@@000Skill gain actually amplifies mistakes. Gain is very sensitive (which is why tapping is easier with it. And why notes hold longer due to your feedbacks) if you don't fret properly you can definitely hear it than with cleans, cause clean is low volume and less sensitive. It CAN hide bad technique but definitely not incorrect playing
You know what though, the fact that this guitarist is hearing the chord progressions and knows exactly which rock/metal solo to play over them shows he has complete mastery of soloing over chord changes, actually making him an expert jazz guitarist.
@@minigungaming5915yep, people are always shocked when they find out i also listen to metal, then i play them some songs back to back and theyre like "ohhhhhhhhhhh... oh... wait what??"
I mean that's just Jazz etiquette. Even if you don't like something, play along for the moment, if you have to: talk it out afterwards backstage. Can't have the gig break down on stage. And most of the time it's perfectly fine for someone of the band to take the linelight for a bit and then fall back in line so the next one can do their awesome thing. Provided of course everyone stays in rythm and key.
I wrote exactly the same thing so I deleted my comment, I love that the expression is just universally known as the "stank face" Jazz man just can't help but vibe to the pentatonic scale.
Honestly, the rock/metal solo (in swing btw!) gives a great contrast here. Almost classical/spanish vibe. I frankly think the jazz context improves the solo and the solo highlights the groove. This is just stellar!!
this what I want from jazz. I love a good jazzy tune that still is fast and upbeat with a catchy melody, but because it's jazz you still have all the instruments doing their own thing
I'm with the rhythm guitarist in this one. I was also in disbelief. I instantly recognized the solo, yet it took a few seconds to fully comprehend those crisp notes which may have been polemically sent. These never disappoint!
@@vvoof2601 I didn’t, thanks for sharing that info! That’s pretty cool. I just thought it was funny from my point of view being comfortable with playing. Realizing I play best when I’m not thinking!
I had a friend make a song where he hired a guitarist to play lead for the recording of the track. The guitar player played the solo from “every rose has its thorn”, note for note and my buddy didn’t catch it until he played the song for a few of his friends 😂
Many good guitarists usually don't play Mr. Crowley because that solo makes them nervous. But this gentleman played it note for note and that too using a clean tone. Salute sir. 🤘🏽
I don't know what's more impressive, the fact that the rock guitarist can play all of these solos, or the jazz musician knowing all of these songs......
This is legit the first version of Mr. Crowley I‘ve heard and I love everything about it, the clean performance, the tone (soo tasty), the faces,… it‘s great!