mike_mccue
I've finally heard enough interviews with old Neil to realize that I can easily listen to music played by people who are a lot happier about playing it.
:-(
In the day and age of insipid music, that has as much feeling as a refrigerator, I find his working through a song really good, and despite the miss of a note or two here and there, in the end, the feeling comes out just fine ... and this is something that you can not teach in music ... and is one of its most important and endearing things about rock music in the 20th century. Perfection is an illusion, based on our preferences, and does not, necessarily, have anything to do with the "music" in your heart at all.
It goes back to that old joke from Peter Michael Hamel's book ... that guy playing one string on his instrument and saying, happily, that "I got it I got it ... " ... and the folks next to him are going ... what? But you, as an audience, have no idea what that "dream" or "feeling" is! And hope that you can find out one day, so that the "waht" is no longer invisible, and you now can compose and play ... easily!
The worst concert I have ever been to and walked out of, was ... Deep Purple, with Leon Russell. Too loud and in the end, DP were out of tune and horrible! Long Beach Arena eons ago! Also walked out of an Ozric Tentacles show here in Portland, because they had no one on the sound, and the band sounded worse than your kids garage band ... at least you know the kids tried, but the folks here that put the show on, had issues with keyboards disappearing, including Ed's in the middle of a song, not enough power at one time and the bass dropping altogether ... you could see the lights go totally off on that side ... it was horrible! And Ed did not get frustrated, but seeing the drummer have to end a song surreptitiously, was really sad and bad. They had no crew whatsoever, or anyone to help them that knew what they were doing!