If you like this type of groove i highly suggest listening to Vulf their song, WONGS CAFE /// You got to be you has the same vibe of this one and has a very funky beat too.
The instrument on the Bottom is the OP-1 by teenage engineering. One of the most fun pieces of equipment I have for on-the-go music. It's an all in one synthesizer and music production station, and is so fun to play around with. However, this guy has it right to be playing with a midi, the keyboard on the OP-1 is limited to just less than 2 octaves, though the range of the instrument is massive, and everything built into it (software-wise) is amazing.
@@brodyquestionmark A solo minus the solo. Imagine Stevie Wonder doing a drum solo, but instead of letting rip on his kit, he just played a straight beat for 60 seconds. That too would be an absolutely vintage no-solo solo.
There's always someone like you, isn't there? Using fancy terminology, trying to look smart to point out something with which you're not quite good enough of a musician to impress someone like me. The D natural is functioning as the flat 13th of the G flat 7 chord, not the 5th of the chord. Other than that, go study some big boy music theory, stop trying to correct the professionals, and groove on, amateur. Leave music theory to the adults. You must be a choir guy. Ooooooooooo buuuuuuuurn!
grace notes. they're not generally played in time and are sort of like a slide that you'd do on a guitar. they're meant to lead you into the proceeding notes.
I liked the music, but the transcription, although technically correct, was musically not. Sixteenth notes should have been eighth notes, and eighth notes should have been quarter notes.
@@jean-naymar602 I'm looking at it strictly from a stylistic point of view, where it's standard practice to swing eight notes but play sixteenth notes straight.
I thought that looked like a fun lil' field recorder. I found out it was called the OP-1. Then I found out it cost almost two grand. I'll stick to my MC Crypt 37a.