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king_buzzo 06.24.2008 03:54 PM

acoustic.
 
ahh, i still need to broaden my mind for this genre-i know some stuff but I need something more.

now i know that just the term 'acoustic' means a lot of stuff, but i mean just like anything that is solo acoustic, can be dark, happy whatever just as long as its as minimal as possible.


anyone care to suggest something?

viewtiful_alan 06.24.2008 03:57 PM

 


Neil young live at Massey Hall.
Great stuff, just him a guitar, and he occasionaly plays a piano.

Rob Instigator 06.24.2008 04:01 PM

acoustic is not a genre. just instrumentation.

any and all delta blues from before the muddy waters era was acoustic, most country music before 1970 was acoustic and much afterwards. most jazz is and was acoustic. then you havethe netherworld of fucking folk nonsense.
acoustic as all hell, even booing their patron saint when he "dared" to play an electric set!
all bluegrass music is acoustic, well, ussually. flamenco music is acoustic. all classical music is acoustic.
organ music from the 1600's is acoustic.
gamelan music from Bali is acoustic, and rocks polyphonically.
and of course every pussy bitch ass fake asshole in the country who could not handle ten minutes of a nirvana live show, much less an entire show of their true insanity, LOVED the "unplugged" acoustic set. fuck I hate that.

Zanfir, master of the pan flut is acoustic music. most folk music from the world over, whetrher gypsy, peruvian andes, aboriginal etc, is acoustic.

Glice 06.24.2008 04:42 PM

Taku Sugimoto will fulfill the minimal bit. Possibly more minimal than you want though.

atsonicpark 06.24.2008 04:55 PM

Fahey!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Rob Instigator 06.24.2008 04:58 PM

I'm just talking shit of course. tons of great acoustic music out there.

but if what you want is a singer with a minimalist guitar accompaniment, I don;t know.

Glice 06.24.2008 05:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by atsonicpark
Fahey!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


Was my first thought (also Jansch).

Anyone heard Joseph van Wissem's Stations of the Cross? I got that recently. Utterly gorgeous in a way that very few lute records are.

Cantankerous 06.24.2008 05:04 PM

neil young

Toilet & Bowels 06.24.2008 05:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Glice
Taku Sugimoto will fulfill the minimal bit. Possibly more minimal than you want though.


ditto annette krebs

Toilet & Bowels 06.24.2008 05:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Toilet & Bowels
ditto annette krebs


better yet, check out Seymour "Cunthead" Wright

hat and bread 06.24.2008 05:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Glice

Anyone heard Joseph van Wissem's Stations of the Cross? I got that recently. Utterly gorgeous in a way that very few lute records are.


Not that I own a lot of lute records, but yes, lovely. I got to see him play most of those songs live earlier this year, fantastic fantasic fantastic.

viewtiful_alan 06.24.2008 05:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cantankerous
neil young

seconded (thirded if you count my first post on the thread)

SuchFriendsAreDangerous 06.24.2008 06:18 PM

if you do not have any acoustic Grateful Dead, then you just are depriving yrself of good acoustic music, and still the most fun stuff to play on yr acoustic guitar. I got kicked out of an acoustic blues band for bringing to many dead covering cover songs to the stage, because they were to damned good compared to the other tunes this band had!



 


though, honestly, I can play that entire album in my sleep, but I do not own it, nor have I ever owned it, nor would i buy it. I think that Dead albums are terrible. however, live dead, that is an entirely different story:

I suggest something like this:



 


a live grateful dead acoustic set. the best would be 1968-1971, with Pigpen, without Pigpen, the acoustic set is not quite the same....

rip Ron McKernan

 

atsonicpark 06.24.2008 06:19 PM

sir richard bishop
leo kottke

would also be tops.

Danny Himself 06.24.2008 06:52 PM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fh0pJsyS9mQ

M. WARD! Amazing fingerpicker and vocalist, very Fahey-influenced.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9pt7CuX7pbE

People like to diss this young man, but really, just listen to the bloody words and the conviction with which he sings them.

SuchFriendsAreDangerous 06.24.2008 07:29 PM

Bird Song acoustic live 1980

Heaven Help the Fool

batreleaser 06.24.2008 09:12 PM

ken mikami
kazuki tomokawa
derek bailey
johhny cash
howlin wolf
"blind" willie johnson
leadbelly

good shit right there

StevOK 06.24.2008 09:23 PM

When I bought the Flight of the Conchords cd at Hot Topic, the dude behind the counter asked me if I liked "acoustic music". I didn't know what the fuck he was talking about, then I tried thinking about, then I said, "I listen to all kinds of weird shit."

Furthermore, isn't everything you hear, by definition, acoustic?

Cantankerous 06.24.2008 09:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by batreleaser
ken mikami
kazuki tomokawa
derek bailey
johhny cash
howlin wolf
"blind" willie johnson
leadbelly

good shit right there

johnny cash definitely
howlin' wolf is my fav blues player of all time. but i think he was better electric.

blind willie and leadbelly are excellent as well.

Everyneurotic 06.24.2008 09:38 PM

howlin' wolf was definitely electric, hubert sumlin was his guitar player, always played a strat.

----

suggested: a ton of current 93 is acoustic.


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