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Riviera, Palm Springs w/Mark Ballas, etc 6-13-14 - Printable Version +- Haley Reinhart Forum (http://haleyfans.com) +-- Forum: Topics (http://haleyfans.com/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Haley Reinhart (http://haleyfans.com/forum-11.html) +--- Thread: Riviera, Palm Springs w/Mark Ballas, etc 6-13-14 (/thread-2045.html) Pages:
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Riviera, Palm Springs w/Mark Ballas, etc 6-13-14 - Miguel - 06-13-2014 Quote:Mark Ballas @MarkBallas 2h Quote:Dylan Chambers @dylan_chambers 14m http://www.psriviera.com ![]() ![]() RE: Riviera Palm Springs -- 6-13-14 - Miguel - 06-13-2014 Quote:Mark Ballas @MarkBallas 18m 29 pictures of Mark Ballas taken last night. https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.734728546579579&type=3&l=2794c5e3ee None of Haley and Casey. I noticed he had a full band. I wonder if "We all got something planned in LA soon" includes the use of it. RE: Haley in the Wild - Miguel - 06-14-2014 Quote:Miguel @HaleyFansDotCom 17m Quote:DJ~RJ / ZencomMedia @ZencomMedia 7m "Mun" = Man Bun I had to research the term: http://www.mensxp.com/grooming/hair-care/21433-hairstyle-in-focus-the-man-bun.html RE: Haley in the Wild - Miguel - 06-14-2014 ![]() Quote:markballas http://instagram.com/p/pPjac5TPLD/# Quote:dylan_chambers ![]() RE: Haley in the Wild - midnightblues - 06-14-2014 I see a LA gig just around the corner real soon with these guys ![]() RE: Haley in the Wild - Miguel - 06-14-2014 Quote:PJ @PJHaleyR 12m Back to being its own thread. PJ found some photos on Facebook of Haley performing. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() More: https://www.facebook.com/HaleyReinhart/photos RE: Riviera, Palm Springs w/Mark Ballas, etc 6-13-14 - Miguel - 06-14-2014 Mark Ballas on his musical background and his new single: Quote:I grew up in a very musical family. My dad was a great guitar player as well. As a kid that was father-son time. He was a great flamenco guitar player, so that's kind of where I started. We would listen to Paco de Lucía and the Gypsy Kings — that's how my road as a musician started. Also in the house he was really big into Earth, Wind & Fire, Michael Jackson, and Prince. These are the kinds of records I grew up listening to. Quote:“Usually when we do records I come in [to the studio] with guitar riffs or a melody or a concept idea for a song. The day we hadn’t come up with anything for two days. We’d been in the studio, hanging out, thinking something would come organically. If it doesn’t come, don’t push it,” he said. No label, but a music publisher: Quote:“The day we put it out, it debuted at No. 24 on the iTunes Pop Chart,” Ballas recalled proudly of May 5. “I’m doing this all independently: no (record) label. So considering that, I’m really excited.” RE: Riviera, Palm Springs w/Mark Ballas, etc 6-13-14 - Himm2 - 06-15-2014 Lots of photos with Mark Ballas & others here: https://www.facebook.com/HaleyReinhart/photos RE: Riviera, Palm Springs w/Mark Ballas, etc 6-13-14 - Miguel - 06-15-2014 I'm not that impressed by Ballas' singing. But he seems to be an excellent guitar player. I saw that he started playing guitar at age 4 and began dancing at age 11. Below, excerpts from a 2010 interview with Dan Lutz, the guy who's been playing bass for him. Expresses his thoughts about making a living in the music businesses and playing bass. Dan Lutz is a first call bassist in Los Angeles. His successful career is credited to his strong groove, versatility, experience and dependability. Playing both electric and upright bass, Dan’s 15 years on the scene has proved himself to be a seasoned professional and respected musician able to swing, groove, improvise, and enhance any musical situation. Whether as a Music Director or sharing stage with the greats of the jazz world, Dan brings a funky and innovative style to the stage and studio alike. He has toured the world over with various artists, played on countless sessions for commercials, movies, and television, and maintains a busy schedule in L.A. on the local club circuit. Dan is comfortable in many styles including gospel, rock, jazz, R&B, pop, and soul. Quote: I had this mindset to say “yes” to any gig or rehearsal or anything that would benefit my playing. I didn’t care if it paid or not, I just wanted to play and meet people. That’s one thing I tell students or other people: just put yourself in as many different environments and playing experiences as you can because who knows who you’re going to meet. Someone may be looking for a bass player or someone for their band. I was always trying to put myself in any position or situation from jam sessions, to birthdays, to weddings. As I did this, I started to meet more and more musicians and would play with them more frequently. That was my mentality. I would take whatever I could get. In fact, one of the big gigs that I got was touring with Tony Danza. He had a Vegas-like show. I got that gig because I could sing and play bass. There were great musicians on that gig and one thing led to another and I started to be able to make a living playing. Through the years, the circle of musicians I was playing with, hopefully all of their careers would keep going up into the next level, and I maintained relationships and connections with those people and my career moved up with them. I’ve just been able to keep doing a bunch of different things. Quote:...if you’re not getting experience and playing with different people and trying to cultivate the business aspect, and the relationship aspect of your musicianship then you’re going to be one of these people who can do all these things and have all this technique but nowhere to really play, except your bedroom. The larger the pond you’re in, the more experiences you’re going to have and the more chances you’re going to have to cultivate an actual career where you can raise a family and make something of yourself instead of living from gig to gig. It’s a matter of being a pro and putting yourself out there in as many situations as you can. "How do you feel about time and where to put the beat?" Quote: It’s tricky. When playing jazz, I like to play on top. Often, with younger players, when you tell them to play on top of the beat, they’ll start to rush. There’s a fine line between keeping a forward, linear motion or feel, and rushing, where you’ll push the band the whole time and make it feel uncomfortable. That’s something I’m always trying to learn and do it the right way, and sometimes I do rush and it can feel uncomfortable, especially if the drummer and I aren’t on the same page. Luckily, you get to know drummers and you get to play with a bunch of guys on a regular basis and you can figure out where it feels comfortable for them. My whole thing, hopefully, that I’m trying to do is get to know what people want. I don’t want to just go into a situation and force my method or my feel onto the band. I want to try to meet everybody where they’re at and make a comfortable feel for the tune. There’s a little bit of getting to know your voice and your approach. At the same time you’re trying to understand the role of the bass player, which is to be supportive and make everybody sound good and lay down that foundation that everybody’s comfortable with. Sometimes that means sacrificing exactly where you want to put it for the sake of the band. If you want to work you have to have that mentality. Otherwise you’ll be known as the dude who always pushes or drags. Quote:Being flexible is the key to a feel, but also to your approach as a bass player in trying to build your career. You have to be flexible. The exception is if you’re going to be a solo-bass-player artist and you’re developing your own thing, and the way you play is the way you’re going to play. Some people have done a really good job of doing that. A good example of that is Mark Egan. I saw him at a jazz festival in Reno with Pat Metheny a while ago. The whole time he was laying it down in the pocket, you know, way in the back not being anything special, so to speak, just being real supportive. When it came time for him to solo he just ripped it. It was incredible. When you mention Mark Egan you think of his work as a fretless solo artist. From then I had a new level of respect for players like that, who can do both, but understand the role of the bass and they understand how they need to be supportive. Then, when the time comes, they’ve developed this technique or the ability to solo or be melodic that’s way beyond the normal expectations of the average, everyday bass player. Quote:... lately, I’ve been into note length: the space between notes and something as simple as a dotted quarter and an eighth note and how it contributes to the feel. It’s dramatic, as a bass player, to be conscious of the space between notes and the length of your notes and how that affects the feel and the groove of any tune. That carries over to how I’ll think about my right hand placement or how much pressure I’m using with my left hand. Then I’ll zone into the high hat or bass drum. How I match with those depends on whether the feel is an eighth note feel or a sixteenth note feel. Altering the note length or the space between notes allows me to approach a tune I’ve played a hundred times with something fresh and continue to contribute something new each time. " What would you like the people to understand about you as a person, and as a musician, and how you balance the two to maintain your success?" Quote: I’m very conscious to not let the idea of success for me be what gig I have. The idea of success for me is to have a healthy marriage, strong friendships, a sense of spirituality and a career that allows me to play in as many different situations as possible. If that stuff gets out of order and I start to place success of what gig I have, and who I’m playing with, then I think I’d get out of balance. For my career, I’m trying to be as diverse as possible. I love playing jazz and straight-ahead, and I love playing R&B and pop, and doing the sessions that I do. I love teaching. I love playing both basses. I love playing Broadway shows here in LA. I love going on tour with a rock or gospel thing. I wouldn’t necessarily be happy if I had to choose one genre within music. I just like playing the bass. I like playing the bass in any genre and trying to make that happen. http://bassmusicianmagazine.com/2010/02/conversation-with-dan-lutz-by-mikel-combs/ 2008: RE: Riviera, Palm Springs w/Mark Ballas, etc 6-13-14 - My Alter Ego - 06-15-2014 Wow! Love this guy's philosophy (I think he refers to it as a "mindset") and it seems to be working for him! Good.For.Him! I also appreciated that, in the video, he referred to instrument's sound as its "voice." The more that we can consider vocalists as "musicians" and instruments as having "voices" the sooner that, hopefully, the "great divide" (between those playing instruments only and those singing only) might close. It will be interesting to hear Midnight's perspective on Dan's playing. |