Shopping by The Jam | Guitar Cover

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  • Опубликовано: 27 авг 2024
  • B-side of Beat Surrender, the final single by The Jam, released November 1982. Some unusual chord sequences in this song, pointing towards Paul Weller's later work in The Style Council
    Using Spleeter I've removed Paul Weller's guitar tracks after the opening pickup notes and replaced with my own. The parts are more or less what was played on the recorded version.
    I'm going into a Boss CE-2w then using an ABY box to split the signal. Left hand side is into an Amplifire-box on its Vox setting. Right hand side is a Joyo AC Tone, then to a Mooer Radar on its AC30 simulation. Then into two channels on my DAW, where I'm adding some hall reverb.
    I'm playing a Gibson ES 330 1964 re-issue.
    Like me on Facebook: / headlessguitarplayer
    Follow me on Instagram: / headlessguitarplayer
    Website: headlessguitar...
    #thejam #paulweller

Комментарии • 6

  • @ApCommunityRock
    @ApCommunityRock 2 года назад +1

    !! Awesome My Friend I love your work keep rock n roll :D !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @serpico555
    @serpico555 Год назад

    Please give the TAB for this song and how you play it.

  • @modfather1965
    @modfather1965 2 года назад +2

    Dude... This is friggin brilliant. Questions: Is that a vintage Casino? Second, how did you manage to drop out the guitar part on the track? Third, what camera are you using to record the video/audio? Thanks for your patience... Keep up the good work. I just subscribed. ;-)

    • @HeadlessGuitarPlayer
      @HeadlessGuitarPlayer  2 года назад

      Thanks. It’s a reissue ES330 ‘64. I used Spleeter to create the stems then just muted everything other than Bruce’s and Ricks parts in my DAW. Then filmed myself using iPhone 11 whilst recording a new guitar track. Then edited in VSDC to blend the audio exported from my DAW with the vid.

    • @modfather1965
      @modfather1965 2 года назад +1

      @@HeadlessGuitarPlayer Geeze... I think I need another PhD to decipher that. Whatever you're doing, it's great. Cool guitar too... I thought it was a Casino, but a Gibson will do.;-) The 330 and the Casino are really the same guitar with different headstock logos, especially those from the old factory back in the 60's...

    • @HeadlessGuitarPlayer
      @HeadlessGuitarPlayer  2 года назад +1

      It probably reads more complicated than it actually is to do it. It is basically creating multiple tracks from a master recording (e.g. ripped from a CD) then muting the ones you don’t want hear. You can have some fun with it too other than replicating parts : instagram.com/tv/CWwAMBcpsf0/