Top 14 Quotes & Sayings by Lee Ritenour

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American musician Lee Ritenour.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Lee Ritenour

Lee Mack Ritenour is an American jazz guitarist who has been active since the late 1960s.

Arranging is the way I put my stamp on my music as much as my guitar playing.
I had redesigned my entire amplifier system for this tour because airlines are very strict now.
Zamajobe is great. She's a terrific singer from South Africa. — © Lee Ritenour
Zamajobe is great. She's a terrific singer from South Africa.
If you play the very subtle jazz tunes with acoustic pianos, acoustic bass and it's a dead standard, you are going to play very differently. It depends on the music.
I used a baritone guitar with a very unusual tuning that became the body of the composition, while the classical guitar is on top of it with the main rhythm part.
In 2010, I had been playing guitar for 50 years.
I've done a lot of albums and I kinda know when I'm onto something that was inspirational for me to record and create, and this was one of those projects where I really enjoyed making the album.
My son Wesley has just turned 13. He was 12 during the recording of this record and he is quite a drummer already and has been studying drums since he was four, but he's also very interested in African percussion and studies percussion.
Even though there are some great keyboard players on the album, there are a number of songs with no keyboard on them and the backing is all guitar oriented. This is first time I've ever done this actually.
Well, Smoke n' Mirrors has very much a world music flavor and it doesn't park itself in one country. It borrows heavily from the Brazilian angle, which is dear to my heart, and I recorded several albums with that flavor.
I always love making albums. I'm passionate about it and it's something that's healthy for the soul and spirit.
I always recommend to any player to always compose their own music. It's one of the best things you can do to find a road to your own style.
Well, Smoke n' Mirrors has very much a world music flavor and it doesn't park itself in one country. It borrows heavily from the Brazilian angle, which is dear to my heart, and I recorded several albums with that flavor. Probably even more so than the Brazilian flavor, there's an African, South African and West African influence and on a couple of other tracks there's some Latin flavor and there's some Indian tables on one track, all centered around my jazz guitar and acoustic guitars, and very much a Lee Ritenour sound.
Ive done a lot of albums and I kinda know when Im onto something that was inspirational for me to record and create, and this was one of those projects where I really enjoyed making the album.
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