This guy was actually my guitar teacher for a while, when i came early, i could hear him practicing in his studio. Dedication, has payed off. Congrats.
My question is, to what extent can we believe he actually played all the notes? It's pretty clear the human ear won't distinguish if he screws up a few notes here and there. The verification should involve computers... but maybe it's already the case
Mile High Shred You're a great guy for doing that. I was really skeptical when I watched these types of videos. A few days later I found Troy Grady's videos, and you happen to have worked with him as you stated in your other video, which is amazing. I'm pretty sure a lot of these other guiness world records would also turn out to be undeserved when put under the microscope. I won't believe any future claim of guitar speed record without this type of verification standard. Who cares though, you can probably pick faster than 99% of the rest of us. I don't think all that hard work went to the shitter. Up the irons!
I would love to hear the 600 bpm slowed down so we can try to get an idea of the musical integrity hes able to accomplish. Not hating like "I bet he misses a buncha notes this isnt a real record blah blah blah" I would just be curious to hear how well he maintained the integrity of the sound playing that ridiculously fast.
Agreed. He didn't actually play the original piece that fast. It's guaranteed you'll miss notes attempting to "play" at 600 bpm. So did he actually play at 600bpm? NO! Of course not.
This is not fake... Please look at the clock... And please, there is a background synth which kind of covers his mistakes. In the 170BPM part, you can hear that synth.
Excellent point. The word shredding is perfect for guitarists with lots of special effects because the effects shred the notes together and it is almost impossible to hear what they are playing but kids love it. ....It is not really good music if you don't like the exact same notes played on an acoustic guitar without any effects. Power chords without power is usually pretty lame?
Truly impressive speed ... And I'm pretty sure that he is well aware that it sounds more like a wood chipper than classical music. But since the whole idea of this specific event is speed I'd say he nailed his wood chipping.
I would like to see you do it at all... That was REALLY clean (especially considering his fastest tempo). You can't say that at 600 beats a minute you can hear or see how he is being sloppy. That is true talent.
Perhaps he should of tried it without distortion. The notes dont sound very clear to me so either he is sloppy due to his inability to accurately play at that speed and/or the distortion prevents any real clarity. I think it's probably a combination of both.
He’s actually said that he has removed his Guinness record from his promos and website, and that the 600bpm attempt was unsynchronised I admire his honesty!
It's interesting that when Tiago Vega set the world Bumblebee record of 320 BPM his fretting fingers hardly lifted off the fretboard but Taylor's at 600 BPM take flight like Guthrie Govan.
While it is impressive (I know I couldnt do it), as a guitarist its not practical. When you get up to those bpm's everything becomes a blur. I dont even think the human ear could hear it if he missed some notes. None the less, he is a great talent. I would like to hear some of his original work.
Wow I feel sorry for the other guy who had set the previous world record. This guy played almost twice as fast. I guess there really is always someone who can do something better than you in life.
Despite not being certain that he picked every single note correctly, he shredded faster than anyone on planet earth has or could shred. That’s guaranteed
nessundorma666 Calling out isn't hating. Dick Dale is faster than this guy. He's all distortion. Guinness doesn't use a wall clock. They use a metronome with a read-out. 600bpm is 10 per second. You can easily count his strumming. That isn't hating, it's stating.
Impressive. Looks like it's based on a hyper picking technique some guy had on a instructional video back in the 80's. Have to dig that VHS out haven't seen it in years.
The majority of the distortion you hear is from the mobile phone microphone that recorded this video, that distortion is what's eating most of the articulation off of the notes. What went out in the music store this was recorded at was both compressed and distorted by fx processing, but as I recall, the Guiness guys got a clean recording (tapped from the signal of this same event, of course) for the record evaluation. And, to the feeble unbelievers who whine about the clock being fakeable, sure, but that's moot since there were heaps of people in the store when this was shot.
What I can tell from watching at half speed is, that his picking hand is not picking every note at higher speeds. In the beginning he is doing that, from 350 ppm upwards his picking hand is not doing it anymore.
+Kenni Kuhlmann-Clark Hmm, what I actually meant is, that in the beginning he makes an upstroke or downstroke with his picking hand for every fret he puts a finger on with his other hand. on the high tempos like 350 and upwards, his left hand still seems to play the same frets but his picking hand does not keep up with the speed, so he is not making a down- or upstroke for every note. Some notes seem to be played legato then. If it is synced and mimed, I have not tried to figure it out, I just wanted to point out that fact I described ;-) But: I also think, that the correct notes are running with as a backing track and he plays to it. Thats not a prove for correct and accurate playing, just saying... ;)
TozSanchez .... Oh okay I sure agree with much of that... But synced/mimed or having a 'backing track' is almost the same thing to me..... If there's a backing track then this is not a solo, and not authentic.... Moreover, the excessive distortion (deliberately) obscures what is being heard (confuses whether it's the backing track or the player), and obviously at faster tempos, or difficult passages, the player can simply 'drop out' and let the backing track cover for the playing (much like many lipsync singers can do -- they sing some easy parts to make it look 'real', and leave the hard parts for the recording).... I also agree with the use of 'legato' (although the traditional proper term is slurring; slurring could be legato, but not all legato is slurring -- legato just means smoothly) -- but that doesn't bother me as much as the synced track (he's probaby doing much more miming in the faster tempos then 'playing along with')... But how can this possibly be a 'world's record'? (btw, did you see the newer one with an Indian player that 'record-setter' has out -- it's hee-lariously entertaining)... So, we have to ask why these 'fastest' videos are being done, and for me the answer is simply to get views/likes/comments for the channel in order to generate revenue -- that seems like the real purpose...
+TozSanchez You are correct. I went back and viewed my performance, and I did not pick every note at 350 bpm and beyond. Undeserved records! You would have made a better judge than Guinness and RecordSetter :)
+Mile High Shred I actually don't wanted to say, that the record is undeserved.I don't know what the rules are, but if every note is played, at least with legato, it should still count, I guess. But if the rule says, that every note has to be picked separately, then the record should not count. :D All I wanted to say is just, that your picking was changing, as the speed increased. ;-)
But string instruments tone doesn't change the way wind instruments do. Of course playing fast would affect breathing and embouchure there but as long as the instrument is in tune for a string instrument then shouldn't the sound be the same?
Sandeep suman Identified by whom? The give away if the cable come out of the bottom of the guitar. It's clearly sped up. A cable wouldn't move like that. They are trying too hard by putting the clock on there - you'd never see him doing the 600bpm without a fixed camera position and the clock anywhere near where he's playing. Probably done on Adobe After Effects. I know a lot of the fastest guitar players in the world and this isn't just faster, it's like 10 times faster. It would be like running the 100m in 2.1 seconds rather than "just" 9.5 seconds.
Sandeep suman Well it is hard to tell if it's real or not. First reason is that the video can be easily manipulated even with the clock. Second reason is that even if it is real then it's hard to tell if he picks the notes flawlessly when he is supposed to play 40 notes pr. second, because if someone were to speed the clip down then the sound would end up being blurred. And.. the greatest guitarists I know is playing no more faster than 26 notes pr second so I'll say that wikichris got a good reason of being skeptic :P btw sorry for my bad english
It's definitely not fake. I have had the pleasure of jamming with John in person, and even without the constant practice it takes to maintain a max speed like that, he was still able to hit completely freakish speeds. One way you can tell that this isn't fake is that he is actually using his fingers. you'll notice that with every attempt since John's (where you get people claiming ludicrous things like 1400 bpm), they are just sliding up and down the fretboard. They change the way they play the song every time once they get to certain speeds. John is consistent and plays the same thing every time. There hasn't been anybody who has actually played faster FOTB faster than John yet.
"its fake because he has hair" thats how you all sound attempting to justify that hes actually playing that fast. yes I am looking at the clock and I've seen this done more than once. Great editing!
+1999beachboy This piece is in 4/4. Which means 4 crotchet beats per minute. Follow me so far? Good. In every crotchet beat there are 4 semiquaver beats. Still with me? Excellent. This piece is composed entirely of semiquavers. Every note is a semiquaver. So for every 4 notes that is played, that is 1 crotchet. And by counting each crotchet in beat, you discover that the piece is in fact 145 beats per minute. If the piece were to be in 600 bpm, you would not be able to hear the gaps between each note, and it would just be 1 long note. That is humanly impossible. If you don't believe me click this link. a.bestmetronome.com/ and type in 170. You can count 4 notes in every 1 click on the metronome.
I understand music. What I don't understand is how you know all the terminology but still manage to gets things so horribly wrong. I was using that very site today. I can play most parts of this song at 200bpm (and yes I understand that there are 4 notes in each beat). also "This piece is in 4/4. Which means 4 crotchet beats per minute.".....?????? that's just wrong. so wrong. You are right that the piece is written in 4/4, but that doesn't mean 4 crotchet beats per minute. That means there are 4 crotchet beats per measure. The beat per minute is simply how many of those measures (in the case of a 4/4 piece, each measure is one beat.. it's basic math. 4/4 = 1) fit in a minute. 4*145bpm = 580 notes in a minute. divide that by 60 and you get roughly 10 notes per second. that is NOT impressive for an experienced guitar player trying to set a world record. I agree that 600 bpm would be physically impossible, but 145 bpm is NOT impressive.
this is not fake.. because this song, "flight of the bumblebee" have simple not.. like 12 11 10 9, 9 8 7 6, 7 6 5 4.. what you need just sync your picking with fingering.. of course need extra training too..
+Kenni Kuhlmann-Clark you do realize there are different frequencies/pitches for metronomes right? I've been in music classes and lessons and everything my entire life and I have a metronome that counts down for you like that. It goes "1,3,1,2,3,4 1,2,3,4" (etc.) to keep your tempo so you can hear if you slow down. The higher pitch is so you can hear it over the instrument
I looked on record setter and Daniel Himebauch, the guy that played 1350 bpm was denied the record. It says this John Taylor 600bpm is still the record. It doesnt give an explanation why he was denied. I cant even get his video on recordsetter. c om to work.
at the 600 bpm part of the video if u hear closely the claps start super early and the dude's hand jerks off the guitar really fast after he's done but if i am mistaken then this guy sure as hell is extremely skillful.
Two things I have to say: 1. This is NOT sped up or fake! Please direct your attention to the analog clock to the right. 2. I'm not an expert on music theory but lets look at exactly how fast he plays. 600BPM x average of 16th notes (4 notes a beat) song = (600*4=2400) He's playing 2400 notes per minute (average) or 40 notes per second (average). I'm not exactly sure how he accomplishes 40 notes per second but I believe he may be a descendant of Chuck Norris.
What are you going on about? You can just Google the sheet music to learn the actual bpm; a measly 161 bpm. Besides what really matters at this speed is notes per second. And the distortion is very light & helps w/clarity here. You must really be disappointed & hard on yourself, because only self-loathers leave pathetic comments like this.
for a start, if it was sped up artificially, the pitch and tone would be higher, yet it remains about the same. Look at his posture, he is having to sit back on the last 2 because his pecks are reaching their limit. Also there are some very slight differences in some of the notes played each time, although its an amazing guitar and well tuned this can't be helped but its still good as far as official records go.
I don't want to be "that guy" but some of the movements in the video look to be sped up, and that clock looks almost pasted in there. I'm not saying it's fake but it's definitely weird.
There's people saying it's sped up but that's just how he moves lol, violin players hands and heads move really fast when they play, plus the clock says the same speed and the people in the background never change speed lol
Needs more distortion. I can almost hear what he's playing.
At 600BPM I can imagine the bees flying with the speed of light.
NEROOOOOMMMMM
seriously though -hes fingers just traveled through time
VFX lol...
Sui
😂
This guy was actually my guitar teacher for a while, when i came early, i could hear him practicing in his studio. Dedication, has payed off. Congrats.
Paid off for what?
@@Fixstuffsteve It payed off, because he got a world record and can play it well
My question is, to what extent can we believe he actually played all the notes? It's pretty clear the human ear won't distinguish if he screws up a few notes here and there. The verification should involve computers... but maybe it's already the case
+InfinityDz I did NOT play all the notes. It's an undeserved record.
Mile High Shred You're a great guy for doing that. I was really skeptical when I watched these types of videos. A few days later I found Troy Grady's videos, and you happen to have worked with him as you stated in your other video, which is amazing. I'm pretty sure a lot of these other guiness world records would also turn out to be undeserved when put under the microscope. I won't believe any future claim of guitar speed record without this type of verification standard.
Who cares though, you can probably pick faster than 99% of the rest of us. I don't think all that hard work went to the shitter.
Up the irons!
RecordSetter Thank you! I appreciate that.
+InfinityDz Yeah well, as you mentioned, this is still fucking epic
+InfinityDz change the video speed to 0.5
I would love to hear the 600 bpm slowed down so we can try to get an idea of the musical integrity hes able to accomplish. Not hating like "I bet he misses a buncha notes this isnt a real record blah blah blah" I would just be curious to hear how well he maintained the integrity of the sound playing that ridiculously fast.
Agreed. He didn't actually play the original piece that fast. It's guaranteed you'll miss notes attempting to "play" at 600 bpm. So did he actually play at 600bpm? NO! Of course not.
@@StaticBlaster Yep, he should play it without distortion.
imagine having a right hand like that for the night
captain obvious
Thanks for pointing that out
youll catch fire
Peak too soon. Lol
It’d be a short night. With months of chaffing.
@@drummyt7166 hahahahahaha
He plays so fast that it doesnt even sound like a guitar anymore holy shit
5:22 and set to speed 2x, now its 1200 BPM.
jesus christ
So how long before he needs his batteries changed?
But... He isn't Asian...
Oh no! That defies all laws of racism!!!
+Mr. MegaMeteor Not racism. stereotyping
+Music Junkie exactly
Indian people arnt very good at guitar tho.
Javier Velazquez What the fuck you mean to say ? How about you show us some skills
Where are the notes ? i cant hear it
+Pietro Vitale it sounds like flight of the bumblebees lol
+David Ng maybe because it is
+David Ng maybe because it is
This is not fake... Please look at the clock... And please, there is a background synth which kind of covers his mistakes. In the 170BPM part, you can hear that synth.
legends says his fingers are still aching
but not from the guitar
why is nobody doing this record with a clean tone? it would
much more impressive
Excellent point. The word shredding is perfect for guitarists with lots of special effects because the effects shred the notes together and it is almost impossible to hear what they are playing but kids love it. ....It is not really good music if you don't like the exact same notes played on an acoustic guitar without any effects. Power chords without power is usually pretty lame?
JazzKeyboardist1 .... and, (often) at the cost of the quality of the tone of each note (or double-stops/chords)
Kenni Kuhlmann-Clark,,yes, Most people are shocked they actually hate their favorite tunes if the guitarists plays the same notes acoustically
ruclips.net/video/SBI98fy2tA0/видео.html
Here's a guy doing it on a nylon string at 350bpm. Way more impressive than this staticfest
Good point--I agree. However, the "fuzz" does add to the mood of the "buzz", (since the subject matter is a humming insect).
This guy is freaking insane man, much respect
Pssh I can do this .....hold my guitar.
wait...
hahaha lmaoooo
His girlfriend must be happy😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂
Truly impressive speed ... And I'm pretty sure that he is well aware that it sounds more like a wood chipper than classical music. But since the whole idea of this specific event is speed I'd say he nailed his wood chipping.
I would like to see you do it at all...
That was REALLY clean (especially considering his fastest tempo). You can't say that at 600 beats a minute you can hear or see how he is being sloppy. That is true talent.
I'm not really saying it is, but this looks sped up.
Perhaps he should of tried it without distortion. The notes dont sound very clear to me so either he is sloppy due to his inability to accurately play at that speed and/or the distortion prevents any real clarity. I think it's probably a combination of both.
This is too far from my imagination..... mind blowing performance, sheer hard work and rigorous practise and has paid off well to this guy
would be impressive if he used only downstrokes
He’s actually said that he has removed his Guinness record from his promos and website, and that the 600bpm attempt was unsynchronised
I admire his honesty!
Wait what was that second note.
I would also accept this record over many others because he's actually strumming each note.
That it's fake?
Waynick Rooney
No, it is not fake, that is why the clock is there so you can see each second tick by.
***** so guiness accepts fake records?
I'm aware lol. I was being sarcastic. Obviously someone as legit as guiness investigates such.
***** you have to be the worlds biggest dumb ass look at the clock and you can tell it wasn't sped up
It's interesting that when Tiago Vega set the world Bumblebee record of 320 BPM his fretting fingers hardly lifted off the fretboard but Taylor's at 600 BPM take flight like Guthrie Govan.
Flight Of The Bumblebee on guitar?!! The way he plays it sounds sooo freaking epic
While it is impressive (I know I couldnt do it), as a guitarist its not practical. When you get up to those bpm's everything becomes a blur. I dont even think the human ear could hear it if he missed some notes. None the less, he is a great talent. I would like to hear some of his original work.
Wow I feel sorry for the other guy who had set the previous world record. This guy played almost twice as fast. I guess there really is always someone who can do something better than you in life.
By the way, it's easy to toy with the timing in parts of the screen so the clock and the background seem normal when other parts are sped up...
take away the overdrive and we'd see how many of those notes he's actually playing
+Tom Norman yes, distortion is annoying.... and obscuring... wish we could hear it clean anyways
Reduce the speed to hear note for note. It's so fast it's beyond your brains processing power.
After all that meticulous practice! Now what? Divine Ascension as an immortal transcending beyond the three modes of material existence
bro you can sustain a note wayy longer with overdrive, which is used for hammerons and pulloffs
Plz tell me that line 6 cab was involved in this
Now do it without the obscene amount of distortion which is clearly hiding all the mistakes. :-)
2023 Still holds Guinness World Record, amazeballz! Congratulations man
Impressive technical feat. Good speed and control. Interesting record to hold.
5:56 Joe Swanson?
Despite not being certain that he picked every single note correctly, he shredded faster than anyone on planet earth has or could shred. That’s guaranteed
You know this was fake right?
@@Norman-Bates You know you just have to type "john taylor world record" to see that it's true.
Tiago Della Vega does it way cleaner.
@@Norman-Bates Do you think they put a clock by his side for what purpose?
@@AndersonLima-we5io That can be edited in.
Has he done anything else? Can't find much about him on Google
"I've got blisters on me fingas!"
Everyone is clapping at the end of every performance and the dude is just like "this isn't even my final form"
Here, hold my beer
Where can I get the exact tabs to this I can print them?
That moment you know they left the packaging on the clock just so they can return it to the store later........ O.o
Or they left the packaging on the clock so it's an easy square to edit a clock running at real time while the rest of the video is sped up.
What makes this video great is the audience
Unintentional Forced Perspective makes the guy in the background during the 350 BPM part look like a tiny guy standing on the amp. haha!
Does anybody know were I can get the notes for this?
God damn I've never seen so many haters on one video lmao
Branden Santos they simply dont understand what is this about.
I love Joey from Manowar when he plays this song!
Amazing stuff
nessundorma666 Calling out isn't hating. Dick Dale is faster than this guy. He's all distortion. Guinness doesn't use a wall clock. They use a metronome with a read-out. 600bpm is 10 per second. You can easily count his strumming.
That isn't hating, it's stating.
At 600 bpm, yes that is 10 beats per second (600/60). But he's play 4 notes per beat, so he is actually playing 40 notes per second.
What do the fretting hand thumb behind neck people have to say about this?
do it on acoustic :)
Do this on a Tele through a clean Deluxe Reverb. THAT would be truly impressive.
plot twist: he sped up the video
how many frets does he covered?
Can someone bother to slowdown the video and check he's playing correctly?
He did play it correctly, it's been confirmed already.
David Gilmore could hit a single note and be more interesting.
I bet he could do through the fire and flames on expert.
Impressive. Looks like it's based on a hyper picking technique some guy had on a instructional video back in the 80's. Have to dig that VHS out haven't seen it in years.
He needs more cowbell
And they found a receipt for guitar skills in his glove compartment, the cost, one soul.
Best part at 5:55
Didn't have the balls to do this through a clean amp.
Wow, this dude is awesome. But why did he play it with distortion. It's so hard to hear the strokes :/ Would've been better with a clean sound imo.
The majority of the distortion you hear is from the mobile phone microphone that recorded this video, that distortion is what's eating most of the articulation off of the notes. What went out in the music store this was recorded at was both compressed and distorted by fx processing, but as I recall, the Guiness guys got a clean recording (tapped from the signal of this same event, of course) for the record evaluation.
And, to the feeble unbelievers who whine about the clock being fakeable, sure, but that's moot since there were heaps of people in the store when this was shot.
eniakk
Jaha okej. Tack för infot :)
What I can tell from watching at half speed is, that his picking hand is not picking every note at higher speeds. In the beginning he is doing that, from 350 ppm upwards his picking hand is not doing it anymore.
+TozSanchez i just watched back and he is. it may be a bit harder to notice or you didn't think he was picking then strumming upwards
+Kenni Kuhlmann-Clark Hmm, what I actually meant is, that in the beginning he makes an upstroke or downstroke with his picking hand for every fret he puts a finger on with his other hand. on the high tempos like 350 and upwards, his left hand still seems to play the same frets but his picking hand does not keep up with the speed, so he is not making a down- or upstroke for every note. Some notes seem to be played legato then.
If it is synced and mimed, I have not tried to figure it out, I just wanted to point out that fact I described ;-)
But: I also think, that the correct notes are running with as a backing track and he plays to it. Thats not a prove for correct and accurate playing, just saying... ;)
TozSanchez .... Oh okay I sure agree with much of that... But synced/mimed or having a 'backing track' is almost the same thing to me..... If there's a backing track then this is not a solo, and not authentic.... Moreover, the excessive distortion (deliberately) obscures what is being heard (confuses whether it's the backing track or the player), and obviously at faster tempos, or difficult passages, the player can simply 'drop out' and let the backing track cover for the playing (much like many lipsync singers can do -- they sing some easy parts to make it look 'real', and leave the hard parts for the recording)....
I also agree with the use of 'legato' (although the traditional proper term is slurring; slurring could be legato, but not all legato is slurring -- legato just means smoothly) -- but that doesn't bother me as much as the synced track (he's probaby doing much more miming in the faster tempos then 'playing along with')... But how can this possibly be a 'world's record'? (btw, did you see the newer one with an Indian player that 'record-setter' has out -- it's hee-lariously entertaining)... So, we have to ask why these 'fastest' videos are being done, and for me the answer is simply to get views/likes/comments for the channel in order to generate revenue -- that seems like the real purpose...
+TozSanchez You are correct. I went back and viewed my performance, and I did not pick every note at 350 bpm and beyond. Undeserved records! You would have made a better judge than Guinness and RecordSetter :)
+Mile High Shred I actually don't wanted to say, that the record is undeserved.I don't know what the rules are, but if every note is played, at least with legato, it should still count, I guess. But if the rule says, that every note has to be picked separately, then the record should not count. :D
All I wanted to say is just, that your picking was changing, as the speed increased. ;-)
Further proof that playing faster doesn't make you sound better.
But string instruments tone doesn't change the way wind instruments do. Of course playing fast would affect breathing and embouchure there but as long as the instrument is in tune for a string instrument then shouldn't the sound be the same?
im not shure about this video, becuase normaly the tone of the metronom say the quarters not the half notes,at "250" bpm its beep at 125
Real to begin with then clearly fake.
This is identified worldwide as the fastest playing. u cant just say its fake sitting there.
Sandeep suman Identified by whom? The give away if the cable come out of the bottom of the guitar. It's clearly sped up. A cable wouldn't move like that. They are trying too hard by putting the clock on there - you'd never see him doing the 600bpm without a fixed camera position and the clock anywhere near where he's playing. Probably done on Adobe After Effects. I know a lot of the fastest guitar players in the world and this isn't just faster, it's like 10 times faster. It would be like running the 100m in 2.1 seconds rather than "just" 9.5 seconds.
Sandeep suman Well it is hard to tell if it's real or not. First reason is that the video can be easily manipulated even with the clock. Second reason is that even if it is real then it's hard to tell if he picks the notes flawlessly when he is supposed to play 40 notes pr. second, because if someone were to speed the clip down then the sound would end up being blurred. And.. the greatest guitarists I know is playing no more faster than 26 notes pr second so I'll say that wikichris got a good reason of being skeptic :P btw sorry for my bad english
Stranger: Wow, you are good at guitars...
Guitarist: Oh I'm just testing my guitar
why that seems to be fake to me? :)
This is not fake.
its not look at the clock derring the whole video and the second hand is moving at correct time
their is a thing on the bit where you turn off annotations that you can slow down the speed and it is real
it doesn't seem that fake to me
It's definitely not fake. I have had the pleasure of jamming with John in person, and even without the constant practice it takes to maintain a max speed like that, he was still able to hit completely freakish speeds. One way you can tell that this isn't fake is that he is actually using his fingers. you'll notice that with every attempt since John's (where you get people claiming ludicrous things like 1400 bpm), they are just sliding up and down the fretboard. They change the way they play the song every time once they get to certain speeds. John is consistent and plays the same thing every time. There hasn't been anybody who has actually played faster FOTB faster than John yet.
"its fake because he has hair" thats how you all sound attempting to justify that hes actually playing that fast. yes I am looking at the clock and I've seen this done more than once. Great editing!
600bpm? Not even close. Thats about 145bpm, which is still very impressive but 600bpm is nearly impossible. It would just sound like tremolo.
The original tune is 170 which is what he played at the start?
+Matt Bellamy do you need another chromosome? unless 145 was a typo... that would be flight of the turtle.
+1999beachboy This piece is in 4/4. Which means 4 crotchet beats per minute. Follow me so far? Good. In every crotchet beat there are 4 semiquaver beats. Still with me? Excellent. This piece is composed entirely of semiquavers. Every note is a semiquaver. So for every 4 notes that is played, that is 1 crotchet. And by counting each crotchet in beat, you discover that the piece is in fact 145 beats per minute. If the piece were to be in 600 bpm, you would not be able to hear the gaps between each note, and it would just be 1 long note. That is humanly impossible. If you don't believe me click this link. a.bestmetronome.com/ and type in 170. You can count 4 notes in every 1 click on the metronome.
I understand music. What I don't understand is how you know all the terminology but still manage to gets things so horribly wrong. I was using that very site today. I can play most parts of this song at 200bpm (and yes I understand that there are 4 notes in each beat). also "This piece is in 4/4. Which means 4 crotchet beats per minute.".....?????? that's just wrong. so wrong. You are right that the piece is written in 4/4, but that doesn't mean 4 crotchet beats per minute. That means there are 4 crotchet beats per measure. The beat per minute is simply how many of those measures (in the case of a 4/4 piece, each measure is one beat.. it's basic math. 4/4 = 1) fit in a minute. 4*145bpm = 580 notes in a minute. divide that by 60 and you get roughly 10 notes per second. that is NOT impressive for an experienced guitar player trying to set a world record. I agree that 600 bpm would be physically impossible, but 145 bpm is NOT impressive.
the average professional "shredder" plays fast bits at around 15 notes per second. In a 4/4 piece that would be 225 bpm. ((15*60)/4)
this is not fake.. because this song, "flight of the bumblebee" have simple not.. like 12 11 10 9, 9 8 7 6, 7 6 5 4.. what you need just sync your picking with fingering.. of course need extra training too..
To bad its fake.
The clock, sherlock. It's the clock.
+Kenni Kuhlmann-Clark so he can get the tempo?
+Kenni Kuhlmann-Clark you do realize there are different frequencies/pitches for metronomes right? I've been in music classes and lessons and everything my entire life and I have a metronome that counts down for you like that. It goes "1,3,1,2,3,4 1,2,3,4" (etc.) to keep your tempo so you can hear if you slow down. The higher pitch is so you can hear it over the instrument
+Kenni Kuhlmann-Clark Because you don't need to show something you can hear
It really isn't though. Troy Grady hooked him up to monitors and electrodes to examine his picking technique. He really is a freak.
I wonder what the record is for Acoustic specifically.
so fakeee🤣🤣🤣
Use a clean sound. This would never get world record without being able to distinguish the notes.
Slow it down, he barely hits half of the notes, even at the slowest speed.
C'est drôle mais au fur et à mesure que la vitesse augmente le son est de moins en moins naturel, bizarrement
I'm lost, did he got the gig or what ?
I looked on record setter and Daniel Himebauch, the guy that played 1350 bpm was denied the record. It says this John Taylor 600bpm is still the record.
It doesnt give an explanation why he was denied. I cant even get his video on recordsetter. c om to work.
He was playing so fast @1:40 that the sales associate in the back was stuck in the space time continuum
I was there. He really played like that.
at the 600 bpm part of the video if u hear closely the claps start super early and the dude's hand jerks off the guitar really fast after he's done but if i am mistaken then this guy sure as hell is extremely skillful.
I'm in love with that guy.
That was truly amazing!
he went so fast i didn't even know if he was playing the same song lol
is that why the clock's seconds hand remains at the same speed?
Why does it look like the video was sped up?
what guitar brand is that? its pretty cool.
Two things I have to say:
1. This is NOT sped up or fake! Please direct your attention to the analog clock to the right.
2. I'm not an expert on music theory but lets look at exactly how fast he plays. 600BPM x average of 16th notes (4 notes a beat) song = (600*4=2400) He's playing 2400 notes per minute (average) or 40 notes per second (average). I'm not exactly sure how he accomplishes 40 notes per second but I believe he may be a descendant of Chuck Norris.
What kind of guitar is that?
I can't find anything on this John Taylor. Is he a muscian or just an acrobat?
Where is the video?
You should listen to it being played they way it was written (Rimsky-Korsakov). On a violin. That is impressive. And fast and with no distortion.
What are you going on about? You can just Google the sheet music to learn the actual bpm; a measly 161 bpm. Besides what really matters at this speed is notes per second. And the distortion is very light & helps w/clarity here. You must really be disappointed & hard on yourself, because only self-loathers leave pathetic comments like this.
for a start, if it was sped up artificially, the pitch and tone would be higher, yet it remains about the same. Look at his posture, he is having to sit back on the last 2 because his pecks are reaching their limit. Also there are some very slight differences in some of the notes played each time, although its an amazing guitar and well tuned this can't be helped but its still good as far as official records go.
how it possible ?
what make guitar is that?
To those saying it's fake: You probably never saw the entire video.
That’s not 600 bpm
Christ, the guy's time is all over the map even at the speed he starts with. But thanks for posting, this is hilarious!
I don't know but the articulation is not there, what's the point of music if you can't hear every note clearly ?
I don't want to be "that guy" but some of the movements in the video look to be sped up, and that clock looks almost pasted in there. I'm not saying it's fake but it's definitely weird.
There's people saying it's sped up but that's just how he moves lol, violin players hands and heads move really fast when they play, plus the clock says the same speed and the people in the background never change speed lol
Thank you. Some people man...