The basic difference is, are you ready for this :: Height!
That’s right – vertical food. The higher your build it the more ‘modern’ it is!
Also, many classical desserts have sauce ladled on the top while more modern varieties of desserts have sauces squirted under them, like in a pool of color and a little dashed across the plate like liquid confetti!
Hope this helps.
.
I’m a young pianist who has been playing for abut 7-8 years now.
I’m looking for anything that has a sort of Bobby Darrin/Ray Charles feel to it. I’ll even accept a book containing music from said artists, as long as its not something simple.
I apologize for the tough question. I’m simply stuck on what to buy, since music books these days are so expensive.
There is a piece of music that is very atmospheric, and is often played in documentaries when people are reflecting on their achievements, or about to face upto their fears or the unknown. I can’t remember where I have heard it, but it was defo in a documentary. Any suggestions would be appreciated, and I’ll bang them in YouTube and let you know if that’s what I mean!
As others have noted, there is a strong country influence present in Southern rock (but some blues artists can be a bit countrified at times). I have to note (pardon the pun) that most soloing in Southern rock is reminiscent of Celtic/Gaelic music: fast execution of pentatonic major and minor scales within a clearly defined rhythmic conception. Blues artists tend to use dominant scales far more often than the pentatonic major (the blues scale is a hybrid which does has elements of pentatonic minor and its parallel dominant 7th arpeggio) and the approach to rhythm is looser and more interpretive.
With no ad hominem to those who made this statement, lumping the Allman Brothers into Southern Rock isn’t altogether fair beyond the geographical consideration. When Duane Allman was alive that band could play the blues (show me a better reading of “Stormy Monday” than the version from the Fillmore recording!) and whose musical sensibilities even stretched towards jazz (”In Memory of Elizabeth Reed” or “Whipping Post” definitely are worlds away from Lynyrd Skynyrd, Molly Hatchet, or .38 Special). The Allmans would be linked more fairly with Little Feat, Dixie Dregs (later shortened to the Dregs, this outfit sounded like the Allman Brothers crossed with the Mahavishnu Orchestra), or Sea Level (which Chuck Leavell started after leaving the first post-Duane Allman Bros. lineup) if they must be categorized (maybe Southern fried funk or gumbo boogie?),
Again, no offense intended by the rant; just my humble opinion- but one forged from countless hours of listening to and playing music including, but not limited to, the above artists.