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jontolton
Добавлен 17 июн 2011
John Martyn - The Visual Guitar Solo [live 1978]
John Martyn plays his "visual guitar solo" (Seven Black Roses) on Rockpalast, 1978
Go to 1:10 if you want to skip the banter, but that's part of the performance, isn't it?
Go to 1:10 if you want to skip the banter, but that's part of the performance, isn't it?
Просмотров: 11 735
Видео
Dylan, Richards and Wood talking about Mick Taylor before Live Aid
Просмотров 189 тыс.Год назад
Bob Dylan, Ronnie Wood and Keith Richards discuss Mark Knopfler and Mick Taylor whilst rehearsing for Live Aid, 12th July 1985. Dylan had previously worked with Knopfler on Slow Train Coming and Infidels, and with Taylor on Infidels and the 1984 "Real Live" tour. There were a couple of tricky bits to transcribe, including one interesting bit that Ron Wood says about the song Leather Jacket whic...
Does anyone know the first verse of this song?
Просмотров 29 тыс.Год назад
After a bit of vamping, Bob decides he can't actually remember the song. This is cut from the official upload of Vol 6 on RUclips because they don't include the pre-gap audio on any tracks, so you lose the in-between song banter. You probably want to go here next to hear the actual song: ruclips.net/video/Sy9jb_YOCoA/видео.html
McGuinn & Clark w/ David Crosby - Live 1977
Просмотров 11 тыс.Год назад
David Crosby joins in with a McGuinn & Clark show at the Boardinghouse in San Francisco 8th December 1977. Gene Clark opens with a two song solo set, followed by two from David Crosby and two from Roger McGuinn. The three then join together to run through old Byrds songs and some newer ones from Gene. Photos are just representative of the time and are not from this actual show. 0:00 Denver or W...
McGuinn & Clark w/ David Crosby - Eight Miles High [Live 1977]
Просмотров 39 тыс.Год назад
Roger McGuinn, Gene Clark and David Crosby end their show at the Boardinghouse, San Francisco with Eight Miles High. December 8th, 1977. Fairly certain the picture is not from this show (no drums at this show), but it is certainly around that period (Crosby joined them and Chris Hillman a couple of times in 1977/78). For this show, Crosby essentially replaced Hillman, doing a two song solo set ...
We Bid You Goodnight - Music Box version
Просмотров 29Год назад
A music box style version of We Bid You Goodnight, perfect as a lullaby
Mick taylor with john mayall at 18 already played with so much more soulful and technique thant ron wood ever had in his entire life
His music was from his imagination . He never learned how to play guitar..
This song is in DADDAD for anyone interested. There appears to be a lot of false information bouncing around about the song. DADDAD with a rolling capo from 2nd to 4th to 5th to 7th back down to 2nd fret where he occasionally drops the high D string down and back up again by ear.
Am I the only one who skips the Bob Dylan covers?
The greatest rock'n'roll band in 70's THE INCREDIBLE ... ... "MICK TAYLOR and his Rolling Stones"
Honestly those are accurate words that people who arent musicians or in bands may not realize but they apply to everything really. Just because you are a good guitarist doesnt mean you can handle the road, doesnt mean your personality allows you to flourish in a group dynamic where you must compromise etc…
Michael Clarke had impressive hair.
Sorry, lads... only there for 5 years, but Mick Taylor *was the Stones*. Zenith. Enough said.
I couldn't imagine being in a band with Crosby
Ron Wood is a fucking chancer. He turned the Stones into a cabaret act.
What are you in it for, Mike? "Money." Appreciate his honesty.
Just one example - "Dead Flowers" - Mick Taylor's guitar playing on both the studio & live versions is nothing short of sublime.
I love Ronnie Wood, but he needs to LEAD his own band. He's not a second banana. He's a great songwriter, too. Rod Stewart didn't write those classics by himself. Mick Taylor was the gold dust on top of what the Stones provided him - the great songs, rhythm section, Keith.
A non drummer trying to tell a drummer what to do…. The worst..
Sheer joy❤
M.T's talent ran circles around the band...maybe he just wasn't into the heavy drug use as Richards and got the hell out of there to save his own life.
By the time the lead in was over I had sung the entire song!!!🤣
Boy, do they sound stoned.
A lot of Truth here, if not opinion. The fact about some artists are just better at accompaniment, over their own writing & perfomance attempts. That can be said about many, many musicians.
'His first group, the Gods'..... Mick was what??? 16-17? this was he group BEFORE he joined Mayall at age 17. No wonder he had issues with going on stage!!
Think it's one of Bob's on the way homer's... you just don't get it, until you're on the way home.
As much of a disgusting person as he was, he was a remarkable vocalist/musician. Hi timber and vibrato were amazing.
Mick Taylor made too much difference in the Stones. The Stones lost a true lead blues player. Ronnie Wood is mediocre at playing guitar
Even without the sound issues, I can't imagine three accoustic guitars really doing well. Maybe this would have done better: a) Dylan only singing and harmonica b) Ron Wood on accoustic guitar c) Keith Richards on electic guitar, doing some fills.
Dosn't Matter what level your at in Music. Band's can sometimes be a Drag! They must be out of Hooch or Blow? Or The 🥁 knows he's not getting any💲in 🙃 "Royalties" So why even Try?
David Crosby seems like a positive constructive kind of guy that would always get along great with his bandmates.
Bob is sitting and is still taller than those other two, they look like Bob's youngsters..
He left his mark. Diamonds - Ya Ya, Sticky, Exile. Retire. Play with who you want. He may have had regrets on occasion, but we all make decisions based on what the soul needs at any given time.
They still managed to make their best album.
It's cool that Mick Taylor played lead guitar on Bob Dylan's 1983 Infidels
Man Hillman really turned on Mike, wild stuff. He was a great drummer and rip.
The quotes attributed to Chris Hillman don’t sound like him to me. Also, Chris says that he was “scared to death” when he was in the Byrds.
Thank you from a Gene Clark fan.
For any guitar players out there, John is playing in an open tuning, the intervals are the same as in DADGAD tuning, but he's dropped down two full tones and his open strings are tuned down to Bb - F - Bb - Eb - F - Bb He starts with a capo on at the 2nd fret and fine tunes the strings, which, with the capo in position, the strings then sound as C-G-C-F-G-C. Whilst fine tuning John jokingly mentions 'I can see clearly now' but the riff sounds very much like Bert Jansch's arrangement of 'Black mountain side' [0:53] later made famous on Led Zeppelin's debut album.
It’s DADDAD…
And it’s called Blackwaterside. Jimmy Page stole the arrangement from Bert and renamed it Black Mountainside and got out of crediting Bert by citing it as a ‘traditional’ song.
I think whoever got to come see this show was blessed extremely, the one time the Big 3 of the Byrds did a thought out program long after the breakup
The song that broke up The Byrds! They're all acting like jerks. I would have left right there.
Mick was a Great Player !
One of best videos ever lmao
That's interesting to hear Keef's unguarded comments about MT. Pretty fair and accurate I guess. MT leaves one feeling "if only", but we are blessed for all his talent. IMHO, that was the Stones' best period.
I think a lot of it comes from the old adage 'not everyone can hack it, being in the Stones'. Look at Brian, he was a great talent, and enhanced so much of the early stuff with his talent, and beautiful playing of so many different instruments. Unfortunately, he had trouble dealing with the enormous fame that came to them, and of course, couldn't handle his addictions. Mick Taylor was younger than the rest of the band, and was never the best fit as a member of the Stones, whereas Ronnie was an ideal fit, even though he may not be as good a guitarist as Mick. I think you just need to appreciate the varied line-ups that this band have had over 60 years.
Brian lived the life the other Stones only wrote about.
The thing with Brian was how he treated people much of the time. Hard to be in a band with a coworker like that.
sounds like they are all High as a Kite
I still have his first two albums - London Conversation and The Tumbler - both brilliant!
you can tell he was stoned....
In creating it's rarely a first draw perfect. Now a sloppy beat, the endresult is a pure mesmerizing, Americana, almost fushion between jazz and country way of playing. JJ Cale's sound is famous for it; the solution to the problem here. His band also plays fasttempo but laidback in the same time. Like a boat floating, but then on horses galloping.
No harmony ever touched what McGuinn Clark and Crosby did together😌
The Duo gigs that Roger Mcguinn & Gene Clark did in late ‘77 & early ‘78 just before MCH became a thing, have some great harmonies. Their voices together complemented each other really nicely. It was their recognition of that complimentary sound that brought them together as foundational Byrds, along with a shared vision / awareness of how the “ new sounds” the Beatles had just brought to the fore, could perhaps be applied to material/genres they were already familiar with plus inspiring them to write their own sings, which Gene Clark had already been doing for some time.
Their sound together was also what incited Crosby to want to join them , creating that Trio of Voices. 3 uniquely identifiable voices that worked beautifully together. 💖
For someone who's mumbled his lyrics live for the past 40 years Dylan shouldn't talk about someone having an off night. All I know is Infidels and Real Live have some great guitar work as did The Stones in the Mick Taylor era.
I read somewhere that Chris listened back to this and says he regrets berrating Michael
just play it likr you mean it
Dear God ~ thank you for Bob Dylan
recording date?
Around mid 1964 if I remember right. It's on "Another Side of Bob Dylan". Unless you're asking about this video, that I don't know, though it might be from the New York Philharmonic Hall in late 1964. Hard to say since he was doing a lot of concerts around that time.