Hi Joe - I hope you read this. My first day on this forum nd already I'm doling out lengthy feedback directly to you.
Joe Bonamassa wrote:Hey Everybody,
I was just surfing the net about Sloe Gin and was noticing that some people love it and some people think Ive gone soft. I pose this question cause it confuses me and Kevin ( not to speak for him , just refering to his Blog). Is there no room for growth in the Blues? Strings on a blues song? Wow what a sin!!! .....
I dont listen to the blues because it follows a scripted format that every artist must strictly adhere to - the blues certainly was not born of that tradition and it's an insult to the idea of the blues for people to think there's anything such as "going soft" just because somone is trying something different - and doing an amazing job of it as well. It's also contrary to the concept of the blues to think there's only one type of sound that can be called the blues.
Joe Bonamassa wrote:Is there no room for growth in the Blues?
Growth = Life.
The opposite is stagnation, atrophy and eventually, death. Sorry to be so grim, but it's just a fact of life.
Joe Bonamassa wrote:Recording Sloe Gin has opened my eyes to musical possiblities ..... I honestly pose the question to the fourm does growth mean something? or should I just make blues deluxe vol 2 thru 60?
Hahaha, that's really funny! I view creativity as, BY DEFINITION, opening your eyes to new possibilitiies, seeing things in a different way and putting that experience into something tangible or accessible to others. Just don't expect that every member of your audience will be so open-minded otherwise they'd be up there trying new things too or at least be willing to taking musical risks in what they listen to. Not everyone is comfortable with the unfamiliar - so let them go seek the familiar - it's definitely out there massproducing it's own boring self over and over in mindless amoeba-like fashion.
But I don't buy new CDs or check out new (new to me) artists because I want more of the same stuff that I've already spent my hard earned cash on. This is not to cast judgement on your straight-ahead classic blues or rock work or anyone's preference for that - I love it and crave it! My name should tell you all you need to know on that count. And maybe that's where the criticism came from - not a craving for the same, but a craving for a certain sound which that particular listener was hoping for. But it's no excuse for closed-minded criticism.
Joe Bonamassa wrote:I love the way Sloe Gin came out. I very proud of the work Kevin and I have done. I m honestly confused about what people expect out of me.
Well thats what i expect when i open a CD - that the artist was true to himself, feels like what he/she laid down was something they can be proud of and expresses what they were feeling in a way only that artist could express it. I usually hope they will take some musical risks and try something innovative and new that they haven't tried before or I havent heard anyone do before or that they have been reworking in different ways to get just right in their own view.
I also expect that they themselves like the music they put out at least as much as I do, that they want to play it at least as much as I want to hear it and that they get a rush off it too!! If you feel Sloe Gin did that, then at least you already met my expectations. In my humble opinion you exceeded my expectations and maybe even changed them.
Joe Bonamassa wrote:Honestly and not to sound pretentious, I can easly just rip over standard blues and call it a day..Thats second nature for me and umteenth others .. But Ive never been one to take the easy way out.. I know this will start quite a thread..
Joe Bonamassa
Yawn. been there, done that, spent my $$ on your CDs DVD and concert instead and plan to do more of that.
A big fat chunk of ca$h and #1 from week 1 onward for the next 4 weeks and counting - for doing it the way you feel it and like it and want it to be is waaaaaaaaaaaaaay beyond icing on the cake and should clear up any lingering doubts.
When I got lucky enough to come back to see you in SF, you were in a conversation about connecting - which is such a vital part of what music is about. Now I'm posing a question to you - do you feel that is happening through this CD? I think you can plainly figure out my response to that, but I am hoping you will read this and respond with your view.
My unsolicited advice to everyone: If you're doing what you love and it's paying off in ways that matter to you, ignore the BS and keep doing what you love!