Man, when I am playing this kind of stuff I am fighting, and sweating, and concentrated, and Tim is just smiling, nice and easy, like he is saying good morning. Thanks papa and Tim, great stuff.
I'm a big fan of both players and I love how they teach the approach...that is what is important. I love the phrasing. The little fingerpluck think papastache I watched in another video has transformed my blues rock playing..
Tim Pierce, you are the tastiest guitar player that I ever heard and that's a lot to say because I grew up listening to Michael Landau, Dann Huff and Steve Lukather all are awesome guitarist but your feeling and ease is remarkable. Thank you very much Papa@Stache because thanks to you I had the opportunity to know about Tim's existence, once again, THANKS !!I
He started in the 1st scale went down to the 5th and back to the first then to the second position but showed different ways of utilizing them in riffs then to the style we are all familiar with when it comes to Hendrix style . Great video broke it down to really understand . Lone the hedrix style Harmony's 3 rd and first string you can clearly hear Hendrix style . You guys are the best !!
I love how Tim explains what he does, how he does it and why he does it in his lessons. He makes it easy for anyone to follow. I would really like to see Bleeding Hearts from Valley of Neptune combining rhythm and solo. Thanks papastache!
Great stuff Tim really enjoyed that I'm so used to trying to pick each note this slows me down I have watched how you do it and that sounds so fluent thanks!
Amazing guitar player, very tasteful, great instinct, that goes by probably pretty well with simplicity of his music knowledge, he doesn't seems to know a lot about theory (he talk about his bending up to the 9 but he's bending up to the minor 10)... As a jazz guy learning the blues and rock thing, it actually helps me understand how it's really about simplicity, instinct, letting go, etc... Thx, great video!
Hi Steve. Ok, the little theory lesson. :) Actually yes, there's such thing as a 10th, it's a 3rd an octave up (same principle as the 2nd and 9th, the 6th and the 13th). Not often mentioned when you study basic harmony, but it has a significant importance in voicing, in orchestration... On the guitar, if you play a low F and a low open A, you'll have a 3rd interval; if you play the same low F with the higher A (2nd fret on the G string), you'll hear a very different color. Even more obvious in a diatonic ascending motion: if you go up from F, to G, A and Bb on the low E string, and playing at the same time A, Bb, C and D, on the low open A string for the 3rd, you'll get this characteristic clustered sound. For a more open sound, same bass line with the same A, Bb, C and D notes on the G string for the 10th. Looks complicated on paper, but very easy to do, and that shows pretty well the difference (vive la différence!).
@@thomasbell6834 the progression uses all E shape Barre chords. It goes B C B A. However the guitar is tuned down a half step so I although you're playing B C B A position the sound that is made is A# B A# G#.
me thinks that Tim is the current incarnation of Siddhartha Gautama. Check out the expression on his face as he plays. Pure bliss. He is on another plane altogether.
Oh Yeah !!! Good Stuff Guys ☺☺😎👊💯💯An Excellent Topic to Delve into.... Jimi's Blues was Just All His Own Absolutely Phenomenal.. Hear My Train a Comin... Berkeley... F**kin Rap ☺☺😎👊💯💯💖
Wow! A++ I guess I'll sleep when I'm dead. Have to try this now! Tim, your teaching style great. Why? Not too fast but not too slow. Calm confident tone. Great explanations. And neat little easy to learn little gems. Phrases like "I'll hang around here" and "walk and land" "safe to land" (not resolve with the tonic or something) Plain language.
I loved this.... Though watching Tim and the ease with which he goes around the fretboard makes me feel just a tad useless :-) Great lesson as always! Thx.
Nice. Do you have a subtle delay on in the background? Kept noticing it, just barely. It sounds good. Love this lesson. Love that you guys are willing to let someone else teach your lessons every now and then. He's a great teacher. Suscribed!
On the album Green Bullfrog, there's one guy with a really smooth style. He plays the 2nd solo on Bullfrog and the 1st Solo on I'm a Free Man. If you could demonstrate that style that would be awesome. Thanks
really enjoyed this lesson :) would it be at all possible to do a lesson on yer blues by the beatles? the eric clapton parts when he played it at the rolling stones rock n rolll circus, cheers marty
Don't sell yourself short Brett you kill it playing Hendrix also, you play like Tim where you put your soul into it and don't sound like a robot copy of Jimi like guys like Randy Hansen, I give Randy a lot of credit for really sounding like Hendrix but it's not the same, Randy is a great Hendrix cover player and can play note for note but his soul isn't in the guitar like you guys, I've heard him try to put his soul into a couple Hendrix songs and it just wasn't there like when you and Tim play. Both you guys are my guitar idols.
When I started playing guitar in the 80's, nobody played like Hendrix. It was all Eddie Van Halen, Randy Rhoads, and Yngwie. I think i was the only guitar player I knew who put time into learning the style. Today, I see teenagers playing Hendrix note for note. I don't know if this is a good thing or not. Maybe playing like Hendrix has become a cliche like playing Eddie Van Halen riffs in the 80s. I don't know.
+papastache102 thanks for the reply! Tim's solo is so epic and it's explained so well, but it's all new territory for me. Still trying to wrap my head around it! 😆
+papastache102 thanks for the reply! Tim's solo is so epic and it's explained so well, but it's all new territory for me. Still trying to wrap my head around it! 😆