• Members of the previous forum can retrieve their temporary password here, (login and check your PM).

do you play any instrument?

Migrated topic.

endlessness

Moderator
Staff member
Moderator
which one? ever played it tripping? how was it?

Im for a couple of months learning how to play the acoustic guitar. still quite a beginner but its wonderful to see the evolution and make some sounds.

Its a great feelng to play an instrument, there's something very spiritual about it. When i say spiritual I mean that all these octaves and how sounds interact with each other, wave interference patterns, harmony and so on, it is all quite recurrent in spiritual traditions (and look at alex grey's paintings for example) but also in our scientific world view , with the periodic table of elements, the whole quantum waves, possible superstrings and all this deal of supersymmetry, and these crazy hidden patterns and fractals in many different phenomenon. Its all so interesting, and I had already amazing music-related experiences

I know a friend of mine that plays really well the guitar can play even more incredibly when tripping, as one gets very sensitive and 'feels' what sounds should come next instead of following learned routines. I still dont have such a large repertoir to be able to start making my own inventions, but when I do I'll definitely make playing an instrument a big part of some trips.
 
oh yea man I play 6 string electric GUITAR..(all self taught or shroom taught haha)

shrooms are the first psy drug ive ever taken & the best IMO for music.. acid has its ups & especially for art IMO. But shrooms i know are the best for my style of music.

I like to capture while tripping, the trip. I like to make it sound as insane or mellow as possible ya know? ( i play PSY TECH metal so its pretty loud & heavy at times)

Ive learned so many tricks & insights & just creating my own style stepping outta the box.

Its just fun cause music sounds so much better & you feel it & you have all this energy!!!

I like to record myself just improving or jamming out whatever flows, i just try not to think at first, then ill go back & take what i liked or learned & mess with it sober, then get high again & tweak it till im satisfied.

If anyone wants to hear any of my live videos or songs ive written on shrooms hit me up!
 
Congas, bongos, select African drums (i.e. djembe, doumbek), midi.

There have been a few instances, while tripping, where I was so in-tune w/ my djembe that I couldn't put it down, even hours after I had touched back down on earth. I don't dare go near my Korg while tripping, however, b/c I fear that it's keys would seem Chinese to me & therefore produce sounds of an extremely foreign, unfamiliar nature (especially after having failed miserably, on more than one occasion, at attempting to turn up the volume on my control device while tripping).
 
Ah, I would love to get some percussion instruments!

I play the accordion, acoustic guitar, harmonium, melodica, keyboard/synthesizer, and game boys.

SWIM once played my accordion while on some incredible acid. He formed a symbiosis with it and was completely enamored at its complex mechanical quality and the overwhelming beauty of free-reed instruments in general.
 
Hmm, I played in a band once. :)

Here is a nice short jam-session of ours:

Don't mind the bass-player too much in this one though, it was near the end of the evening and his hands were severely injured. The drums were computer, the rest is live.


Here is another more ambient jam session from around that same time:

It's sound quality isn't the best but the sphere gets better and better. Again computer drums, rest live.


And as the last one a song that's not finished but you can hear a lot of potential from this one. Also from around the same time as the previous jam-sessions. I still like to make a new song out of the good parts of that session. The bass-line is soooo nice:
 
I play the piano. Never on spice, though. Whenever i'm on some substance i start to hear such crazy stuff that i run out of fingers to play it all. Too many melodies at the same time.
 
Lol thats awesome that there are so many artists here. I probably could start learning guitar since I am only 18. I just don't think I was made for that kind of thing though I've tried it for 3 months or around that time before. Ended up giving my guitar to my bro cause he wants to play country??????.
 
im 24 and just started, and also never seemed to have talent for these things but its incredible how in 2 months one can evolve a LOT! Its just about dedicating a little time every day, watching youtube guitar lessons, getting chords and tabs of simple songs that one already knows quite a lot and can 'play' in the head (for me it was bob marley, sublime, pink floyd, etc), etc.
 
I sing and play guitar, piano, bass, flute, recorder, violin, percussion, and I love synthesizers, especially the Virus line. I've recorded several of my own albums over the many years. I love music and have always been interested in music. It’s really the voice of the soul.

For anyone out there just thinking about learning to play an instrument, GO FOR IT! Its one of the most rewarding things you can learn to do in life. It can be pure bliss.
 
I play guitar,bass and a little piano.

I learned to play om my own,i never took music theory or any classes...it's just kind of in me.

I like improvisation and jamming and when i lived in brooklyn, i had amny people to play with but since i've been in florida, i dont really have anyone to play with and i've been becoming rusty :cry:

I need to dust off those rusty strings, justa one more time - GD lyric
 
endlessness said:
im 24 and just started, and also never seemed to have talent for these things but its incredible how in 2 months one can evolve a LOT! Its just about dedicating a little time every day, watching youtube guitar lessons, getting chords and tabs of simple songs that one already knows quite a lot and can 'play' in the head (for me it was bob marley, sublime, pink floyd, etc), etc.

Totaally agree, I started playing the guitar when I was 18 after being told by a guy at 16 I was too old to learn it :roll:

Its easily doable to learn the guitar even though it seems impossible at first, just takes some effort and patience, it still does for me now as I hardly play it nowadays. Ive started teaching my step daughter, shes 8, and a 12yrold boy and when I do it it gives me the enthusiasm to get back into it.

As mosquad said mushrooms helepd me a lot also. And acid, really how I got into it so much, though I still think im shit tbh.

Really like electronic music and have a couple of synths and full size rhodes keyboard but I never learned, just used it as a midi contorller. My flats too small to have these things on the go so recently ive been using reason ( software synth) rewired with nuendo (sequencer) to make stuff. Got a new soundcard so I can just plug in guitars or whatever and record, but it doesnt go with windows vista for some reason which is really annoying, it just crashes, driver problems. I also have a bass but I just pluck and dont have a clue, sounds good though when I record with ym pedal but the soundcard is a real pain when running on vista on my laptop.

I just want to go to friends houses take the laptop out plug guitars in and record everything but this driver problem is really depressing. Think I have to partition my drive and get xp on but thats also been a problem, plus im not very technical :x I also like to dj, mainly dnb and techno. I found the decks a lot more accesible compared to the guitar when learning, but thats maybe because I love techno and drum and bass and it sounds great, unlike a learner guitar player lol
 
I used to record a bit, but I traded my mixer for some other music equipment (classic game boys, actually), because I didn't like the fancy "fx" and equalization that it applied to the mix. I've been on hiatus for some time but am now just getting back into recording. I can't really afford fancy equipment, however, so I've found my way to cassette recording; which has the benefit of low cost, a warm lo-fi sound, and boundless sentimental and nostalgic value. I first considered this after seeing "The Devil and Daniel Johnston," but it was the fact that many of the bands I now listen to (like Pocahaunted) release on cassette that finally broke me into it.

This is probably the best time I could've decided to get back into recording, considering the DIY and psychedelic nature of my most recent influences, and the fact that some prominent 8-bit-collective members have recently developed new equipment for the chiptune movement (the old equipment was unreliable, inefficient, and entirely inadequate bootleg crap).

We're building a tribe here, and some day our rebel yells will reach your ears.

These are exciting times we live in.
 
amor_fati said:
I used to record a bit, but I traded my mixer for some other music equipment (classic game boys, actually), because I didn't like the fancy "fx" and equalization that it applied to the mix. I've been on hiatus for some time but am now just getting back into recording. I can't really afford fancy equipment

Nowadays, computers are very inexpensive mixers with LOADS of options. Try something like Reaper or Cubase to mix your music, together with the free VST plugins it's all you need to start with. In the beginning you can use your onboard soundcard with ASIO4All, later on you can buy an inexpensive external soundcard, for only $ 99,- you have descent one to start with these days.
 
The Traveler said:
Nowadays, computers are very inexpensive mixers with LOADS of options. Try something like Reaper or Cubase to mix your music, together with the free VST plugins it's all you need to start with. In the beginning you can use your onboard soundcard with ASIO4All, later on you can buy an inexpensive external soundcard, for only $ 99,- you have descent one to start with these days.

My onboard soundcard is fried, so I use an ancient serial card with no inputs. Besides, I've already got a decent cassette deck (w/ 1/4" mono L/R inputs) and a mini-mixer. A 4-track tascam cassette recorder with studio phones and a condenser will only run me $140. Plus I generally consider digital formats as supplementary to analogue in most cases, as analogue releases have more tangible value on top of being far more "warm-sounding". Eventually I'll get my music into digital format by tape->rca->usb, but for now, this is best way to go in order to simply get my music recorded.

People may think it's simple pretension to use outdated equipment, but I tend to feel as though we haven't explored all the possibilities of that equipment. I don't see technology as a necessarily forward march of progress, so I tend not to adhere ideas like obsolescence. I think we take these things for granted.
 
Back
Top Bottom