Your assessment of the Mahavishnu orchestra is right. It's beyond rock / jazz fusion. I saw the Mahavishnu Orchestra several times in the 70's and there was that huge religious vibe that went along with it. Wherever they played, they turned that venue into a cathedral.....and the evil spirits that normally lingered in those establishments didn't appreciate it much....especially at a place like Winterland in San Francisco. One with an awareness could sense that strong "good vs evil" battle that would take place while they were playing, My group of musician friends always simply referred to John McLaughlin as " Mahavishnu" back then. That was a very unique and special time for music and then faded fast by the late 70's. I never experienced any time period like it since.
"You know you know" sounded even better played on the 12string of his Gibson double neck when I saw them live ,those open string arppeggiated patterns had a more sonarous affect on the Iner mounting flame stuff & on the Birds of fire album and a few after that.. loveed those two Marshall days, what a beautiful raw tone.
Thank you for making this video giving an insight into John McLaughlin's chord playing. I too became enthralled by it when in the late eighties I took up the guitar discovering those fusion players of a decade earlier. You are right it is not quiet jazz nor rock or blues which I love but something other worldly and I loved it. This video was a real treat to watch waking up this Easter morning reminiscing my youth.Thanks
I just found out about that Gmaj13#11 after seeing Shakti last month. He played the Lila's Dance intro and I was determined to finally figure out how to play it. Great video and channel! Your chords of Steely Dan vid was awesome, too.
I can see where John's ears were going, from experimenting with these lush Zawinul-type chords and especially the particular modes he overlaid while soloing, which isn't always the obvious mode unless you're hearing it. The droning and tesselations of notes in the chords is reminiscent of Indian music. It all came together brilliantly. What ears, man! And he practiced 8 - 10 hours a day. It shows.
I have this great memory of playing the first part of "Dance of Maya" on an acoustic guitar while my 7-yo Godson played a zombie video game that was so scary for him that he didn't want to play it if I wasn't in the room with him; but he LOVED how "Dance of Maya" was enhancing the scariness in a way he could still handle (as long as I was in the room). 😱🎃👹🧟♂💚🧟♀🎶🎵
Hi ! Great demo, since I’m struggling with the thumb technique, witch is unusual for me 🥵, and saw lot of time how easy JM play like this. Also, one stunning chord arpeggio progression is on Apocalypse, after the orchestra storm. Very tricky. Fast, patterns like Dance of Maya, incredible ambiance !
I was an army bandsman (guitar) in the early eighties. Besides having to audition to be accepted as a player, all players from all branches of service had to attend and graduate the school of music (six months of intense study and practice), located in Norfolk, VA. This was after you successfully completed basic training. Anyway, on the percussion instructor's door were copies of Billy Cobham's progress reports...all A's. (I believe he was in the Navy)You already had to have some chops and musical experience before you were even given the chance to audition. It had been a long time since his attendance and my attendance, yet to those of us in the know, it was super cool!
I was so thrilled to be going to a Mahavishnu orchestra concert at my college one night in the early seventies that I didn’t pay close attention to the poster which if I had I would have seen that it clearly said The Hahavishnu Orchestra. Imagine my altered experience
Well done ! First time I've heard somebody playing these chords..besides McLauglin. Brings back those great memories and feelings when I first heard this material back in the 70's. The phase shifter is set just right too.
Great episode!! Gary Richrath, I know I’m not the only one that would see your take on his playing, I was born in the Midwest, he’s the reason I hold a Les Paul in my hands 😎 Thanks Dave for all you do !
Reminds me how wonderful John's chordal compositions are I've been listening to for 50 years! Lilas dance especially. Takes me to another place. Well done. Tabs would be nice, just being cheeky 😊
Love your playing first of all. Secondly, very informative as I am a huge fan of JM. Those Chords are indeed challenging, but instantly they take you into another haunting place.
Amazing to see/hear someone playing these mesmerizing guitar parts I've been listening to for years! Who writes parts like these? It's like music from another dimension. Btw 'Lila's Dance' is pronounced "LEELA"
Thank you for all this! One comment: I'm rather sure, that concerning You Know You Know there is something lacking in your chords. The first chord (Em79/B) has both notes: f-sharp (4th string) AND g (open 3rd g-string) TOGETHER. Analog for the B-Part: the first chord (Am79/E) has both notes: c (string 3) AND b (open 2nd b-string). What is your opinion? 🙂 Guenther Doblies from Switzerland
Awesome Dave, I have listened to John McLaughlin but never the Mahavishnu Orchestra, New music day for my wife and me! As always thanks for the lesson bro 🎸🎸👍
Un grand merci pour cette video que je cherchais depuis longtemps - la différence avec tous ces guitaristes qui vont vite, c'est que eux ne montent que des gammes, alors que JML fait de la musique ! Il les enterre tous !!! La différence, c'est la spiritualité dans la musique, alors que les autres ne sont que dans le commercial et l'esbrouffe - Ne pas oublier Miles Davis sans qui rien ne serait en musique moderne...et John Coltrane, Dieu sur terre !
For the second part of You Know You Know, the Em is from the 7th fret, the D from the 5th, and then the Bm A and Em are the same as the beginning. So it’s a straight shot down the fretboard on the A string...7 5 2 open and the down to the E string. I don’t mean this negative at all, I love how you are bringing these tunes to your fans (which I am one) and your delivery is always excellent. Another note for influence...JM is Jeff Beck’s biggest modern influences. There a many articles and interviews with Jeff where he details how JM the MO influenced his playing as the future of guitar and music, leading him right into the recording the Blow by Blow album. For Wired Nawarda who drummed with the MO plays and wrote most of the album, and Jam Hammer played and wrote on it too of course. As a matter of fact, one of Jeff’s biggest tributes to the MO is, Jeff starts almost every single concert with a Mahavishnu tune. It’s like every tour he picks one of two JM tunes to open his shows.
Great lesson David and thank you. Exactly the kind of lesson I hoped to see. If you don't mind, check out Pierre Bensusan, he plays in DADGAD tuning and I'd enjoy a lesson on his chordal work. Once again, thank you for the John McLaughlin lesson. Wonderfully done!!
Love the mahavishnu orchestra Riffs your playing so well,the right tempo as well bravo also love the inner moulting flame framed album cover on the wall 😢🎸
Thanks for this. Love John McLaughlin's playing. Would there be a 3-Licks vid in the future? ;p I'm obsessed with the record he did with Santana in '73 lately. (Love, Supreme Surrender) - it's so great.
My first experience of John McLaughlin and Mahavishnu Orchestra was actually Inner Mounting Flame, from where some of your selections originated. Very intimidating guitar parts for a novice player as I was back in the 70s. Jazz-Fusion was interesting to me for a while back then in the 70s-80s. I really enjoyed Scofield, DiMeola, Clarke and Corea et all, but I find that style can be a challenging listen now. I must have spent too long in the pentatonics.
Would help with some form of music notation, at the very least tabs with chord symbols, but music notation even better. The most characteristic chord of McLaughlin’s is a major chord with a bass a half-step below the chord’s root…I was surprised that you didn’t mention it.
Cool lesson Dave, i think i can hear Johns lead guitar influence on Eric Johnson and i think i might of heard Eric say it himself in an interview:) Please do a chordplay on Mike Landau?.. many thanks, alex
Love this stuff, I’m a huge JM fan. John plays Meeting of the Spirits with his thumb on the first chord. He also keeps the open G string ringing through both chords. So the only thing that changes is the bass note.
Wow.. Ive never heard any. I did hear the violin player once but that was with the Dixie Dregs in Fort Worth in 1991.. Great show. Huge Dregs fan as well< I still think Steve Morse is way underated guitar player, at least by the public unless you been going to deep purple concerts..lol
John uses his thumb most of the time in chords as in MotS, Lila. Beautiful work tho. Thanks for putting it up. Some of the best guitar music ever written
There is a video of him somewhere where he's talking about harmony and he plays 2nds, 3rds, 4ths and 5ths to demonstrate. His playing is so fluid when he does it. I can't find it anymore.
Geez. Trying to figure out the fingering to the G13#11 on Lilas' Dance is tough, and online has variations that are digit twisters or just don't sound right. What's your recommendation on proper fingering?
Ironically, guitar players like Jeff Beck and Chris Poland `re more influenced by Mahavishnu`s keyboard wizard Jan Hammer. His Minimoog-solo style like the bendings and the major pentatonic with the minor seventh runs was a huge influence (for me too)!
Your assessment of the Mahavishnu orchestra is right. It's beyond rock / jazz fusion. I saw the Mahavishnu Orchestra several times in the 70's and there was that huge religious vibe that went along with it. Wherever they played, they turned that venue into a cathedral.....and the evil spirits that normally lingered in those establishments didn't appreciate it much....especially at a place like Winterland in San Francisco. One with an awareness could sense that strong "good vs evil" battle that would take place while they were playing, My group of musician friends always simply referred to John McLaughlin as " Mahavishnu" back then. That was a very unique and special time for music and then faded fast by the late 70's. I never experienced any time period like it since.
I was fortunate to see the Mahavishnu Orchestra perform Birds of Fire. The word intense comes to mind. This band was my gateway into jazz.
"You know you know" sounded even better played on the 12string of his Gibson double neck when I saw them live ,those open string arppeggiated patterns had a more sonarous affect on the Iner mounting flame stuff & on the Birds of fire album and a few after that.. loveed those two Marshall days, what a beautiful raw tone.
"Something like that. . ." Proceeds to play it perfectly.
Cheers for this, just what I was looking for! Once I found John McLaughlin I never looked back.....
For me Mahavisnu, is it. There will never be another, especially in this times.
I noticed that the cover of Mahavishnu's first album, The Inner Mounting Flame, is hanging on the wall. What a great band. Thanks for this video.
Inner Mounting Flame blew me away. It really changed my playing.
Thank you for making this video giving an insight into John McLaughlin's chord playing. I too became enthralled by it when in the late eighties I took up the guitar discovering those fusion players of a decade earlier. You are right it is not quiet jazz nor rock or blues which I love but something other worldly and I loved it. This video was a real treat to watch waking up this Easter morning reminiscing my youth.Thanks
Inner mounting flame was the album that made me “get” fusion. Changed my musical life profoundly.
John played the Meeting of the Spirits-Chords with the thumb on the bass notes. Nice to see on older Videos.
I would love to learn more about the chord progression on the song "Resolution."
Unbelievable guitarist... I loved how he threw a blues riff in there .thank you David
I just found out about that Gmaj13#11 after seeing Shakti last month. He played the Lila's Dance intro and I was determined to finally figure out how to play it. Great video and channel! Your chords of Steely Dan vid was awesome, too.
I can see where John's ears were going, from experimenting with these lush Zawinul-type chords and especially the particular modes he overlaid while soloing, which isn't always the obvious mode unless you're hearing it. The droning and tesselations of notes in the chords is reminiscent of Indian music. It all came together brilliantly. What ears, man! And he practiced 8 - 10 hours a day. It shows.
You’ve nailed Birds of Fire, no.. all of John’s songs perfectly. Best I’ve ever heard outside of the original. Deep Heaviness!!
thank you for making this difficult, fascinating art of guitar a bit more accessible to us mortals
I have this great memory of playing the first part of "Dance of Maya" on an acoustic guitar while my 7-yo Godson played a zombie video game that was so scary for him that he didn't want to play it if I wasn't in the room with him; but he LOVED how "Dance of Maya" was enhancing the scariness in a way he could still handle (as long as I was in the room). 😱🎃👹🧟♂💚🧟♀🎶🎵
Hi ! Great demo, since I’m struggling with the thumb technique, witch is unusual for me 🥵, and saw lot of time how easy JM play like this.
Also, one stunning chord arpeggio progression is on Apocalypse, after the orchestra storm. Very tricky. Fast, patterns like Dance of Maya, incredible ambiance !
This is really great stuff. One of the most influencial musicians of the jazz age. Cheers
I was an army bandsman (guitar) in the early eighties. Besides having to audition to be accepted as a player, all players from all branches of service had to attend and graduate the school of music (six months of intense study and practice), located in Norfolk, VA. This was after you successfully completed basic training. Anyway, on the percussion instructor's door were copies of Billy Cobham's progress reports...all A's. (I believe he was in the Navy)You already had to have some chops and musical experience before you were even given the chance to audition. It had been a long time since his attendance and my attendance, yet to those of us in the know, it was super cool!
The Mahavishnu period was and is so unique. Do you have the TABS for those pieces? Thanks.
I was so thrilled to be going to a Mahavishnu orchestra concert at my college one night in the early seventies that I didn’t pay close attention to the poster which if I had I would have seen that it clearly said The Hahavishnu Orchestra. Imagine my altered experience
Thanks for mentioning Robert Fripp!!
Well done ! First time I've heard somebody playing these chords..besides McLauglin. Brings back those great memories and feelings when I first heard this material back in the 70's. The phase shifter is set just right too.
This is not easy music but you play and teach it very well. Thank you.
Great episode!! Gary Richrath, I know I’m not the only one that would see your take on his playing, I was born in the Midwest, he’s the reason I hold a Les Paul in my hands 😎
Thanks Dave for all you do !
Wonderful, thank you 🙏
" Spooky and mysterious" ... absolutely .
Reminds me how wonderful John's chordal compositions are I've been listening to for 50 years!
Lilas dance especially. Takes me to another place.
Well done. Tabs would be nice, just being cheeky 😊
Love your playing first of all. Secondly, very informative as I am a huge fan of JM. Those Chords are indeed challenging, but instantly they take you into another haunting place.
Amazing to see/hear someone playing these mesmerizing guitar parts I've been listening to for years! Who writes parts like these? It's like music from another dimension. Btw 'Lila's Dance' is pronounced "LEELA"
I love and adore John Mclaughlin and his music.
Such a gentle lesson of something difficult. You're the best.
Thank you for all this! One comment: I'm rather sure, that concerning You Know You Know there is something lacking in your chords. The first chord (Em79/B) has both notes: f-sharp (4th string) AND g (open 3rd g-string) TOGETHER. Analog for the B-Part: the first chord (Am79/E) has both notes: c (string 3) AND b (open 2nd b-string). What is your opinion? 🙂 Guenther Doblies from Switzerland
Awesome Dave, I have listened to John McLaughlin but never the Mahavishnu Orchestra, New music day for my wife and me! As always thanks for the lesson bro 🎸🎸👍
I've listened to this music a million times and he's spot on Bravo to him
Un grand merci pour cette video que je cherchais depuis longtemps - la différence avec tous ces guitaristes qui vont vite, c'est que eux ne montent que des gammes, alors que JML fait de la musique ! Il les enterre tous !!! La différence, c'est la spiritualité dans la musique, alors que les autres ne sont que dans le commercial et l'esbrouffe -
Ne pas oublier Miles Davis sans qui rien ne serait en musique moderne...et John Coltrane, Dieu sur terre !
For the second part of You Know You Know, the Em is from the 7th fret, the D from the 5th, and then the Bm A and Em are the same as the beginning. So it’s a straight shot down the fretboard on the A string...7 5 2 open and the down to the E string.
I don’t mean this negative at all, I love how you are bringing these tunes to your fans (which I am one) and your delivery is always excellent.
Another note for influence...JM is Jeff Beck’s biggest modern influences. There a many articles and interviews with Jeff where he details how JM the MO influenced his playing as the future of guitar and music, leading him right into the recording the Blow by Blow album. For Wired Nawarda who drummed with the MO plays and wrote most of the album, and Jam Hammer played and wrote on it too of course. As a matter of fact, one of Jeff’s biggest tributes to the MO is, Jeff starts almost every single concert with a Mahavishnu tune. It’s like every tour he picks one of two JM tunes to open his shows.
Did you know there are recordings of Jimi Hendrix and John Mclaughlin jamming! Great stuff. How doing a Alvin Lee segment now.
Great lesson David and thank you. Exactly the kind of lesson I hoped to see. If you don't mind, check out Pierre Bensusan, he plays in DADGAD tuning and I'd enjoy a lesson on his chordal work. Once again, thank you for the John McLaughlin lesson. Wonderfully done!!
We need a Robert Fripp/King Crimson video!
I second that!
How is it possible? Only 57,000 followers? Love this channel! Keep it coming.
Yeah, completely agree. There isn`t much, if anything, this fella can`t do on guitar. Always impressive.
Chords of Larry Coryell in the future?
Love the mahavishnu orchestra Riffs your playing so well,the right tempo as well bravo also love the inner moulting flame framed album cover on the wall 😢🎸
Nice video. Thanks. Speaking of that time in the 70s when fusion came up, Larry Coryell's 11th House must be mentioned.
Great chordplay! Had those albums when I was young. Have never thought it could be played. It’s a different universe for me. Loved the Shakti years.
Bird of fire blew my mind first time i listen to it🙉🎸👌
Great video! I also like Trilogy and Faith are great chords to play.
I've had Apocalypse playing in my car pretty much since January
The beginning of vision is a naked sword, truly changed my life, it's like I was deaf, then all of a sudden that sound.
Anything with McLaughlin in it gets an instant thumbs up from me!
Can you possibly show us what these chords look like a bit closer up? Immhaving trouble seing what you ar doing exactly.Thank You.
The chords and indeed the music of the classic M O are pure genius ... mind blowing and wonderful !
I saw him play with Dave Brubeck. Sick show....
Thanks for this. Love John McLaughlin's playing. Would there be a 3-Licks vid in the future? ;p
I'm obsessed with the record he did with Santana in '73 lately. (Love, Supreme Surrender) - it's so great.
Superb! Bravo for choosing such an excellent--if sadly obscure--group of musical artists.
Utterly fantastic! Love your work!!
12:00 ! please play G# the major third, not G . Apart from that ,thank you for the excellent video.
What are you going through? What is Your set up? Talk about your guitar and amp set up please
I would love to see you do a Fripp/Eno video featuring some material from "Here come the Warm Jets."
Meeting of the spirits....great video!!
Did you do a Zappa Chordplay yet??
That last passage is just too cool sounding!
Brilliant .. more please!
Excellent post.
Very interesting and very cool lesson. I will have to listen to these guys. Thanks Dave.
My first experience of John McLaughlin and Mahavishnu Orchestra was actually Inner Mounting Flame, from where some of your selections originated. Very intimidating guitar parts for a novice player as I was back in the 70s. Jazz-Fusion was interesting to me for a while back then in the 70s-80s. I really enjoyed Scofield, DiMeola, Clarke and Corea et all, but I find that style can be a challenging listen now. I must have spent too long in the pentatonics.
Would help with some form of music notation, at the very least tabs with chord symbols, but music notation even better. The most characteristic chord of McLaughlin’s is a major chord with a bass a half-step below the chord’s root…I was surprised that you didn’t mention it.
Different and interesting, thanks!
Thx. Liked this lesson. I am a long time fan of this band.
Meeting of the spirits. Phrygian awesomeness
Cool lesson Dave, i think i can hear Johns lead guitar influence on Eric Johnson and i think i might of heard Eric say it himself in an interview:) Please do a chordplay on Mike Landau?.. many thanks, alex
Great stuff -- not enough people know about this history!
Great lesson, thank you for sharing your knowledge
Carlos Santana said John McLaughlin was a rare guitarist that could play fast but still retain melody
Love this stuff, I’m a huge JM fan. John plays Meeting of the Spirits with his thumb on the first chord. He also keeps the open G string ringing through both chords. So the only thing that changes is the bass note.
Sorry but no. On the second chord G string ringing go to B fourth fret same string, with the pinky.
saw them live twice. once with Jerry Goodman and once with Jean Luc Ponty. saw the one truth band later.
The first time you hear 'The Noonward Race', it'll blow your hair back.
YES!
Wow.. Ive never heard any. I did hear the violin player once but that was with the Dixie Dregs in Fort Worth in 1991.. Great show.
Huge Dregs fan as well< I still think Steve Morse is way underated guitar player, at least by the public unless you been going to deep purple concerts..lol
John uses his thumb most of the time in chords as in MotS, Lila. Beautiful work tho. Thanks for putting it up. Some of the best guitar music ever written
another stellar lesson! Did I miss the explanation of the new playing position?
You Know You Know....Count it: 9(Chords)+15(Silence) = 24/4?
Could you call off the notes in the chords please?
Ha! As soon as I saw the thumbnail I said he's going to do Birds of Fire.
Nice video but one thing I noticed is you played “Sanctuary” straight, I think it has more of a swing triplet feel if I remember correctly ? :) 👍
Thank you man. There's very little info on John on YT.
There is a video of him somewhere where he's talking about harmony and he plays 2nds, 3rds, 4ths and 5ths to demonstrate. His playing is so fluid when he does it. I can't find it anymore.
Meeting with the spirits.
The beginning stuff does sound similar to Rush's No One At the Bridge.
PLEASE do Jason Becker, he deserves it
Speaking of 60s-70s era guitarists, how about a WOODSTOCK chordplay with Alvin Lee, CSNY, Canned Heat, Arlo Guthrie, etc.
Thanks B🐓!
Really?! How awsome are you?! Are you my spirit animal????
Hi do you do any stretches etc for your hands either before you play or in general and if so can you share please thanks
Please include another demo of MO’s Trilogy part 1 at least. That’s be awesome. Eternity’s Breath?? Miles Beyond.
Chords of pat metheny...
by the way, if you could check out the chords of bands like Martyr, Gorguts/Negativa, and Cynic that would be awesome
Geez. Trying to figure out the fingering to the G13#11 on Lilas' Dance is tough, and online has variations that are digit twisters or just don't sound right. What's your recommendation on proper fingering?
Chords of SHAKTI next :-P
Birds of Fire-so that’s what guitar can be when one knows how the heck to really play guitar
Thank you all
Ironically, guitar players like Jeff Beck and Chris Poland `re more influenced by Mahavishnu`s keyboard wizard Jan Hammer. His Minimoog-solo style like the bendings and the major pentatonic with the minor seventh runs was a huge influence (for me too)!