Evan,
You completely missed my point. I am not talking about beginning and ending notes. I am talking about the actual legato performance, which is CONTAINED IN THE CONNECTION BETWEEN NOTES. That is a performance indistinguishable aesthetically from a run. The only difference is it is very fast and almost imperceptible. But it is the exact same principle, and you are contradicting yourself by allowing one but not the other.
For the person who doesn't like the fact I pointed out Evans music was good -
that's my opinion. You can have your own, but don't act as if that is ridiculous. I don't appreciate that attitude one damn bit.
This whole thread has become truly like arguing how many angels can fit on the head of a pin. All I was tryng to do was state how valuable the dynamic change samples are and also that I haven't been able to use complex performance elements like runs, but I don't think this is a hard and fast thing at all. What Fred said is perfect and sums it up completely. I've often noticed how all the great artists in history have been first of all practical workmen, and only after that "artists."
You completely missed my point. I am not talking about beginning and ending notes. I am talking about the actual legato performance, which is CONTAINED IN THE CONNECTION BETWEEN NOTES. That is a performance indistinguishable aesthetically from a run. The only difference is it is very fast and almost imperceptible. But it is the exact same principle, and you are contradicting yourself by allowing one but not the other.
For the person who doesn't like the fact I pointed out Evans music was good -
that's my opinion. You can have your own, but don't act as if that is ridiculous. I don't appreciate that attitude one damn bit.
This whole thread has become truly like arguing how many angels can fit on the head of a pin. All I was tryng to do was state how valuable the dynamic change samples are and also that I haven't been able to use complex performance elements like runs, but I don't think this is a hard and fast thing at all. What Fred said is perfect and sums it up completely. I've often noticed how all the great artists in history have been first of all practical workmen, and only after that "artists."