Great lesson! Just what I was looking for. Please ignore the ignorant dorks who don't seem to know what rhythm means, and who ask you questions that you already answered. I'm a huge SRV fan and you do his memory honor! Thanks
Jody. you lessons are really well done. I particularly like the one where you use the 3rd interval to play A and E chords all over the neck. This immediately opened many doors for me. A good teacher makes it look easy. A+
Thanks so much, I've been struggling trying to get the way Stevie did it down to jam with the guys in our band, but since our lead guitarists does a lot of this as well, I'm going to just drop in behind him with this more simplified pattern for now.
This is a good lesson for a beginner in the blues style, but it sure ain't Pride and Joy.That being said, Your a great teacher Jody- I've picked up a fair amount of tips from you. Thanks for that!
can you play this with finger style at all?....i can work out most strumming with out a pic..but sometimes short accurate strumming will get blurred a bit
I take it you didn't actually watch or listen to the video. He said it was a revised, intermediate way to play it, also that it's a great rhythm that will fit up under the lead guitar as a 2nd guitar....i.e. a band with 2 guitars, and both guitars playing the exact same thing is just dumb.
Terrible Pride And Joy lesson. What makes the song so great and separates it from the standard "boring" blues progression is the way Stevie scrapped the open strings...
Great lesson! Just what I was looking for. Please ignore the ignorant dorks who don't seem to know what rhythm means, and who ask you questions that you already answered. I'm a huge SRV fan and you do his memory honor! Thanks
Jody. you lessons are really well done. I particularly like the one where you use the 3rd interval to play A and E chords all over the neck. This immediately opened many doors for me. A good teacher makes it look easy. A+
Thanks so much, I've been struggling trying to get the way Stevie did it down to jam with the guys in our band, but since our lead guitarists does a lot of this as well, I'm going to just drop in behind him with this more simplified pattern for now.
I love this song. Actually, I love every single note SRV ever played. :)
This is a good lesson for a beginner in the blues style, but it sure ain't Pride and Joy.That being said, Your a great teacher Jody- I've picked up a fair amount of tips from you. Thanks for that!
Thanks Jody, keep'm come'n.
Much appreciated buddy...
Great tips!
thank you . great lesson :)
Ditto - good lesson, but doesn't SRV use a minor 3rd in the bass runs on both the I and the IV chord?
can you play this with finger style at all?....i can work out most strumming with out a pic..but sometimes short accurate strumming will get blurred a bit
Ppl are stupid. This is rhythm, not lead
thats a simplefied version right ?
un tio muy enrrollado
That SRV shuffle is impossible --been at it for months --gave up !
Sounds more like Robben Ford
What? A Cover?? You're kidding! Never would have guessed! Thanks for the info Captain Obvious.
hmmmmm ....
Ok that's not SRV's Pride and Joy, a cover perhaps. But that ain't even close. Sorry fail.
I take it you didn't actually watch or listen to the video. He said it was a revised, intermediate way to play it, also that it's a great rhythm that will fit up under the lead guitar as a 2nd guitar....i.e. a band with 2 guitars, and both guitars playing the exact same thing is just dumb.
Terrible Pride And Joy lesson. What makes the song so great and separates it from the standard "boring" blues progression is the way Stevie scrapped the open strings...