DATE: Fri, 08 Apr 1994 15:01:49 CDT From: sawy~di.com Subject: Re: How Does He Do It?
Joe Terrasi writes: > Damn, but you gotta love Winslow's answers!
Amen. We're all learning a lot from Winslow.
Winslow, your answer is beautifully specific and daunting. It falls into the rough category of "first do this nearly impossible thing, then do this other nearly impossible thing, and then do them one after another, back and forth, at dazzling speed." I look at your diagram of the single-hole-block, | C | X | G |, and sigh -- it looks so generously large on the screen, but when I get the harp in my mouth and try it I might as well be trying to pick a lock with my tongue.
Daunting though it is, the details give me something I can work on and, in time, I may master them. This is very different from the answer I got from Kim Wilson, himself, last night, backstage at the House Of Blues in Cambridge. I tried to put the question to him but I had a tough time making myself understood in describing the effect. I never fully succeeded, not for lack of trying or lack of his interest or patience. When he got the jist of it he said it probably entailed flicking the tongue from side to side.
During his first set he did a long solo, a capella save for the drummer beating his sticks together. He made heavy use of tongue lifts, on and off the bottom notes of a wide embouchure. He did them in succession on different chords and kept up a great chugging, syncopated rhythm against long wailing high notes. When we talked about the "split tremelo" he mentioned that this tongue lifting is fairly new with him. I took advantage of the chance to ask his opinion of tongue blocking vs. pucker in general -- does he use one or the other primarily? No, he answered, "I just wing it, mix it all up, use whatever feels right. All these different things give different sounds and it's important to get a big variety."
A few observations about his performance... He used a bullet mic plugged into a Fender Concert Amp (4 10" speakers). No volume control on the mic, no effects boxes. He left his controls around the same settings all evening: volume at 2 o'clock, treble at 10 o'clock, bass at 2 o'clock. [I assume this means a volume setting around 7; how he cranks it that high without feedback is a mystery.] His amp was mic'ed to the house PA. His tone is always thick with a kind of icy frosting of high frequencies. He works hard and looks very fit -- he's lean and muscular -- a great accomplishment for someone who has been a performer for 20 or more years.
I told him about our harp list and how he is mentioned often and in the highest regard. He was very glad about that.