Hitting vs. strumming
It's a cloudy, windy, and imminently rainy day today and my iPod knows it. The Never Played playlist is giving me hushed tunes from Mia Doi Todd and Devendra Banhart, moody grooves from Amon Tobin and Pizzicato Five and easy-on-the-hungover-brain '60's pop from The Free Design and Chad & Jeremy. Thank you, little white musical pill. You know me so well. Actually, a little too well. It's freaking me out. Maybe you should leave, iPod. No, wait! Don't go! I'm sorry! Give me one more chance! I can still make you happy!
I'm in a fragile state today. Shredding takes a lot of out me. Last night, I was up on stage with a guitar for the first time in almost a decade, trying my best to remember how to rock and roll while standing up. It took me back to my Touk days, when I had both more and less hair, and me and my strat and my troublesome amp would get all high energy with the boys. My God, we were spazzes. In a good way.
But the debate club in my head got started up about which was more fun to play: drums or guitar? The debate rages on.
Pros of playing drums:
- Get to hit things
- Don't have to worry about feedback or other technical problems
- Get to sit in back and take comfort in the fact that almost no one is looking at you
- Is much easier to hear a song and immediately know how to play it
- Have to lug all that gear around
- Expensive parts and accessories
- A lot less glory
- Loud/Nearly impossible to practice in an apartment
- Have to sit down
- Get to dance and jump around
- Is considered a "hotter" instrument to play
- Can swing the guitar around and pretend you're The Edge
- Have to deal with technical issues
- Have to "figure out" how to play songs
- Harder to improvise and come up with parts (for me, anyway)
- Every other person in the world plays guitar
But still, after all these years, it felt great to get guitarded again.
6 comments:
We listened to a lot of Touk this past weekend at the reunion. Our class party was on the lawn directly across the street from the Somewhere Else Tavern, where we could hear a band practicing. I was immediately flooded with memories of going there for Touk shows, so I grabbed the cd out of my car and got everyone dancing and singing along to Ten Overrun. After all these years nearly everyone still remembered all the words.
Wow...that's really awesome. Though I guess it gave new meaning to the "ten" in the title, being the ten-year reunion and all.
I always wish that I had learned to play the guitar. I would have been a lot more useful to my friends who are much better guitar players than I will ever be. Plus my brother played the drums and he was really good. So it has to run in the family, right? Or maybe not.
I like "guitarded." Nice touch, rockstar.
Just for the record, Momentary Academic totally plays guitar. Believe none of her modesty.
Hitting stuff or bouncing around? TOugh call indeed...
I was wondering about that...I always thought that Momentary played guitar. And wrote songs. And rocked out.
I'll bet good drumming runs in the family, MA. But most importantly, drums are absolutely the most fun instrument to play when you don't know what you're doing. My first set in 9th grade was bought with saved allowances, and when I got it home, I had no idea how to play it. But damn, was it ever fun.
I am super bummed I did not get to see you play the guitar on Friday night in New York. Keep practicing because I am going to want to see you play another time...perhaps without warning.
Heather
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