Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Technical Difficulties







The family laptop is having issues. I'll post again when and if the matter is resolved!

Monday, February 2, 2015

Kottke vs Fahey





 I've been looking forward to hearing Leo Kottke's first album again when I noticed the library had purchased a copy. When it was originally released, it was a great leap forward for acoustic guitar playing, but it never resonated with me. I was curious why, and I hoped hearing it again would give me some clues.

There's no question that Kottke is an amazing guitarist, and technically, he has Fahey beat. But I respond to Fahey's music, and though I can appreciate the mastery of Kottke, I get no emotional connection. 

I recall on a Zappa album, Steve Vai is credited with "stunt guitar", and that's how I think of Kottke, and then I thought of the perfect metaphor: Kottke is Superman, and Fahey is Spider-Man!

There were two camps back in the early '60s era in comics: you were either DC (Superman, Batman, Green Lantern, etc.) or Marvel (Spider-Man, Fantastic Four, X-Men, etc.) Me? Make mine Marvel all the way. DC comics were like puzzles: how will the superhero defeat the villain THIS time? Whereas with Marvel, the plot was usually secondary to the whole presentation. The hero's personality, motivation (and self-doubt!) were just as important as the villain's arsenal and dreams of world conquest (and sometimes, even the villain had some deep-seated personal fears and doubts that ultimately motivated him, unbeknownst to him but not to us).

So, as a Spider-Man fan, I was naturally in the Fahey camp. And as much as I can appreciate Kottke's skill and talent, it's all too much cape and blue tights for me. As the Simpson's Comic Book Guy might say, "Best. Analogy. Ever!"