Saturday, February 05, 2011

good shit...

read this over at buk.net (thanks, mjp):

Captain Beefheart's Ten Commandments For Guitarists

1. LISTEN TO THE BIRDS That's where all the music comes from. Birds know everything about how it should sound and where that sound should come from. And watch hummingbirds. They fly really fast, but a lot of times they aren't going anywhere.

2. YOUR GUITAR IS NOT REALLY A GUITAR Your guitar is a divining rod. Use it to find spirits in the other world and bring them over. A guitar is also a fishing rod. If you're good, you'll land a big one.

3. PRACTICE IN FRONT OF A BUSH Wait until the moon is out, then go outside, eat a multi-grained bread and play your guitar to a bush. If the bush doesn't shake, eat another piece of bread.

4. WALK WITH THE DEVIL Old delta blues players referred to amplifiers as the "devil box." And they were right. You have to be an equal opportunity employer in terms of who you're bringing over from the other side. Electricity attracts demons and devils. Other instruments attract other spirits. An acoustic guitar attracts Casper. A mandolin attracts Wendy. But an electric guitar attracts Beelzebub.

5. IF YOU'RE GUILTY OF THINKING, YOU'RE OUT If your brain is part of the process, you're missing it. You should play like a drowning man, struggling to reach shore. If you can trap that feeling, then you have something that is fur bearing.

6. NEVER POINT YOUR GUITAR AT ANYONE Your instrument has more power than lightning. Just hit a big chord, then run outside to hear it. But make sure you are not standing in an open field.

7. ALWAYS CARRY YOUR CHURCH KEY You must carry your key and use it when called upon. That's your part of the bargain. Like One String Sam. He was a Detroit street musician in the fifties who played a homemade instrument. His song "I Need A Hundred Dollars" is warm pie. Another church key holder is Hubert Sumlin, Howlin' Wolf's guitar player. He just stands there like the Statue of Liberty making you want to look up her dress to see how he's doing it.

8. DON'T WIPE THE SWEAT OFF YOUR INSTRUMENT You need that stink on there. Then you have to get that stink onto your music.

9. KEEP YOUR GUITAR IN A DARK PLACE When you're not playing your guitar, cover it and keep it in a dark place. If you don't play your guitar for more than a day, be sure to put a saucer of water in with it.

10. YOU GOTTA HAVE A HOOD FOR YOUR ENGINE Wear a hat when you play and keep that hat on. A hat is a pressure cooker. If you have a roof on your house the hot air can't escape. Even a lima bean has to have a wet paper towel around it to make it grow.

most of it applies to writing also. made me go get my Telecaster out of the closet and give her a strum. slick as ever...and I gave her a drink of water too...

3 Comments:

Blogger Joseph Gallo said...

A most excellent post. As both a musician and poet, I relate muchly. ;-)

Found your blog while searching for Omar Salinas and sadly discovering he passed away two years ago. I met him once and we had such a great soulbone-breaking laugh about Spanish poet Federico GarcĂ­a Lorca, but I cannot recall the joke he made. We were in tears for ten-minutes at a party in Carpinteria, after a reading he did in Santa Barbara, circa 1992-3.

With your permission, I'd like to link to your blog from mine. Good poets & pickers should network whenever prudent. ;-)

11:19 PM  
Blogger christopher cunningham said...

if you like Salinas, you might like Luis C. Berriozabal...just google him and read some of his quietly reflective work. here's a post he wrote upon Salinas' death: CLICK

thanks for visiting and sure, link away.

2:55 AM  
Blogger Father Luke said...

Crazy, man... crazy.

9:31 AM  

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