David Grier's Wheel Hoss: Fast, Faster, and Fastest!

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  • Опубликовано: 26 авг 2024
  • THE MAGNET CAMERA MOUNT IS NOW ON KICKSTARTER! Film your own playing just like we did with David! www.kickstarte...
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    Man, bluegrass flat pick master David Grier plays the prettiest stuff. In this clip from our latest interview with him, we talk arranging standards for different tempos, and how David streamlines his arrangements for smooth pickin' when he hits the gas pedal. Asute observers will note the distinct change in his picking mechanics as he ramps up the Monroe classic "Wheel Hoss" to around 300bpm eighth notes. Get more David here: troygrady.com/i...

Комментарии • 263

  • @nelsonkerr1119
    @nelsonkerr1119 4 года назад +118

    He finishes "Wheel Hoss" at 295bpm flawlessly and says "something like that" then casually sips his coffee. Awesome stuff Troy.

    • @troygrady
      @troygrady  4 года назад +36

      Hilariously, I can tell you after he reviewed the footage he was bummed he hit the pickguard at one spot, said he wished hadn't done it. I'm like, you're kidding right?

    • @andybowen1249
      @andybowen1249 4 года назад

      Lol I heard it but come on man, don’t be so hard on yourself.
      Have you ever come across Allen Shadd?

    • @2204JCM
      @2204JCM 4 года назад

      Troy Grady Yeah its near the very end of this video as you can hear it. But this dude can play 8th notes at head cutt’n speed!

    • @troygrady
      @troygrady  4 года назад +2

      Yes I filmed Winfield in 2007 during our first Carl Miner interview and Allen was a competitor that year.

    • @andybowen1249
      @andybowen1249 4 года назад

      I thought you’d of come across him on your travels? I always enjoy his stuff on Dream guitars channel. I don’t know, but he just seems a little bit different to me? Every note Allen Shad plays, always seems essential to me. I know he can play the well drilled fast stuff, but very much like Carl Miner, who you mentioned, he’s so good at doing the real beautiful, slower stuff.

  • @EricMooreGuitar
    @EricMooreGuitar 4 года назад +30

    David is such a monster player! That right hand accuracy is so insane. His left hand is so smooth. He is absolutely amazing.

  • @PICKERY
    @PICKERY 4 года назад +8

    Davids been killing it for years. I think its awesome to see him becoming a more common name in the guitar world. One of the best in the world, no exaggeration.

  • @1bassman9
    @1bassman9 4 года назад +7

    That is some of the most amazingly flawless and accurate picking I have ever witnessed ! WOW !

  • @RC32Smiths01
    @RC32Smiths01 4 года назад +93

    Can you ever get Rick Graham on the show? He is one of the most technically clean and consistent players out there. Great work

    • @skullkid112
      @skullkid112 4 года назад +15

      I think Rick and Marshall Harrison are some of the best talent on RUclips and the guitar game in general.

    • @bingefeller
      @bingefeller 4 года назад +10

      @@skullkid112 They are technically brilliant, they're certainly not songwriters though.

    • @I0MSammy
      @I0MSammy 4 года назад +19

      @@bingefeller Yes so they are talented then... I am sick of hearing people make this same old argument. I know you are not saying you're a better player than Rick but do you honestly think you could write a better song than he could if you tried? Probably not. We get it, it doesn't have to be stated every 5 minutes that Rick is no David Gilmour, but then again David Gilmour is certainly no Rick Graham.

    • @bingefeller
      @bingefeller 4 года назад +1

      @@I0MSammy I'm not a songwriter either..... I'm just a bedroom warrior playing covers and jamming to backing tracks on RUclips. I don't try to write songs.

    • @I0MSammy
      @I0MSammy 4 года назад +6

      Then you're not really in a place to judge. Don't get me wrong I am not trying to be disrespectful but everyone always rips into technical players as if they can't write songs - they definitely can, just not as well as acclaimed artists

  • @damonstewart70
    @damonstewart70 4 года назад +21

    Man Troy you cover EVERY spectrum of advance guitar... BEAUTIFUL STUFF

    • @troygrady
      @troygrady  4 года назад +7

      And don't forget mandolin. If it's got a pick, we'll film it! But yeah, David is always so eloquent.

    • @damonstewart70
      @damonstewart70 4 года назад +2

      @@troygrady you rock man no one has done stuff like this not only that you YOURSELF are a picking monster I think we NEED an album from you

    • @troygrady
      @troygrady  4 года назад +1

      @Dissonant Timbres I think we mailed her several years back and never heard. We can try again, I'd love to talk to her. And her husband Justin Moses too. Both great!

  • @funshorestudios
    @funshorestudios 4 года назад +10

    Hey Troy, just wanna say you’re doing God’s work. Your videos solved a problem I had with alternate picking for 20+ years. I hope you get all the blessings and good will you deserve.

  • @woodbox665
    @woodbox665 4 года назад +46

    So the Martin in the background is on standby in case the one he's playing catches fire?

  • @vonmilash823
    @vonmilash823 4 года назад +3

    i was naturally an upward pick slanter my whole life and knew i was limited. I became a solid rhythm player with a bag of tricks. Then, one day, Troy's video with MAB got me experimenting. Now i can easily downward slant and relied on it almost entirely. Then Troy's videos with Andy Wood got me taking another look at upward slanting and those quick transitions between UPS and DPS. Between Andy Wood and this guy, I'm now always trying to look at ways to incorporate both slants to find the best (most comfortable) way to do something. The lick im working on is simple... 16th notes at 143.... simple descending 3nps on two strings.. 14,13,12 on G, 14,13,12 on D, starting with a downstroke on G. Repeat. All alternate picking. Two way slanting and those quick wrist rotations a la Andy Wood got me there and beyond. This little exercise is the foundation of the solo in Gel by Collective soul, which few people other than Ross Childress can really seem to play. (Not well, anyway). Troy and I are about the same age I'd say... started out the same... rocking to old records and trying to figure out how some guys did things that i couldn't. But he got those instructional vids years ago and watched them meticulously and finally cracked the code. Hats off to Troy. His vids made a world of difference in my playing.

  • @TruthSurge
    @TruthSurge 3 года назад +18

    I guess it's fair to assume he's been playing for more than a year?

    • @brianj4090
      @brianj4090 11 месяцев назад

      6 weeks with the Esteban DVDs

  • @DoodlesHD719
    @DoodlesHD719 4 года назад +7

    Troy Grady has helped me realize, even more so, that every one plays guitar different.

  • @752brickie
    @752brickie 4 года назад +1

    Wow is all I can say !!! WOW !!!!! Thank you Troy and David !!!

  • @mitchmatthews6713
    @mitchmatthews6713 4 года назад +1

    I jammed with David once at IBMA a few years ago. A great guy, fantastic and totally underrated guitarist.

  • @terrinpeterson9899
    @terrinpeterson9899 4 года назад +24

    Rick Graham deserves to be on your series of these type of videos, please get him onto here somehow. 😁👌🤘

    • @theohwlf
      @theohwlf 4 года назад +2

      Up

    • @mdub2000
      @mdub2000 4 года назад +1

      Man rick graham is a freakin beast.... makes you want to quit hahahaha

    • @Afurthyclays
      @Afurthyclays 4 года назад

      Give us a 1-2 punch!
      Rick Graham & Guthrie Govan!
      Hell, you'd have enough studying on those 2 to last you a YEAR.

  • @andybowen1249
    @andybowen1249 4 года назад +1

    What a humble, brilliant man.

  • @priteshugrankar6815
    @priteshugrankar6815 4 года назад +3

    Another fantastic upload. The Carl Miner bundle was an eye opener...This seems even better.

    • @troygrady
      @troygrady  4 года назад +2

      David's technique may be somewhat more gettable, maybe? Not sure! I think what I mean to say is that it's more obvious to me what he's doing at these different speeds, and it's also more similar to what I kind of do already. Both David and Molly Tuttle are in sort of the same familiy of pronated arm position players who use wrist, or mostly wrist motion.

    • @priteshugrankar6815
      @priteshugrankar6815 4 года назад

      @@troygrady you have no idea how much your videos and most importantly the bundle has helped me. I practice intermittently but still I can feel and hear the smoothness...Man you are a genius...🙏

  • @SlowerIsFaster139
    @SlowerIsFaster139 4 года назад +2

    the picking accuracy is really impressive

    • @troygrady
      @troygrady  4 года назад

      David is an all time great!

  • @brownmonkeybananayellow
    @brownmonkeybananayellow 4 года назад

    Thanks for posting this. There are not enough videos of David Grier.

  • @lordviewer7305
    @lordviewer7305 4 года назад +2

    I love all the stuff you have on guitar an technique. Fanboy here

    • @troygrady
      @troygrady  4 года назад +1

      Right on! Thanks for watching.

  • @mdub2000
    @mdub2000 4 года назад +2

    Thanks for this Troy....i love blue grass....even though i'm more of a rock and jazz guy...they way they skip strings with their pick its so intuitive for em.

    • @troygrady
      @troygrady  4 года назад

      Indeed they got skills!

  • @countryguitaronline
    @countryguitaronline 4 года назад +1

    Nice one! I love David Grier's stuff. Sounds great!

  • @ShawnBrockMusic
    @ShawnBrockMusic 3 года назад

    You got to love David! I teach this song and many other flat picking selections over on my channel, for those who are interested in the pursuits of bluegrass guitar. Great job on this guys! Love it!

  • @googe2312
    @googe2312 4 года назад +4

    I just want to say thanks to Troy and his team. Im learning alot . 🤘

    • @troygrady
      @troygrady  4 года назад +2

      Right on, thanks for watching our stuff!

  • @rayberczik5654
    @rayberczik5654 4 года назад +1

    I can't say enough about everything you do for musicians that pick their instrument. I would have never thought of the pick slanting and things you have picked apart and demonstrated at regular speeds and slow motion. You have helped my picking a great deal. It was a struggle at first having to relearn and retrain my brain and muscle memory but it has been well worth the effort!!! Wish I could shake your hand!! Thank you!!!

  • @Swampster70
    @Swampster70 4 года назад +5

    This isn't the kind of music I normally listen too but this guy impressed the shit outa me. Great stuff.

    • @jmdbb
      @jmdbb 4 года назад +2

      Bluegrass Flatpickers are some of the best players on earth but get overlooked by a lot of guitar players unless they're specifically into this kind of music. Check out Tony Rice and Norman Blake as well. Norman isn't as fast of a player but the talent is incredible.

  • @daf827
    @daf827 3 года назад

    Holy moly! I can’t hear that fast! I first saw one of these neck mounted cameras on a Molly Tuttle video. DG is
    a crosspicking beast.

  • @Del_Puerto_Musica
    @Del_Puerto_Musica 4 года назад

    Great as usual Troy! I have been using your videos to better my technique and it really helped speed the process! I am a gipsy jazz player myself but this bluegrass stuf is just is pure gold!

  • @martinrotolo
    @martinrotolo 4 года назад +3

    Awesome! Would be good to see some fingerstyle players on here too

  • @SLP-eb1wp
    @SLP-eb1wp 4 года назад +1

    Wow excellent player and the camera angles are great!

    • @troygrady
      @troygrady  4 года назад

      David's the perfect candidate for the overhead - he's a rock and never moves!

    • @SLP-eb1wp
      @SLP-eb1wp 4 года назад

      @@troygrady thanks for bringing such a good picker to our televisions

  • @dennismeredith6944
    @dennismeredith6944 4 года назад

    Wow....What a joy to watch and listen......Thank you!!!

  • @tecnolover2642
    @tecnolover2642 3 года назад

    Ok,, im sold. This guy is one of the best flat pickers on the planet!

  • @TheMidnightModder
    @TheMidnightModder 4 года назад +2

    A well setup guitar, thick strings, thick pick and a bunch of practice.

    • @jdhaole7650
      @jdhaole7650 3 года назад

      Don't forget boatloads of talent!

  • @purplehaze7495
    @purplehaze7495 2 года назад

    What a guy!

  • @dondickfisch4102
    @dondickfisch4102 4 года назад +1

    Great!!! Great!!!!! Great!!!!!!!! Greetings from Germany!

  • @greekflatpicker
    @greekflatpicker 4 года назад

    My favorite flatpicker . THANK you!

  • @RobertoDallaVecchia
    @RobertoDallaVecchia 4 года назад

    Awesome video Troy, thank you

  • @bubba4001
    @bubba4001 4 года назад

    Troy,
    This man, David Grier plays great. Thanks for sharing.
    Regards,
    David D.

    • @troygrady
      @troygrady  4 года назад

      Thanks for watching! David is the best.

  • @mutantkoffee
    @mutantkoffee 4 года назад +6

    Thoughts of how much time for training just techinque? Im doing 1 hr of technique and im seeing progress faster than doing noodling and just playing. I used to do that thing, its fun and all but I was not making progress.

  • @jamesbowen8960
    @jamesbowen8960 Год назад

    His dad was Lamar Grier, a banjo player for Bill Monroe.

  • @Wyrdo999
    @Wyrdo999 2 года назад

    I love Davids playing. His lines are fantastic, the way he weaves them together. Although he's not improvising, all the time, his playing like this allows for improvising the fills between the melody. Wheel hoss reminds of something Jimmy page would have like to have composed in his Gallows Pole days. If I was a movie producer that needed music for a Western scene, or any scene that called for the " Down Home " sound, I wouldn't even have any parts written. I'd just have David come in, look at the scene, and say, " play something you feel will fit with this scene." David would be first call for stuff like this, before ANY session guys.

  • @TheCrimsonIdol987
    @TheCrimsonIdol987 3 года назад

    Spanish flamenco and bluegrass are the two genres I wish I was good at, and David Grier's just flexing on us.

  • @Feverdream7777
    @Feverdream7777 4 года назад +8

    I watch all Troy Grady videos at half speed, not to learn easier, but to listen to him sound like a drunk.

    • @troygrady
      @troygrady  4 года назад +11

      Just wait til you watch our drunk videos in half speed!

  • @MecchaKakkoi
    @MecchaKakkoi 4 года назад +6

    Would love to see you analyse an oud player as they have some crazy picking skills! Ahmed Alshaiba has some great stuff on youtube

  • @activistarts7722
    @activistarts7722 4 года назад +1

    His picks sound like a tap dancer . Amazing

  • @cerimccoy
    @cerimccoy 2 года назад

    Absolutely beautiful!!!

  • @iloverumi
    @iloverumi 4 года назад

    amazing playing and interview. thanks.

  • @MICKSHRED
    @MICKSHRED 4 года назад +1

    I TV practice alot, it's my favorite pass time. As far as what I practice, it would be small parts of a necrophagist solo, I'll go threw them slow amd then build up. Then analyze what's not working or even rearrange the note to better fit my finger muscle memory. Also go through solo fragments that I've building as my own that I've stole from Gilbert, dimebag or zakk. Then work on my rythm chops too.

    • @ncsludgefactory5445
      @ncsludgefactory5445 3 года назад

      Front porch for me, learn a new riff, been chopping off that black dahlia murders moonlight equilibrium and all the bluegrass licks I can get ahold of, I heard somewhere of you ain't practicing something you don't know you just jamming 🤘(no tv, laptop movie, throw those tvs in the trash guys

  • @theophany1770
    @theophany1770 4 года назад

    Really appreciate you introducing me to this guy. Have considered doing a vid on or interviewing Chris Impellitteri? He's often overlooked for some reason. Thanks for the vids and inspiration man!

  • @laudnivek-k9
    @laudnivek-k9 4 года назад +1

    Great content as always.

  • @mbsnyderc
    @mbsnyderc 2 года назад

    Dave is just cool as it gets.

  • @OneMoreGrave
    @OneMoreGrave 4 года назад

    That is a bad bad man. His right hand floors me.

  • @legalize.brokkoli
    @legalize.brokkoli 4 года назад

    It's not only technique with David, somehow i get carried away by his playing after the first few notes, each time. Amazing.

  • @hilaryhahn
    @hilaryhahn 4 года назад

    Love this video , good job . Thumb up right away !!

  • @kelvinburigo2430
    @kelvinburigo2430 4 года назад +3

    Troy, please, bring GUS G to your lab! I think we all would love to see you analyzing his picking technique!

    • @TMWilson71
      @TMWilson71 4 года назад +1

      Kelvin Búrigo gus g ?

    • @___and_memes_for_all
      @___and_memes_for_all 3 года назад

      @@TMWilson71 from Ozzy’s band. He played on the album Scream

  • @bernarddover1442
    @bernarddover1442 9 месяцев назад

    Class

  • @justincase8533
    @justincase8533 4 года назад +1

    That was great! The string skipping off the charts.. thank you!

  • @quintinpace2627
    @quintinpace2627 4 года назад +2

    TV practice is me noodling, then I get into it and forget the tv.

  • @markchristopher4165
    @markchristopher4165 4 года назад

    Man, what a killer player in every respect. Awesome

  • @Progmium
    @Progmium 4 года назад

    Lot of pick hopping! Pretty awesome stuff!

  • @Afurthyclays
    @Afurthyclays 4 года назад +3

    I wish I had a band name called "Wheel Hoss".
    It sounds f*cking cool! 😁

  • @axeaddiction796
    @axeaddiction796 4 года назад

    Incredible

  • @andywoodmusic
    @andywoodmusic 3 года назад

    master

  • @lucacicchelli3163
    @lucacicchelli3163 3 года назад +1

    You guys should check out Mark O' Connor

  • @ollecederborg4468
    @ollecederborg4468 4 года назад +1

    tv practice for me is playing the same thing over and over. Real simple things like triplets. Triplets with a string shift etc. It works for sure. Metronome in one ear.

    • @troygrady
      @troygrady  4 года назад +4

      See that's the mystery right there. I don't think it's one thing. I think in David's case he's using it as a creativity generator, by playing random stuff without thinking too much about it. That's how he explains. Other people when they talk about it, may be talking more about trying to learn a specific technique or phrase. It's unclear to me if it works better for one or the other.

  • @TheBigwillistyle
    @TheBigwillistyle 4 года назад

    Holy...

  • @williamstraney4041
    @williamstraney4041 4 года назад

    If you slow the video down to .25 speed during the last song, you can see that he leans his pick into each direction. When he's picking down, his pick is tilted so that the point is pointing back up at his chest. When he picks up, the pick is tilted so that the point is pointing towards the ground.
    Also, his pick travels much further on his downstrokes than on his upstrokes.

    • @troygrady
      @troygrady  4 года назад +1

      Great observation! But that's not exactly what's going on. The pickslant (the leaning you're noticing) is determined by the last note on the string. When the last note is a downstroke, he uses the upward pickslant. When the last note is an upstroke, he uses the downward pickslant. This explains why the pickslant and the direction are not always correlated. For more on this topic, feel free to check out our latest series on Frank Gambale, where we address pickslanting in great detail.

  • @maffooo2040
    @maffooo2040 4 года назад +1

    I think it would be really cool to see tosin abasi on the show - he seems to have quite an unorthodox picking technique that I would love to see up close

    • @TheCrimsonIdol987
      @TheCrimsonIdol987 3 года назад

      I'm curious to see how close Tosin's technique is to Frank Gambale's. In his scalar and arpeggio runs, it seems VERY similar.
      But, Tosin's a different player, so maybe he's doing some interesting things.

  • @chilljlt
    @chilljlt 4 года назад

    what a guy!

  • @alwolf2325
    @alwolf2325 4 года назад

    Fantastic.

  • @martinrussell9980
    @martinrussell9980 5 месяцев назад

    "...too fast, you're not really going for the cross-picking anymore..." and Mr Grier thinks (but has the class not to say) "watch me." Just stunning! "Something like that." I love this.

  • @richardcrowson9265
    @richardcrowson9265 4 года назад

    If I'm not mistaken, his father was Lamar Grier who played banjo (and roomed on the road) with Clarence White back in the day. David has a good bit of Clarence in his playing.

    • @troygrady
      @troygrady  4 года назад

      Indeed! We talk aboute Clarence a lot in this interview and play some of his lines.

  • @MrCelistaskin
    @MrCelistaskin 4 года назад

    Legend

  • @markrobinson891
    @markrobinson891 4 года назад +1

    The Eric Clapton of Bluegrass flatpick style. Or as Jack Black said. “Face melting” riffs.

  • @GuitSiva
    @GuitSiva 4 года назад

    Good job David..👏👌 Warm cheers 😊 God bless 🙏🎸🎶

  • @acedaytona1884
    @acedaytona1884 4 года назад

    I've always found tv practice a great tool, especially for scales!!

  • @boneal4942
    @boneal4942 4 года назад

    This dude is a ripper!

  • @MegafonVEVO
    @MegafonVEVO 3 года назад

    Troy, great idea to show it this way. Nevertheless the tempo math is wrong, typically you take this as 16th notes and final tempo would be cca 145bpm by usual standards. Even if you have the metronome click with every 16th note and call it 600, it will not be. Anyway it has nothing to do with David playing awesome, I was just listening to his 2000 gig with Chris Thile, boy my jaw dropped!

    • @troygrady
      @troygrady  3 года назад

      Bluegrass generally counts this as eighth notes, it's not my doing, that's just how it's done. These are basically really fast swing type tunes, like bebop.

  • @supremoluminary
    @supremoluminary 4 года назад

    Awesome

  • @Guyallknowing
    @Guyallknowing 4 года назад

    Troy you NEED to get Andre Nieri under one of those cameras!

  • @someguy4505
    @someguy4505 6 месяцев назад

    Its getting your picking hand in synce with the fretting hand. Each finger typically doesn't work that fast.

  • @randyriggs5457
    @randyriggs5457 4 года назад +3

    I'd like to see Billy Strings on here, if he hasn't been already. I watched him play "Tennessee Stud" on Fretboard Journal. They didn't show his hands for a lot of the song. I know that song isn't that technical but I'd like to see him playing it in one of your videos.
    Thanks

    • @troygrady
      @troygrady  4 года назад +3

      Billy is great! We haven't interviewed him yet but he was there when we met with Molly.

  • @EmotionalShredd
    @EmotionalShredd 4 года назад

    Hi Troy, it would be very interesting to get Michael Sagmeister on the cam. He is one of the greatest Jazz Bebop Players and never seen such a smooth picking trchnique before. Seems like a mix of alternate picking and economical picking. He doesnt really move his wrist while alternate picking, he seems to get the alternate picking motion through thumb and finger movement

    • @troygrady
      @troygrady  4 года назад

      Haven't listened to him before, but yes, seems to be finger movement, and a mix of alternate and economy. Good catch. The motion itself looks simiar to Martin Miller who we've interviewed. If you haven't seen any of our stuff with him, we have a few things right here on the channel you can check out.

    • @EmotionalShredd
      @EmotionalShredd 4 года назад

      @@troygrady yes, have seen it. I follow all you're content. Martin Miller is fenomenal, what a beast. But I really recommend to analyse Michael Sagmeister, never seen someone hold the Pick with the top of the thumb tip and switching over to a different pick grip now and then. Also playing extrem smooth with extrem small movements even through he is doing alternate picking. Thanks for you're answer

  • @adamhill1216
    @adamhill1216 7 месяцев назад

    Smoke started coming from my speaker there for a bit

  • @LibbysBluegrassVideos
    @LibbysBluegrassVideos 4 года назад

    Have you considered doing a video like this of Jake Workman? The picking hand camera view would be amazing.

  • @RJ-lf8ex
    @RJ-lf8ex 4 года назад

    Is the shoulder angle of his picking hand new? Nice addition! Sweet. Great camera work, thank you for posting

    • @RJ-lf8ex
      @RJ-lf8ex 4 года назад

      3:58 for those curious

    • @troygrady
      @troygrady  4 года назад +1

      We’ve done it for a few interviews including Molly Tuttle and some more recent players as well. But David is ideal because his posture is so consistent.

  • @nylonsteel
    @nylonsteel 3 года назад

    00:02 2:14 3:38 for thy practice

  • @skullduggery3377
    @skullduggery3377 3 года назад

    phew...so sick.

  • @someguy4505
    @someguy4505 6 месяцев назад

    Some people are great at presenting a show to anaylze what others do, some are just meant to play and its hard for them to explain exactly how to do what they do.

  • @Wildart2
    @Wildart2 4 года назад +1

    I wonder if he prefers old strings?

  • @justpassing5324
    @justpassing5324 4 года назад

    Hey guys! Could you consider bringing Chris Poland here? He's an insane legato player, and ex-Megadeth(Peace Sells).

  • @kadourimdou43
    @kadourimdou43 4 года назад

    Will have see if there’s any sheet music for this.

  • @thanosfisherman
    @thanosfisherman 4 года назад +2

    Crazy! Does he abandon the cross picking and switch to pickslanting on the fastest version?

  • @craigyoung8541
    @craigyoung8541 4 года назад

    Troy, love your stuff...did Grier mention what pick he was using here?

  • @cryptoskywalker1714
    @cryptoskywalker1714 4 года назад

    I still miss strings playing Ain't Talkin' Bout Love and Sweet Home Alabama. Fuck!

  • @hotdoggravy
    @hotdoggravy 4 года назад

    Wow

  • @teratism143
    @teratism143 4 года назад

    the best.

  • @guibox3
    @guibox3 4 года назад

    How the f****** can he be so accurate when his wrist is damn near floating over that bridge?? I HAVE to have my pinky anchored to the body to pick like that. He such an unbelievable player.

    • @troygrady
      @troygrady  4 года назад +2

      David rests the hand on the bridge most of the time. That's what provides the tactile reference. However, even if you don't do that, he still has the forearm anchor point as well. That's also a prett powerful reference. In our first interview he shows how he can start with his hand a foot away from the guitar and pick any string with his eyes closed. He doesn't think it's a difficult ability to develop, i.e. the spatial location.

  • @PapaGinseng_
    @PapaGinseng_ 4 года назад

    Sounds about like my VST guitar .. epic!

  • @michaelcraig9449
    @michaelcraig9449 4 года назад

    Troy is this part of the cracking the code lessons? I just want to get right to the stuff to play fast..

  • @R0BERTMAY
    @R0BERTMAY 4 года назад +1

    "Something like that.. that's really slow" 🤣