3 Ritchie Blackmore Licks From 1972

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  • Опубликовано: 27 июл 2024
  • Here's the next Three-For-All lesson with 3 Ritchie Blackmore Licks From 1972.
    Ritchie Blackmore (of Deep Purple and Rainbow fame) is a guitar legend of massive importance and influence for electric rock, hard rock, and metal players all over the world. Even if you don't listen to his music, you can't deny the fact that he single-handedly influenced legions of guitarists that came after him, which is a noticeable trend that continues to this day.
    This lesson takes a look at three licks from a live concert in 1972 from Denmark, which captured Deep Purple strutting their stuff in the early 1970s.
    The ideas in this lesson include an exotic scale overview (in the style of Blackmore), a slippery-sounding blues lick, some rapid-fire shift-sliding ideas, and much more.
    One of the hardest things about nailing Blackmore's style and sound is his tone - which is almost as significant as his licks and phrases. Ritchie's tone (especially in the 1970s) was biting and rich with overtones, which gave most of his ideas "back in the day" its own flavor and unique sound. You can easily catch and "earful" of this during the clips from this lesson.
    Give this lesson a view, leave some comments and feedback, and please subscribe to Late Night Lessons - THANK YOU!
    Become a Patreon supporter of Late Night Lessons for only $5 (or more) each month and gain access to PDF notation/tab files of these lessons. Thank you!
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Комментарии • 174

  • @repetitivemotion
    @repetitivemotion Год назад +9

    I’ve seen many top bands and performers but none as exciting as Blackmore. On stage he was the best to watch, you never knew what he was gonna do. And he played a million notes in a show. Fantastic. He was on fire

  • @keithberry4930
    @keithberry4930 2 года назад +4

    I love Ritchie Blackmores career! Alot of people didnt because of his attitude. Talent wise, he was the best. He didnt Miss anybodies ass. THANK YOU!!

  • @centaurus5676
    @centaurus5676 4 года назад +21

    Gates of Babylon was Blackmore's Zenith in solo's...never heard anybody master that! It's a beast!

  • @lanceross3633
    @lanceross3633 4 года назад +15

    Iconic player,Blackmores influence can be heard in so many different legendary guitarists styles. My first introduction to the harmonic minor scale was through Ritchie. He's got so many exotic sounding licks. Great lesson.

  • @uncleremus5046
    @uncleremus5046 4 года назад +20

    Ritchie wrote the best leads. Also for his time & in his genre he had superior technique. Great lesson Brother!

  • @EllisGordon33
    @EllisGordon33 4 года назад +22

    Ritchie Blackmore, most all were influenced by him, but only the best of the best could add his style to their playing. Another great "Late Nighter".

  • @DJAMAYADOTCOM
    @DJAMAYADOTCOM 4 года назад +13

    last year I rediscovered Richtie's playing and found a new appreciation for how ahead of things he was. I started listening to rainbow and deep purple and my thoughts were basically "yngwie before yngwie" on alot of the sounds I was hearing. Plus even just his look and big presence on stage is so huge and influential. Thanks for going over these licks man.

  • @guitarmemoir
    @guitarmemoir 4 года назад +35

    Blackmore and Beck were the trailblazers. Ritchie for his use of exotic scales and Beck for his modal playing. Few give JB the credit for being the first guy to really introduce mode-based songs to a Rock audience. Maybe a three-pack from Blow By Blow?

    • @vitalygoji
      @vitalygoji 4 года назад

      Just goes to show that guitar playing don't get you far if you don't have great singer. Page and Blackmore wouldn't be known if they did not meet Plant and Gillan. Uria Heep found out that hard way after they fired Byron instead of allowing him to recover

    • @guitarmemoir
      @guitarmemoir 4 года назад +4

      @@vitalygoji Nonsense.

    • @kimhansen6384
      @kimhansen6384 4 года назад

      JB seldom hit a note in tune.

    • @PrinceWesterburg
      @PrinceWesterburg 4 года назад +3

      @@vitalygoji - Yeah, coz Jeff Beck just nose dived after ditching Rod Stewart! XD

    • @seanandben
      @seanandben 3 года назад +3

      Richie Blackmore said of Jeff Beck - "He has notes on his guitar that the rest of us don't have". Richie was a big fan of Jeff's playing.

  • @Waynescottguitar
    @Waynescottguitar 4 года назад +5

    Another great lesson :) love Blackmore's playing, a real trailblazer. Always underrated by the British rock press back in the day.

    • @burlatsdemontaigne6147
      @burlatsdemontaigne6147 4 года назад

      Wayne Scott ____ Not on account of his playing. On account of being an arsehole.

  • @gregalon
    @gregalon 4 года назад +28

    Those snake charmer licks are pure gold.

    • @leroykencaid8992
      @leroykencaid8992 4 года назад +5

      That lick is originally from DP's live version of Mandrake Root where they improvise for like 20 minutes or something, you can hear it on California Jam version of Space Trucking

  • @billwarkentin3630
    @billwarkentin3630 4 года назад +18

    Really enjoyed this Dave! I saw Ritchie 4 times in concert. Once with the classic Purple line-up and 3 times with Rainbow (once each with Dio, Bonnet and Turner). Ritchie was always great! He's more reserved on record, but in concert his greatness really shows!

  • @cirjames2540
    @cirjames2540 4 года назад +15

    Ritchie is so incredibly underrated. Great lesson!

  • @doxierottenbreath5773
    @doxierottenbreath5773 8 месяцев назад +2

    Every now and then somebody just devotes a video to a minute part of a player's style. Thanks so much for these hidden treasures, kind of a resolve after listening to them after all these years. Great stuff - you rock!

  • @65Lynchy
    @65Lynchy 4 года назад +7

    Another great player who started off as a session guy,such a wide body of work,rock,metal,power pop,minstrel!

    • @EclecticEssentric
      @EclecticEssentric 4 года назад

      This seems to be where greats are born; I imagine they get so much info from playing with different folk that they become amazing, and they must have been decent just to be a studio musician in the first place.

  • @jeromegoslett1478
    @jeromegoslett1478 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the insight into my all time favourite player

  • @leslawrenson
    @leslawrenson 4 года назад +4

    Great video! Ritchie Blackmore was a major influence on my playing, and still is. I'm the lead guitarist in a gigging rock covers band, here, in England. We play some Deep Purple and some Ozzie/Rhodes stuff in our set. He's one of a few guys (Rhodes, Gary Moore, Satriani and Schenker included) who encouraged me to step outside the bog-standard pentatonic blues stuff.

  • @J24777
    @J24777 4 года назад +5

    Awesome!!! Glad you did Ritchie Blackmore!! Thank you!!

  • @DogwithtwoBones
    @DogwithtwoBones 4 года назад +4

    Great lesson, you explained the scales well and I appreciate the attention to detail regarding the phrasing. Blackmore is hard to get, but you nailed it!

  • @batmaniac66
    @batmaniac66 4 года назад +2

    More Ritchie, PLEASE!!!

  • @ct90twa
    @ct90twa 4 года назад +7

    Appreciated the exotic scale overview to start there. Another great lesson. Thanks!

  • @davidsmith-jj4iq
    @davidsmith-jj4iq 4 года назад +9

    He used pick up switching a lot ,sometimes for one note then,back,very ingenious.

  • @richb6291
    @richb6291 4 года назад +5

    Exceptionally brilliant Dave thanks for this . Still love Ritchie s playing genius !!!, loved the seamless transition from back to front pick up during solos too.

  • @elenka.svaliva2
    @elenka.svaliva2 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for the lesson. You are so right about Ritchie's legacy and influence.

  • @williammolina9792
    @williammolina9792 4 года назад +5

    One of his favorite groups where the Swedish band ABBA he said in one interview, that he loved their songs structures.

  • @odgeUK
    @odgeUK 4 года назад +11

    This is becoming one of my favourite channels. Love the deep dive approach on the more interesting facets of a players style. Great work! With regard to Hendrix and Blackmore, I really feel the influence was one way, Blackmore was playing a 335 until Hendrix came along, at which point, like Clapton, he switched to a strat and then started to go crazy with the whammy bar like Hendrix. And Blackmore really discovered Dio and Coverdale, as opposed to 'worked with them'. They became greats due to their association with the master Ritchie Blackmore! Would love an analysis of Ritchie's Strange Kinda Woman live solo on Made in Japan, that is chock full of Blackmore's licks and I've only see one person on YT give it a go.

    • @centaurus5676
      @centaurus5676 4 года назад +1

      You are correct, Dio was in ELF who were a support band and Coverdale answered an add in Melody maker. Without Blackmore their careers would have been different.

  • @elinino5275
    @elinino5275 2 года назад +2

    Ritchie pretty much invented everything. With the exception of the Hendricks chord, but he may have been playing that as a kid who knows!

  • @drewm5898
    @drewm5898 4 года назад +3

    BLACKMORE I LOVE IT
    Love you Dave

  • @lawrencelike6125
    @lawrencelike6125 3 года назад +2

    Great job on identifying Ritchie's phrasing. Ritchie continues to use those scales in Blackmore's Night. On virtually every live album, Ritchie uses the scales that you did such a great job of illustrating. Thank you!

  • @michaeljoseph2917
    @michaeljoseph2917 4 года назад +1

    Ritchie's my boy. Good job with this. Your my one and only teacher for now. Excellent player you are.

  • @BillLarkinmusic
    @BillLarkinmusic Год назад

    I play guitar for a living. You are my Yoda guitar guru. lol
    Great insight again; Blackmore has a mysterious and moody mode in notes and phrases, bluesy but almost vicious
    for the time..

  • @seanmiller7889
    @seanmiller7889 4 года назад +3

    Thanks for adding in the background stories along with your lessons. It really adds to your content.

  • @MeandMaeForever
    @MeandMaeForever 4 года назад +3

    Damn man... The early Rainbow days... I can hear all these licks all over yhe olace from the 80s till now

  • @mariannwatt2678
    @mariannwatt2678 2 года назад

    Thanks mate im gonna work on this today you kinda demistfied some stuff that has been staring me in the face for a long time this old boy gonna nail this today cheers

  • @TheDogPa
    @TheDogPa 4 года назад

    Almost nobody ever gets anything right when it comes to Ritchie. I had this show on a vhs with a code burn in the 80's...so I was ready to be disappointed...but wait...! Excellent piece. Well done! I saw just about every SoCal Deep Purple or Ritchie show for decades...starting with 2 times in '74. I just turned 60 and it's sure nice to see people out there still paying attention to this stuff.

  • @billwilliams6338
    @billwilliams6338 4 года назад +14

    LATENIGHTLESSON, Joe Stump uses a lot of those double leading tone scales, maybe you can make a video on Joe Stump licks

  • @josephmarino2654
    @josephmarino2654 3 года назад

    Thanks for the analysis of the ‘72 concert licks. Ritchie Blackmore is my favorite guitarist for many years.

  • @greenmanmusic1259
    @greenmanmusic1259 4 года назад +2

    Great to hear some stuff from Blackmore!

  • @SharpEdgeStandardOfficial
    @SharpEdgeStandardOfficial Год назад +1

    I remember hearing Strange Kind of Woman when I was about 12 or 13 yrs old and being completely floored by his playing it sounded so intricate and perfect the way he would rip through solos.

    • @mattmarcz7574
      @mattmarcz7574 Год назад +1

      That's the most underrated guitar solo ever. Still gives the chills

  • @aruizislas
    @aruizislas 4 года назад +6

    First time I listened to that Hungarian scale was in an old David Chastain's lesson.

  • @stringbender11672
    @stringbender11672 4 года назад +1

    Awesome bro. A lot going on in this video. Loved it
    🤟😎👍🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸

  • @RecycledRocker2
    @RecycledRocker2 4 года назад +1

    I really appreciate your musical education . Thanks for sharing !!

  • @joseluismartinalonso1736
    @joseluismartinalonso1736 2 года назад

    Hi friend. I usually watch your videos (although I understand quite little of what you say, because of my bad English) and this must be the first time I have seen you excited during the entire video. I hope you laughed as much as I did when Ritchie dropped his pick, precisely at that concert in Denmark. Congratulations on your analysis. Thank you.

  • @pauljude
    @pauljude 4 года назад +7

    Just found you man. Definitely digging the vids!!!

  • @marklamorder3743
    @marklamorder3743 6 месяцев назад

    Awesome stuff!

  • @simbat1833
    @simbat1833 Год назад

    Great, thanks for showing ritchie's licks, nice one, will try them, more please

  • @MadamOst
    @MadamOst 2 года назад

    I adore Ritchie Blackmore.

  • @fredrios1402
    @fredrios1402 4 года назад +1

    Your commentary is great..not just your lessons... Was never a real big Blackmore fan..but you treatment caught my ear

  • @bluevd12
    @bluevd12 4 года назад +3

    I saw Richie at the electric circus in new york. Playin a red 335 doin their first hit hush. Great sound straight into a marshall.. 1967 i think

  • @PrinceWesterburg
    @PrinceWesterburg 4 года назад +2

    Blackmore influenced Hendrix - My God, I never considered that! >Mind Blown

    • @giannisvar4414
      @giannisvar4414 4 года назад

      Hendrix influenced ritchie

    • @craigcotter7476
      @craigcotter7476 3 года назад

      @@giannisvar4414 tons of people influenced Hendrix.

  • @Hughami
    @Hughami 4 года назад +4

    Oh, cool! Hoped this one was coming. Love Blackmore. Nice one, Mr. B. (Er ... rewster., not lackmore, I mean). And, if i might add, i really like your vibrato.👏 if Neal Schon comes up soon, it will make my Christmas. Just sayin’ 😉

  • @davidsmith-jj4iq
    @davidsmith-jj4iq 4 года назад +3

    Ritchie ,was the first,rock player I was really into[Made in Japan, In Rock,etc] the whole band are awesome ,but Rainbow were awesome[Dio era,mainly],I saw him in 1980,with Graham Bonnet,and he was an enigma ,some nights he would be on fire ,others ,looked like he didn't care, a character,for sure.

  • @tittitocci
    @tittitocci 4 года назад +2

    Ritchie! ❤
    Another great video!
    Licks from the 70es Al Di Meola or from the late, great, Ollie Halsall would be very welcome 😉

  • @johncrapper366
    @johncrapper366 4 года назад +1

    The best you tube channel

  • @leftyzappa
    @leftyzappa Год назад

    Big time Deep Purple fan. Thank you for this!

  • @billysmith5075
    @billysmith5075 4 года назад +1

    You're setting the bar high David ...Always interesting and cool gotta love it !!!!

  • @hazor777
    @hazor777 4 года назад +1

    they're all good, but this is one of your more valuable lessons - many thanks

  • @kevinraabe457
    @kevinraabe457 4 года назад +3

    You my friend are one hellaciously advanced , knowledgeable player. Where did you grow up? Incidentally, did you already give us a Schenker lesson!?!? I believe you recently did. Thank you forever!

  • @philipbowley8374
    @philipbowley8374 4 года назад +1

    Cool lesson mate..well put together.

  • @garyh.238
    @garyh.238 3 года назад

    Thank you for this excellent overview of Blackmore's use of the harmonic minor scales and variants. Very well presented and understandable. It will definitely be helpful to my learning - I will be referring to this video a lot.

  • @LawHunterSound
    @LawHunterSound 4 года назад +1

    Thanks Dave ... Thanks a Lot!!

  • @peterslattman6762
    @peterslattman6762 2 года назад

    Dave. Great video! Really like your style of not only showing the licks but also putting them into context.
    Richie is a fenomenal player who deserves more recognition.

  • @hybris159
    @hybris159 3 года назад

    Wow, thank you very much for this awesome lesson!

  • @giustinoscalise3177
    @giustinoscalise3177 3 года назад

    LOVE THIS VIDEO! Thank you!

  • @RodneyWallaceDynamoC
    @RodneyWallaceDynamoC 3 года назад

    thank you such great lesson! Loved it

  • @jesseserna8424
    @jesseserna8424 2 месяца назад

    Ritchie is a living legend of guitar playing.Back in the 80s Dio was my idol,then I discovered Rainbow and found that the same guitar player was in Deep Purple 😮WOW 🙌🏼🎸..Live long and be well Ritchie Blackmore. By the way I just discovered Uli Jon Roth 😉

  • @allbutsix7372
    @allbutsix7372 4 года назад +1

    Another great one

  • @williamdon3442
    @williamdon3442 4 года назад

    Love your lessons mr Brewster

  • @bustercrack788
    @bustercrack788 4 года назад +1

    Great lesson on someone who doesn’t actually feature that much on RUclips tutorials . After a few beers the other night my mate re introduced me to the Stormbringer album and I wondered if Blackmore would feature on LNL and then here he is . That’s called synchronicity you know 😂🇬🇧✌️

    • @voronOsphere
      @voronOsphere 4 года назад

      David B is always one step ahead of just about EVERYONE'S Wish List!

  • @kellymcdonald1895
    @kellymcdonald1895 Год назад

    EXCELLENT!

  • @davidyates8880
    @davidyates8880 4 года назад +1

    Another great video David. I'm lucky enough to have seen Blackmore play both for Rainbow and Deep Purple. Also saw his protege, Yngwie, play his first ever UK gig, unfortunately never saw Randy, but did see the great Uli Roth play in the 1980s. Would love to see a video of you dissecting some of his licks.

  • @MouldyGuitars
    @MouldyGuitars Год назад

    Great video. It has tied together something I just stubbled across as I tried to play along to (not replicate - I'm too early for that!!) Gates of Babylon. I found it fitted a scale that I had stumbled across a while ago which was minor pentatonic with major 3rd. It has that sort of sound. But your video ties it together with the proper theory :). Now I realise why I like RB and this scale sound.. The two go hand in hand and must be set in my mind from listening to this in the late 70s in my early teens :D

  • @Scottocaster6668
    @Scottocaster6668 4 года назад +2

    On the last lick you showed, I liked that pinky finger harmonic "slap" on the 12th fret for the last note. Probably didn't realize you did it.It sounded cool 😀👍

    • @jeddak
      @jeddak 4 года назад

      Noticed that, too. That was sweet. 11:15

  • @bluefenderboy
    @bluefenderboy 4 года назад +1

    What I would like to see is your take on his live playing with Rainbow in the 70's. Maybe some stuff off of the Onstage album. There are a lot of things to look at in the versions of Mistreated and Catch The Rainbow on that album. The intro to 16th Century Greensleeves also comes to mind. The material that he released with Dio was absolutely killer!

  • @n.j.m.3752
    @n.j.m.3752 4 года назад

    Definitely my favorite you tube channel

  • @Gohanndes1
    @Gohanndes1 4 года назад +19

    Excellent lesson! Another one of the same era guitarist who used exotic scales is Uli Jon Roth, maybe you can do lesson on his licks.

  • @roberthunter3783
    @roberthunter3783 3 года назад

    Amazing lesson

  • @GameLevelEditor
    @GameLevelEditor Год назад

    Well explained insight into guitar theory and antics used by one of my rock n roll legends! Everything you mentioned is on par with what i gathered growing up in the late 70s and early 80s! The lesson was cool too. One thing I realized about Ritchie was things I noticed earlier on especially in the live footage available how he would seem to chromaticize some riffs very quickly like he did in "child in time live" almost spaz like but i thought it was very cool how he did it with such conviction.

  • @irecki1
    @irecki1 4 года назад

    Richie was guru of the guitar, but you are a guru of presentation his style

  • @edmundooliva6818
    @edmundooliva6818 4 года назад +4

    For me, Blackmore is up there with Van Halen... A guitar virtuoso 🤘

  • @jukup1
    @jukup1 4 года назад

    YEEEEEEEEESSSSSSSSSSSSSSS!!!! THANK YOU SO MUCH!!!!!!!

  • @seanandben
    @seanandben 3 года назад

    I can't believe I missed this first time around! A fantastic lesson on the minor tonalities scales, and a great insight into Richie Blackmore's playing style. Did you know that Richie only used 2 positions on his pickup selector - the neck or the bridge. In fact, he usually took the middle pickup out altogether and just screwed the cover down fully. Watching him play, it's interesting to note that his pick or picking hand is generally over where the middle pickup would be, so I guess it got in the way. Fender's Richie tribute strat had no pickup in the middle. :-)

  • @LASKARIKOS
    @LASKARIKOS 2 года назад

    Blackmore is a legend

  • @robertritchie2860
    @robertritchie2860 2 года назад +1

    By the way Blackmore discovered Gillan, Coverdale, Dio, Bonnet, JLT and Ronnie Romero. And half of them went on to sing for Tony Iommi... Including Glen Hughes. That's a lot of Rock Royalty stemming from Mr Blackmore....

  • @GuitarPahlut
    @GuitarPahlut 4 года назад +1

    Thanks David, Mr Blackmore is one of my all times favs!!!!! I am so happy you did this lesson man! \m/

  • @krispayy6076
    @krispayy6076 4 года назад +1

    You should have done his licks from California Jam in 1974!

  • @simongustafsson4470
    @simongustafsson4470 2 года назад

    I may be a little late on this one due to the facts that this video is 3 years old.. But i just wanted to thank you for covering up some of the scales Ritchie use, and show us on the guitar.
    I play guitar myself and have recently commit to be better in terms of scales, techniques and music theory in general and the more I learn about all the theory and styles of great guitar legends, the more I understand what an impact they made in their times.. and still do of course. Im talking about names like Blackmore, Hendrix, Malmsteen, Page etc..
    My personal goal is just to be aware of all the greatness guitar legends have given us and just practice it and give it a personal mark.. and of course to have fun with it and rocking out! :)
    P.S Who is your favorite guitarist?

  • @burlatsdemontaigne6147
    @burlatsdemontaigne6147 4 года назад +1

    What about the Ritchie lick that Hendrix pinched from Terry Kath and SRV pinched from Ritchie? You know the one. The 'major excursion' I call it.

  • @hank987
    @hank987 4 года назад +5

    I assume that lick reminds you of Angus since its the same notes as "Whole Lotta Rosie"....great job!

    • @robertritchie2860
      @robertritchie2860 3 месяца назад

      Except it was written 5 years BEFORE whole lotta rosie

  • @ericmurray5001
    @ericmurray5001 4 года назад

    I really dig this guy's style. I'm learning a lot. One positively-intended format suggestion: Start each video with a clip playing the lick and then work back into the dialog; which are both equally as entertaining and educational by this pleasant instructor. I skip to the first clip I see of the playing and backtrack to the explanation. I suppose I do this because I like to hear how close to each player he actually gets sonically and then hear how he arrived to such vivid interpretations of specific guitarists' styles. The way he uses the artist's signature guitar on his video pic to explain who's style the video investigates is creative marketing ingenuity.

  • @ganazby
    @ganazby 4 года назад

    Scott Henderson is a huge fan of Ritchie Blackmore.

  • @angularsquare8757
    @angularsquare8757 2 года назад

    I would say the first few bars of the studio Child in Time solo, certainly influenced Dave Gilmour.

  • @rcanderson4328
    @rcanderson4328 4 года назад +1

    Blackmore is the king.

  • @voronOsphere
    @voronOsphere 4 года назад +1

    Sweeeeeeet!!!

  • @joefoster9303
    @joefoster9303 4 года назад +1

    I took lessons from joe stump for one year in Brookline 1994.

  • @greenmanmusic1259
    @greenmanmusic1259 4 года назад +2

    So how about some tone note, chord change, whole tone bends etc from Mr Gilmour?

  • @batmaniac66
    @batmaniac66 4 года назад

    More Blackmore, please!

  • @jasonrowland3379
    @jasonrowland3379 4 года назад +2

    How about 3 Uli licks? Great job btw. Excellent vids

    • @odgeUK
      @odgeUK 4 года назад +2

      I second this. Any licks from Sails of Charon would be a great start.

    • @jasonrowland3379
      @jasonrowland3379 4 года назад +1

      @@odgeUK he has a lot of great licks. The double live album transcendental sky guitar with an orchestra is insane

  • @mariannwatt2678
    @mariannwatt2678 2 года назад

    I read that richie took lessons from big jim sullivan a session guitarist,in london

  • @thetruthhurts6652
    @thetruthhurts6652 Год назад +1

    The first guitarist I listened to was Blackmore. Unfortunately it ruined it me because no one after that impressed me as much.

    • @thetruthhurts6652
      @thetruthhurts6652 7 месяцев назад

      Same with me. He was my first and after I started listening to all the other guitar gods I always thought Blackmore was better and couldn’t understand why he wasn’t getting the same recognition the others got.

  • @christopherprim1973
    @christopherprim1973 3 года назад

    Who is Marty Friedman? I feel like a good biopic of Marty is long overdue. A good girlfriend introduced me to both Bruce Cockburn and early-mid Dire Straits, so I don't feel like everyone went to seed early. You remind me of my favorite keyboard nerd. Anyway, on to the Sabbath video.