my life through music

What I love most about the guitar is its ability to create something big from relatively little. Unlike literature or painted art, audio physically surrounds the listener. It’s enveloping. And unlike other instruments like the piano, the guitar is unique in that the player has direct manipulation over the strings. New notes and sounds can be achieved via harmonics, slides and bends. You are truthfully the master of the universe that you create.

Rather than selling my soul to the Devil like Steve Vai’s character did in the movie Crossroads, I chose to do it the old-fashioned way like Ralph Macchio. (He is, after all, the Karate Kid.) And while running modal scales proved ultimately useless (I’m pretty sure I’ll never use Lydian), I did pick up a few philosophical lessons on playing and performing that I’ve been re-pondering hours before heading out to load for tonight’s gig at The New Parish.

So, here they are. Five life lessons that can be inferred from the guitar:

1.) Be Light As a Feather | Use the minimal amount of finger pressure while fretting to attain faster playing speed. It’s not how hard you press, it’s how efficiently you move.

2.) Find Your Balance | Relax and focus on what you’re doing now. Keep the future in mind but don’t wander too far or you might get lost.

3.) There Is No Wrong Way | Mistakes are only deviations from your desired path. Push through and don’t let these deviations bring you down or you’ll end up straying more. Don’t sweat the small stuff or you’ll end up drenched.

4.) Be Inspired | When it comes down to it, the goal of pursuing any artistic endeavor is to create something meaningful, expressive and aesthetically profound. Try and hold onto whatever it is that inspires you.

5.) Don’t Forget to Have Fun | Life is short, after all…

Here are a few heartwarming ads I found particularly effective. I love a quality promo even if it has little to do with the actual product. It’s interesting how so many goods are now defined by a lifestyle, and how proper marketing can completely turn a company around (see: Jack in the Box, 1995). A good commercial is a good commercial, even if it’s from a dinosaur relic like JCPenney.

By the way, did you know Arizona Jeans are way affordable?


Saw this ad before Avatar and it damn near choked me up. Song: “Follow the Arrow” by Rosi Golan.


Who doesn’t want Jim Lehrer to tuck them in at night?


Another great one from JCPenney that premiered in theaters a few years ago.

Wait for the eyebrow raise.


Shigeru Umebayashi | Composer
IMDB | Film Description

I finally watched Wong Kar-Wai’s “In the Mood for Love.” While I’m not usually a fan of melodramatic HK cinema, this film was so beautifully executed and performed (by Tony Leung and Maggie Cheung, two of the most stunning actors) that it’s set apart from the rest. The artfully shot drama follows the relationship between a man and a woman who realize their spouses are unfaithful. While they grow close, they vow never to be as adulterine as their other halves. It’s a film that examines what love can mean, whether you get it or not. Whether it’s happy or not.

Some movies you wish you couldn’t relate to. Even if they’re great, you’d rather they not touch a nerve or spark some flame inside. Better you’d smiled at the credits, clapped if you really loved it… turned off the TV and went to bed.

And that would be the end of it.

Kingdom of Heaven | It’s visually lush and enchanting with a remarkable score by Harry Gregson-Williams. Jeremy Irons is fantastic and Edward Norton really delivers as the “leper king.” Still culturally relevant since its release, the film has more to do with the good and evil within people than that which exists between faiths. Also, Eva Green is in it.

Sunshine | Danny Boyle may very well be my favorite director. Sunshine hits the heart of the sci-fi genre: behind all the technology, it’s ultimately about humanity. Also, Rose Byrne is in it.

Pan’s Labyrinth | “A fairy tale for grown ups,” the film contrasts fantasy with the brutal reality of human violence.

The Motorcycle Diaries | A flat-out beautiful film with one of the best taglines ever, a quote from Che Guevara: “Let the world change you and you can change the world.”

Braveheart | Probably my favorite film of all time with one of the most moving scores ever by James Horner (Glory, Titanic). If anything can be both uplifting and heartbreaking at the same time, this is it. By the way, movie trailers in 1995 totally blew.


www.fiona-apple.com
www.disney.go.com/disneypictures/nightmare

At the risk of sounding cliché by referencing The Nightmare Before Christmas, Fiona Apple’s cover of Danny Elfman’s “Sally’s Song” serves as a perfect example of everything I love about music: it’s emotive, flowing and experiential. Several instrumental voices seemingly dance around one another while still retaining an overall sense of harmonic unity. (The string descension at 2:28 is particularly powerful…)