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George
 
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I heard Hedges live, outside in baltimore shortly before he died. He had at
least one full rack of stuff to create the guitar sound. I couldn't get close
enough to the rack to see what was in it, but that was no "simple" guitar
sound.

No acoustic guitar on the planet had notes as low as those coming out of the
stacks. I'm guess ing he had some octave splitters.

Regards,

Ty Ford

\I will ask my friend Lenny Mirizo what was in the rack
he traveled with Michel several years as his engineer
he may remember , though it has been a long time gone
George
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George
 
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I heard Hedges live, outside in baltimore shortly before he died. He had at
least one full rack of stuff to create the guitar sound. I couldn't get close
enough to the rack to see what was in it, but that was no "simple" guitar
sound.

No acoustic guitar on the planet had notes as low as those coming out of the
stacks. I'm guess ing he had some octave splitters.

Regards,

Ty Ford

\I will ask my friend Lenny Mirizo what was in the rack
he traveled with Michel several years as his engineer
he may remember , though it has been a long time gone
George
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George
 
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I heard Hedges live, outside in baltimore shortly before he died. He had at
least one full rack of stuff to create the guitar sound. I couldn't get close
enough to the rack to see what was in it, but that was no "simple" guitar
sound.

No acoustic guitar on the planet had notes as low as those coming out of the
stacks. I'm guess ing he had some octave splitters.

Regards,

Ty Ford

\I will ask my friend Lenny Mirizo what was in the rack
he traveled with Michel several years as his engineer
he may remember , though it has been a long time gone
George
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ScotFraser
 
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but with a sound that's so non-guitar that it masks
some of what's really going on.

The non-acousticity of Hedges guitar sound never interfered with his playing
concept, as I feel it does mightily with Adrian Legg's Ovationizing.


Scott Fraser


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ScotFraser
 
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but with a sound that's so non-guitar that it masks
some of what's really going on.

The non-acousticity of Hedges guitar sound never interfered with his playing
concept, as I feel it does mightily with Adrian Legg's Ovationizing.


Scott Fraser
  #7   Report Post  
ScotFraser
 
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but with a sound that's so non-guitar that it masks
some of what's really going on.

The non-acousticity of Hedges guitar sound never interfered with his playing
concept, as I feel it does mightily with Adrian Legg's Ovationizing.


Scott Fraser
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Brian Takei
 
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Ty Ford )
in article news.com
wrote:

I heard Hedges live, outside in baltimore shortly before he died.


I caught him that tour at the Birchmere in VA. So glad I did. First
time was Blues Alley in DC. So glad I did.

He had at
least one full rack of stuff to create the guitar sound. I couldn't get close
enough to the rack to see what was in it, but that was no "simple" guitar
sound.


Nomadland.com probably still has his rig specs and rider.

No acoustic guitar on the planet had notes as low as those coming out of the
stacks. I'm guess ing he had some octave splitters.


I don't think so. Heavy gauge strings, and serious intent:

"By design, acoustic guitars just aren't built to speak below a certain
pitch... So if you use non-standard tuning and tune down to deepen the
guitar's voice, what you hear coming out of the box can be kind of
disappointing..."

"I get around the problem of wimpy low end by using a [Sunrise] magnet
pickup. Magnetic pickups detect the vibration of strings even when its
inaudible to the naked ear. If you put that signal through a good
equalizer, boosting some sounds and softening others, you can effectively
change the response of the guitar." - M. Hedges
ref: Rhythm Sonority Silence
by: Michael Hedges and John Stropes
pg: 31


I think he's incomparable, and what he achieved in terms of acoustic
guitar composition and performance is beyond words. I really like him.
I'm grateful.

Regards,
-Brian
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Brian Takei
 
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Ty Ford )
in article news.com
wrote:

I heard Hedges live, outside in baltimore shortly before he died.


I caught him that tour at the Birchmere in VA. So glad I did. First
time was Blues Alley in DC. So glad I did.

He had at
least one full rack of stuff to create the guitar sound. I couldn't get close
enough to the rack to see what was in it, but that was no "simple" guitar
sound.


Nomadland.com probably still has his rig specs and rider.

No acoustic guitar on the planet had notes as low as those coming out of the
stacks. I'm guess ing he had some octave splitters.


I don't think so. Heavy gauge strings, and serious intent:

"By design, acoustic guitars just aren't built to speak below a certain
pitch... So if you use non-standard tuning and tune down to deepen the
guitar's voice, what you hear coming out of the box can be kind of
disappointing..."

"I get around the problem of wimpy low end by using a [Sunrise] magnet
pickup. Magnetic pickups detect the vibration of strings even when its
inaudible to the naked ear. If you put that signal through a good
equalizer, boosting some sounds and softening others, you can effectively
change the response of the guitar." - M. Hedges
ref: Rhythm Sonority Silence
by: Michael Hedges and John Stropes
pg: 31


I think he's incomparable, and what he achieved in terms of acoustic
guitar composition and performance is beyond words. I really like him.
I'm grateful.

Regards,
-Brian
  #13   Report Post  
Brian Takei
 
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Ty Ford )
in article news.com
wrote:

I heard Hedges live, outside in baltimore shortly before he died.


I caught him that tour at the Birchmere in VA. So glad I did. First
time was Blues Alley in DC. So glad I did.

He had at
least one full rack of stuff to create the guitar sound. I couldn't get close
enough to the rack to see what was in it, but that was no "simple" guitar
sound.


Nomadland.com probably still has his rig specs and rider.

No acoustic guitar on the planet had notes as low as those coming out of the
stacks. I'm guess ing he had some octave splitters.


I don't think so. Heavy gauge strings, and serious intent:

"By design, acoustic guitars just aren't built to speak below a certain
pitch... So if you use non-standard tuning and tune down to deepen the
guitar's voice, what you hear coming out of the box can be kind of
disappointing..."

"I get around the problem of wimpy low end by using a [Sunrise] magnet
pickup. Magnetic pickups detect the vibration of strings even when its
inaudible to the naked ear. If you put that signal through a good
equalizer, boosting some sounds and softening others, you can effectively
change the response of the guitar." - M. Hedges
ref: Rhythm Sonority Silence
by: Michael Hedges and John Stropes
pg: 31


I think he's incomparable, and what he achieved in terms of acoustic
guitar composition and performance is beyond words. I really like him.
I'm grateful.

Regards,
-Brian
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John
 
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but with a sound that's so non-guitar that it masks
some of what's really going on.

The non-acousticity of Hedges guitar sound never interfered with his playing
concept, as I feel it does mightily with Adrian Legg's Ovationizing.


Scott Fraser


When I saw Adrian in concert last year, I was amazed at how different his sound
is now from when he started out. It is truly a "created" non-organic guitar
sound. He appears to have dropped the Ovations though (at least for the show I
saw). Not unplesant, but just different. As for Michael, despite the fact
that he was beyond avant-garde, I could always tell that he was playing a
guitar.
-John Vice
www.summertimestudios.com
  #15   Report Post  
John
 
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but with a sound that's so non-guitar that it masks
some of what's really going on.

The non-acousticity of Hedges guitar sound never interfered with his playing
concept, as I feel it does mightily with Adrian Legg's Ovationizing.


Scott Fraser


When I saw Adrian in concert last year, I was amazed at how different his sound
is now from when he started out. It is truly a "created" non-organic guitar
sound. He appears to have dropped the Ovations though (at least for the show I
saw). Not unplesant, but just different. As for Michael, despite the fact
that he was beyond avant-garde, I could always tell that he was playing a
guitar.
-John Vice
www.summertimestudios.com


  #16   Report Post  
John
 
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but with a sound that's so non-guitar that it masks
some of what's really going on.

The non-acousticity of Hedges guitar sound never interfered with his playing
concept, as I feel it does mightily with Adrian Legg's Ovationizing.


Scott Fraser


When I saw Adrian in concert last year, I was amazed at how different his sound
is now from when he started out. It is truly a "created" non-organic guitar
sound. He appears to have dropped the Ovations though (at least for the show I
saw). Not unplesant, but just different. As for Michael, despite the fact
that he was beyond avant-garde, I could always tell that he was playing a
guitar.
-John Vice
www.summertimestudios.com
  #17   Report Post  
ScotFraser
 
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He had at
least one full rack of stuff to create the guitar sound. I couldn't get close


enough to the rack to see what was in it, but that was no "simple" guitar
sound.


Mark Fitzgerald of Rosewood Sound in Syracuse provided PA for various Hedges
tours. He'd know.
315-437-6427. Tell him I said hi.


Scott Fraser
  #18   Report Post  
ScotFraser
 
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He had at
least one full rack of stuff to create the guitar sound. I couldn't get close


enough to the rack to see what was in it, but that was no "simple" guitar
sound.


Mark Fitzgerald of Rosewood Sound in Syracuse provided PA for various Hedges
tours. He'd know.
315-437-6427. Tell him I said hi.


Scott Fraser
  #19   Report Post  
ScotFraser
 
Posts: n/a
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He had at
least one full rack of stuff to create the guitar sound. I couldn't get close


enough to the rack to see what was in it, but that was no "simple" guitar
sound.


Mark Fitzgerald of Rosewood Sound in Syracuse provided PA for various Hedges
tours. He'd know.
315-437-6427. Tell him I said hi.


Scott Fraser
  #23   Report Post  
ScotFraser
 
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I share shop space with Mark,and we
have sort of a collective sound resource going on.

Cool. Give him my greetings. He's provided PA for a number of Kronos gigs &
we've shared a bunch of post concert beers.


Scott Fraser
  #24   Report Post  
ScotFraser
 
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I share shop space with Mark,and we
have sort of a collective sound resource going on.

Cool. Give him my greetings. He's provided PA for a number of Kronos gigs &
we've shared a bunch of post concert beers.


Scott Fraser
  #25   Report Post  
George Gleason
 
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"ScotFraser" wrote in message
...
I share shop space with Mark,and we
have sort of a collective sound resource going on.

Cool. Give him my greetings. He's provided PA for a number of Kronos gigs

&
we've shared a bunch of post concert beers.


I have been privledged to work many really cool events as part of his staff
Geraldine Dodge Poetry fest
Paul Winters "World Tree"
Klexmatics
He is a tireless at booking work though sometimes his technical prowess
works against him.
Peace
george


---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
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  #26   Report Post  
George Gleason
 
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"ScotFraser" wrote in message
...
I share shop space with Mark,and we
have sort of a collective sound resource going on.

Cool. Give him my greetings. He's provided PA for a number of Kronos gigs

&
we've shared a bunch of post concert beers.


I have been privledged to work many really cool events as part of his staff
Geraldine Dodge Poetry fest
Paul Winters "World Tree"
Klexmatics
He is a tireless at booking work though sometimes his technical prowess
works against him.
Peace
george


---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.688 / Virus Database: 449 - Release Date: 5/18/2004


  #27   Report Post  
ScotFraser
 
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though sometimes his technical prowess
works against him.

I could see how a promoter might mistake his explanation of his newest mid/high
design for technobabble intended to wow the naive in order to get a gig. I hope
most see that as his high level of passion for acoustic realism, though.


Scott Fraser
  #28   Report Post  
ScotFraser
 
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though sometimes his technical prowess
works against him.

I could see how a promoter might mistake his explanation of his newest mid/high
design for technobabble intended to wow the naive in order to get a gig. I hope
most see that as his high level of passion for acoustic realism, though.


Scott Fraser
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