Smooth groove, I grew up listening to , Joe Sample, Eric Clapton and David Sanborn. Beautiful , it does not get any better , they love to watch each other play. Steve Gadd kills it on drums also. The best !
Great groove by all the "A list" players. You can tell Steve has played drums behind Clapton for a good while. He fully supports his guitar playing and singing.
@@Nounismisation This is a quiz for Peanuts. Create a great new melody, or simply show off the prepared phrases that fit the key. Which is more creative and advanced? It is a hint. The difference between karaoke and composition. The difference between the quiz king and the inventor. The difference between a scientist and a critic.
@@Nounismisation everyone can be absent minded once in a while. I have seen all the guitar players make mistakea playing their own solos.. Including Mark Knopfler severas times in a night So what?
@xaniumpower jazz for me is like painting a picture; there are no more wrong notes if you reach a certain level of skill; there's just expression. these two notes in the context can give the right spice, the right dot of colour to make the pictuer interesting. in my opinion :-)
That's correct, Victor Wooten did a nice statement about this. anyway, even if eric was "wrong" (and by wrong, I mean playing a couple of notes he wasn't going to play intentionally) it's still improvised music, and little mistakes can also make the music alive. nobody would want to listen to a couple of computers running scales :D
There were better notes for the context though. But i agree with you. Every note can have it's place in music. Someone has told me a similar statement. There are no wrong notes in music he said. Every note can be a "right" note if you resolve it even though it maybe is considered as a "wrong" note. Pick a key, take a "wrong" note. The distance to a "right" note isn't that big isn't it?
Smooth groove, I grew up listening to , Joe Sample, Eric Clapton and David Sanborn. Beautiful , it does not get any better , they love to watch each other play. Steve Gadd kills it on drums also. The best !
Great groove by all the "A list" players.
You can tell Steve has played drums behind Clapton for a good while. He fully supports his guitar playing and singing.
Sample solo: 2:48
Clapton solo: 4:39
This Eric's solo is why he is far better and creative than Jazz guitarist. EC's solo is like a story.
Amazing Improvisation.
Are you off your nut? The man didn't know which key everyone else was playing in at moment.. 40mins 40 to be precise.
@@Nounismisation
This is a quiz for Peanuts.
Create a great new melody, or simply show off the prepared phrases that fit the key.
Which is more creative and advanced?
It is a hint.
The difference between karaoke and composition. The difference between the quiz king and the inventor. The difference between a scientist and a critic.
I wrote 40mins 40? Where has this CC'd response comment come from?
@@Nounismisation Eric is mainly improvisational so they got the key wrong but once he found it ,,it was fire 🔥
@@Nounismisation everyone can be absent minded once in a while. I have seen all the guitar players make mistakea playing their own solos..
Including Mark Knopfler severas times in a night
So what?
I live this laid back and in the pocket, all day
Marcus is GREAT!!
Marcus Rules! [2]
Eric laying down the funk !!
Marcus Miller Rules!
Who wrote this comosition/song? It sounds amazing!
@xaniumpower
jazz for me is like painting a picture; there are no more wrong notes if you reach a certain level of skill; there's just expression. these two notes in the context can give the right spice, the right dot of colour to make the pictuer interesting. in my opinion :-)
That's correct, Victor Wooten did a nice statement about this.
anyway, even if eric was "wrong" (and by wrong, I mean playing a couple of notes he wasn't going to play intentionally) it's still improvised music, and little mistakes can also make the music alive. nobody would want to listen to a couple of computers running scales :D
@CptChaos88 Gadd had already played with EC. Just watch EC live in Hyde Park (Prince's Trust concert, 1996).
There were better notes for the context though. But i agree with you. Every note can have it's place in music. Someone has told me a similar statement.
There are no wrong notes in music he said. Every note can be a "right" note if you resolve it even though it maybe is considered as a "wrong" note.
Pick a key, take a "wrong" note. The distance to a "right" note isn't that big isn't it?
nice ! ですね.
im already jumpin' :D:D:D!!!!!
@pullerknabe Yeah, sounds one step sharp :D
@xaniumpower but this concert was 14 years ago. :>
So...?
Your comment was 9 years ago.
Everything happened sometime.
What's your point?
4:42 - aaaaaahhhhhhhhhhhh!!!!!!!! total fuck up
@stretch54
sorry but as far as I know, they met the first time there. they started to tour together from there on. or am I wrong??
Put some “stank” on it❗️
😃🌈🎷⚡️✨🌟
too bad Eric makes a mistake at 4:41, when he changes scale.
It could fit in the song, but it are 2 wrong notes :(
eric gets older i guess ^^