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mschultz says...

Filed under: emulate

Judd6149 says...

Note:  When referring to Fleetwood mac in this post, I am not talking about the Stevie Nicks/Lindsey Buckingham version.  I am talking about the Peter Green stuff...the "Early Mac". 

Recently I wrote a post about the not so fine line between influence and emulate.  I also wrote one on Mick Fleetwood's celebrity podcast on iTunes (that is a joy to listen to).  Low and behold, a convergence of thoughts has occurred!

After the Mick Fleetwood post, I went and picked up some early Feetwood Mac. I needed to go back and hear their sound of that time.  In the podcast, Fleetwood spoke about the heavy influence of Delta Blues in the original incarnation of the Mac.  Infact, as history and Mick tell us, a great many British bands of the '60's were influenced by these Delta inhabitants, musicians and creators of the folk and the lore. 

I wasn't sure what to get and it was spontaneous thing, so I went for the full buffet of early Mac: a 2009 (re)release, "Black Magic Woman: The Best of Fleetwood Mac". Again, this is the Peter Green, Jeremy Spencer stuff...not the flowing scarves of everyone's favourite cocaine pixie. 

I put it on and walked London for an hour or so. 

These guys, to say the Very least, were completely affected by those old sounds they heard come across the Atlantic from the Mighty Mississippi. They wanted no misunderstandings about what their intensions were...to play just like their Delta heroes. 

This got me to thinking about the influence and emulate discussion I posed a few days earlier. Like I said, "Influence is you with a twist.  Emulate is you trying not to be you".

Early on, to all their talent and credit, I think the Early Mac were emulators. Listen to a song like, "Shake Your Money Maker". This is an Elmore James song.  Now, I am no musician so what I say may not be technically correct. I do have a pretty good ear and feel for tunes.  What my ear feels after listening to the Early Mac play this song is almost a complete duplication of Old Elmore James' version.

Fine.  No issues with that. Early Mac may have been the best British blues band of them all.  My point is that they aimed to emulate  Elmore and his brand of blues.  It wasn't just that song either.  There are a half a dozen that have the Elmore feel. Now, as Early Mac evolved, they kept some of that blues culture in their music, but their sound developed into something more personal from the band.  Yes, later on they went stone-cold different and had unprecedented success.  That situation was a horse of a much different colour...and it wasn't blue(s).

Old Elmore, he was a bit different. He was hugely influenced by his predecessors and contemporaries. Still, he ended up with a very unique sound of his own for those times. A slash and slither, electrified slide that you knew was Elmore when you heard it. One of his direct influences was Robert Johnson.  Elmore took Johnson's "Dust My Broom" and whipped it up into an all out electric, slide frenzy.  This was Elmore being influenced by Johnson's playing, but giving it his own stamp...Elmore "with a twist". 

Just for fun...let's talk Jeff Beck.  What a natural fret-freak, eh?  The Jeff Beck Group was a like a dinner guest you really wanted to have over, but knew would cause a ruckus and may put others off. This Beck incarnation played a (self admitted/anointed) heavy sound.  This band included Rod Stewart on vocals and Ron Wood on bass (Wow...Woody is so underrated. Listen to his bass playing...stunning).

If we lean Beck to either side of this influence/emulate discussion, it is definitely the influence side. His first two albums, Beck-OLa and Truth are fantastic...especially the former. He plays songs we know, but he plays in a style all his own. Yes, he takes on a classic by Elvis Presley, "Jail House Rock", but he sets fire to it and burns the original to embers. 

Shit, The King would never been able to shake his pelvis to this!  By the way...what the hell is up with those "Jailhouse" lyrics?!  Go Back and listen to them?  Prison-mate love anyone? Here is a bit of the lyric:

Number forty-seven said to number three:
You're the cutest jailbird I ever did see.
I sure would be delighted with your company,

Come on and do the jailhouse rock with me.

Yikes!

For good measure, listen to Beck's version of "I Ain't Superstitious".  Yep, more influence. 

This is all just my opinion.  I truly like all this music whether it is a rip-off or new take.  I'm glad bands like Early Mac, The Stones and the Animals found the blues.  They just might have rescued it from an ignorant (uncaring) America.

Two more parting thoughts from good friends:

Like Ol' Neil Young says: "It's all one song".
A bit of wisdom from The Good Doctor, Hunter Thompson: "I've been plagiarising all my life.  Its called learning". 

Thanks guys. Spot on.
_____

Here are the tunes I was talking about.  Put your ear to them and tell me what you think...

Filed under: emulate


Before I made the decision to ditch Windows Vista in favor of Ubuntu Linux, I asked myself what I would really be giving up. The only answer I could come up with was the marvelous Evernote client, which is not distributed in a Linux version. While the Web interface retains allmost all of the functionality of the client, it of course by definition lacks the convenience of a local copy of your Evernote database. With a little research, however, I am happy to announce that I am now running the latest Evernote 3.1.0.1225 in Ubuntu 9.04 using Wine. Wine is a Linux program that allows you to install and run many Windows programs in Linux. You can see that a couple of graphical components are a little wonky (the black boxes around the toolbar icons), but overall the functionality is intact. In fact, I took the above screen shot with Evernote. My database, over 1GB, synchronized without a hitch. And the automatic update feature even works properly as well. All in all, I'm extremely pleased.

Installing Wine in Ubuntu is very simple. Go to Applications > Add/Remove and type "wine" in the search box. Click the check box, click "Apply," and the program will install. To install Evernote, just download the installer file and double-click it. A launcher icon should appear on the desktop, and Evernote will also appear in Applications > Wine > Programs.

I found that at first, the text in the Evernote List View was not displaying. This was remedied with the simple registry fix below:

6.16. Wine displays corrupted or missing text.

This may be bug 16146, caused by the nvidia-96xx legacy driver, or bug 18120, which affects QT 4.5.0 applications. It could also be caused by missing fonts, font conflicts, or adding new fonts to Wine.

Try using a fresh Wine prefix (by moving or deleting ~/.wine, or changing the $WINEPREFIX environment variable). If you still have this problem, try setting the following in the Wine registry:

[HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Wine\X11 Driver]
"ClientSideWithRender"="N"

Place above in a text file called norender.txt and it can be inserted into the registry with the command regedit norender.txt. Please apply only as required. (This was reported as being required of OS X on the 1 Dec 2007, and more recently on other platforms, such as Ubuntu.)

I may even try running some other Windows programs in Wine at some point. Maybe. But there are so many excellent native Linux apps, I may not need to.

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Filed under: emulate