legato vs. stacatto style

For all non-guitar instruments; mandolins, synths, kazoos, and anything else musical that doesn't fit elsewhere.

Moderated By: mods

User avatar
ohyeahfuzzbear
.
.
Posts: 1848
Joined: Mon Feb 15, 2010 9:06 am
Location: midlands

Post by ohyeahfuzzbear »

portugalwillie wrote:
BacchusPaul wrote:
JJLipton wrote: I think you may be referring to pizzicato.
What's pizzicato?

I think you need to go away and find out what legato, staccato and pizzicato all mean.
+1

I'm pretty sure pizzicato is just plucking the strings.
Yeah pizzicato is just plucked strings... Well I guess my GCSE in music does come in handy sometimes :l
Doog wrote:"And every day after high school, the young Kurt would sit down with his soldering iron and oscilloscope, to work on what come to be known as the Boss DS-1, the world's first guitar distortion pedal."
User avatar
George
.
.
Posts: 20953
Joined: Fri Jul 03, 2009 11:52 am
Location: UK

Post by George »

This is like a painter being told to choose between fluid brush strokes and that stabby motion.

I'm sure the reply 9/10 would be, "I don't care, they're just two ways to apply paint. whatever gets the fucking picture on the canvas. I use them both, often at the same time".
User avatar
kim
[='±'=]
Posts: 12832
Joined: Tue May 30, 2006 8:30 am
Location: BE

Post by kim »

GeorgeF wrote:This is like a painter being told to choose between fluid brush strokes and that stabby motion.

I'm sure the reply 9/10 would be, "I don't care, they're just two ways to apply paint. whatever gets the fucking picture on the canvas. I use them both, often at the same time".
this