The Origin of Tapping on Guitar

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 15 апр 2020
  • Join Guitar Super System today: guitarsupersystem.com
    Stream my debut album Lotus on Spotify: spoti.fi/40kR5x2
    Stream my debut album Lotus on Apple Music: apple.co/476OXuP
    Follow on Instagram: / musiciswin
    Follow on Facebook: / musiciswin
  • ВидеоклипыВидеоклипы

Комментарии • 741

  • @MusicisWin
    @MusicisWin  4 года назад +169

    I hope you enjoyed the video! Thanks for watching and hope everyone is doing great. Now quit reading these comments and pick up your guitar!

    • @billmozart7288
      @billmozart7288 4 года назад

      You got me

    • @zackmags2458
      @zackmags2458 4 года назад

      Can I finish my homework first?

    • @neenuvasu
      @neenuvasu 4 года назад

      I am already subscribed.
      CHECKMATE. TYLER

    • @NivanSharma
      @NivanSharma 4 года назад +1

      Music is Win yes father I will practice

    • @chrisoma4
      @chrisoma4 4 года назад +4

      If you wanna see true tapping look up stanley Jordan, jon gomm, alex misko or any of the rest of those guys in the percussive guitar community. Eddie can't hold a candle to them. Anyone can tap with one finger but not many can do an eight finger tapping solo while playing different layers of music independently with each hand.

  • @myless.5493
    @myless.5493 4 года назад +642

    Person: Eddie, what was the note again
    Eddie: Its right here
    *accidentally touches the string*

    • @plowablemars2697
      @plowablemars2697 4 года назад +33

      That's how tapping was invented

    • @putridabomination
      @putridabomination 4 года назад +5

      Zappa did it before him though

    • @commentfreely5443
      @commentfreely5443 4 года назад +1

      my hand is fretting

    • @joshuafreedman7703
      @joshuafreedman7703 4 года назад +7

      Putrid Abomination Evidence recontinuously points out that Edward Van Halen himself never once in his lifetime has tried to claim he invented the technique, or was the *first* to use it. So making protest statements such as "Zappa did before him" is just needless.

    • @MarylandGuy-ey3st
      @MarylandGuy-ey3st 4 года назад +5

      EVH didn’t invent it but he made it mainstream in rock music

  • @evanelgart5449
    @evanelgart5449 4 года назад +138

    Tyler thank you so much for mentioning Genesis. A lot of people don’t realize that Steve Hackett was a serious tapping pioneer and how influential he was with the technique. You’re the man!

    • @aliensporebomb
      @aliensporebomb 3 года назад +13

      Be sure to check out “Shadow of the Hierophant” from Hackett’s “Voyage of the Acolyte” where he does an unaccompanied tapping solo between two sections but with a lot more echo. This was done in 1975,

    • @tonymagrogan
      @tonymagrogan 2 года назад +6

      Also, the intro to Return of the Giant Hogweed in Nursery Cryme (1971). And 2m35s into Dancing With The Moonlit Knight from Selling England By The Pound (1973).

    • @francescofavro8888
      @francescofavro8888 Год назад +3

      @@tonymagrogan and also in the live version of "The Knife"

    • @tonymagrogan
      @tonymagrogan Год назад

      @@francescofavro8888 that’s right. Live, because Ant Phillips did the studio version

    • @LaMarcGasoldridge
      @LaMarcGasoldridge Год назад

      John Du Cann of Atomic Rooster was guitar tapping back in early 1971, and I am surprised no one has ever mentioned him. This even predates Steve Hackett doing it during Nursery Cryme later on in the same year.

  • @IgnorancEnArrogance
    @IgnorancEnArrogance 3 года назад +27

    Personally I give the credit to Steve Hackett for adding the hard rock electric guitar tone that is intrinsically tied to tapping today. He also does some great tapping on The Return of The Giant Hogweed and Supper's Ready during that 71-72' era of Genesis.

    • @drwugong
      @drwugong Год назад

      I was going to say, wasn't the intro to hogweed the first in a rock context?

  • @lauscho
    @lauscho 4 года назад +17

    Steve Hackett also did some rudimentary sweep picking along with tapping on "Dancing with the Moonlit Knight". His credentials as a pioneer of shred techniques must NOT be diminished and I'd love for you to give him more love in a future episode.

  • @RandyResnick
    @RandyResnick 4 года назад +39

    Thanks for the mention! Hey bros, at 00:01:20 you ask about Harvey Mandel and me. Harvey played alongside me in PFDA with Sugarcane in 1970 (he's in that photo) and he first saw me tapping night after night in most of my (rare!) solos. He likes to say he brought it out more to the public, which is true. This is mentioned in Van Halen 101 and by Lee Rittenour who was at the Whisky one night when we played there with Richard Greene. As for the inspiration, I did want to be able to play as fast as Don, but the inspiration came from African music, similar to Herbie Hancock's later version of Watermelon Man that used the bottle sounds. That is how it started, playing intervals too wide to play legato on the neck with the left had. That was also the time of the Chapman Stick.

    • @FreeBrunoPowroznik
      @FreeBrunoPowroznik 3 года назад +2

      Hi Randy. Fantastic to read your comment and see you on here. I'm sure I read somewhere that Zappa got his tapping (with plectrum) technique from either you or Harvey. Did you ever spot that moustache in the crowd?

    • @RandyResnick
      @RandyResnick 3 года назад

      @@FreeBrunoPowroznik Hey, great to hear from you! I recall Frank was at the same studio as we were at some point, but did not actually see him. I recall he was in a foul mood. You've seen the Italian guy on TV years before, killing it with tapping? The unique thing about what I was doing then and now is the rhythm. The tapping technique itself has been around forever. I think Harvey finally came around to admitting that he may have been "inspired" by seeing me do it. There a good example of what I was doing on my wikipedia page.

    • @FreeBrunoPowroznik
      @FreeBrunoPowroznik 3 года назад +1

      @@RandyResnick Thank you so much for the reply Randy. I've got Sugarcane Harris's anthology cd (vol 1) and I'm sure you are on some of the tracks. That music is unbelievable!

    • @RandyResnick
      @RandyResnick 3 года назад

      @@FreeBrunoPowroznik I'm glad you like it, it was an amazing experience playing with those guys!

    • @markr.devereux3385
      @markr.devereux3385 2 года назад +1

      Great comment I totally believe what you are saying. And props about the Chapman stick. The technique is integral to the instrument. I feel there is more to the story . Steve LYNCH remembers learning the technique at THE GUITAR INSTITUTE. it was floating around and Steve being the guitar master he was tracked down a fusion player that shared the tapping thing with him. This was pre-van Halen debut record. Of course EVH really fleshed it out in all its glory. But it was coming down the pike and would have hit the main stream at some point.

  • @mikefalappi
    @mikefalappi 4 года назад +23

    I was just excited to hear someone mention Steve Hackett. Especially in the same video as Van Halen. Hackett is severely underrated.

  • @PastelComGini
    @PastelComGini 4 года назад +12

    Hackett's "tapping" is very audible in Selling England By the Pound's solo.

  • @robertrobles4028
    @robertrobles4028 Месяц назад +1

    Jimmy Webster recorded his tapping technique on an entire record in 1959. Webster called his technique the touch method. He was doing it years before….It’s available on RUclips. That beats all of the guys you mentioned by several years. He actually wrote an instruction book ‘the Touch Method for Electric Spanish Guitars in the 1950’s.

  • @ChristianIce
    @ChristianIce 4 года назад +23

    0:00 Question.
    2:09 Answer.

  • @neenuvasu
    @neenuvasu 4 года назад +32

    Just started guitar super system.
    Amazing recommend to everyone.
    Trying to improve guitar in lockdown.
    Stay healthy Tyler 💙.

  • @IgnorancEnArrogance
    @IgnorancEnArrogance 3 года назад +12

    The Musical Box is the first recorded instance when it comes to real electric tapping, but a lot of people don't seem to be aware that Steve used it to a further extent on at least two other Genesis songs roughly within the same year: The Return of the Giant Hogweed from the same album starts with finger tapping. Then the third movement as well as the last minute of the epic Supper's Ready in 1972 use the technique in a comparatively faster and more effective way like EHV. There is a good amount of video footage Steve playing these songs in 1971-1972. The Musical Box only has 5 seconds of tapping, whereas these two other songs give a much better example of Steve's compositional finger-tapping from the former and improvised finger-tapping from the latter. While it's obvious that EVH perfected and popularized the technique, Steve deserves a little more credit in this topic than just a quick honorable mention.

    • @Blockoumi
      @Blockoumi 2 года назад +1

      also in dancing with the moonlit knight in 1973

    • @bobapposite4435
      @bobapposite4435 2 года назад +1

      Which is almost certainly where Eddie actually got it.

  • @miriambenjisalarmedia8340
    @miriambenjisalarmedia8340 4 года назад +6

    Music is win is great!!

  • @themistoklestheodosopoulos6253
    @themistoklestheodosopoulos6253 4 года назад +75

    Hacket was sick. Those early Genesis albums are fire. Also the tapping on the solo from Musical Box was definitely not showmanship. It was a compositional tool.

    • @pumbar
      @pumbar 4 года назад +3

      Agreed

    • @NivanSharma
      @NivanSharma 4 года назад +2

      Themistokles Theodosopoulos 100% agree

    • @socialdef3
      @socialdef3 4 года назад +5

      Genesis was at the top of their game in the 70's.... nobody could touch them except perhaps Yes, and in the late 70's, Rush appeared.

    • @magnusbruce4051
      @magnusbruce4051 4 года назад +6

      Yeaaah, from Trespass to The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway are all prog rock essentials. Steve is such a humble and chilled out guy, too. Yeah, he was pioneering a bunch of techniques and had an acute sense of not over-playing (even though he definitely could if he wanted) but is often overlooked as a musician in Genesis. I saw him a few years ago on one of his Genesis Revisited tours. He's started incorporating some new techniques into his playing like mashing the tremolo bar and is, I think, more technically proficient than he was in the early-mid 70s. He's about the same age as the rest of the guys from Genesis, but he looks about ten or twenty years younger imo. Possibly because he's so chilled out.
      Back when I saw him playing Gabriel era songs was the night after I saw Peter Gabriel play the final date of his tour and in the same city. I felt there might be a guest appearance as he was in the area and Steve was doing the songs Peter sang, but nothing happened. Incidentally, Stephen Biko's son was in the audience for Peter's gig, so that made the performance of Biko just that extra special.

    • @IgnorancEnArrogance
      @IgnorancEnArrogance 3 года назад +2

      Yeah for how incredible and moving his guitar playing was, he is probably the least showy guitar player I've ever seen, sitting and looking down for most of his entire run with Genesis like he was a session musician.

  • @stebbarry9395
    @stebbarry9395 6 месяцев назад +1

    Dave Bunker is another player that very few seem to know about. From the Wikipedia page "Dave Bunker developed and patented the first double-necked tap/touch-style guitar,[6] which he called the Duo'Lectar." in 1955. I have seen a video where he plays rhythm with one hand on one neck and melody with his other hand on the other neck.

  • @davefree11
    @davefree11 4 года назад +32

    Eruption is the reason I’m here. That was my hook. The defining moment I wanted to play guitar.

  • @July-gj1st
    @July-gj1st 4 года назад +4

    I really loved this video! Here’s some ideas I’d love to hear in this format:
    Origin of sweep picking
    Origin of pinch harmonics

    • @dannycottar3737
      @dannycottar3737 2 года назад

      Roy Buchanan (spelling ?) was the 1st to be recorded using , pinch harmonics . He says , he used to accidentally do it . Then he started deliberately doing it . He was fantastic , RIP .

  • @sonicbridge1944
    @sonicbridge1944 4 года назад +5

    As an eyewitness, I can declare that Harvey Mandel's tapping technique was being used as far back as the Early 70's. He may not have been the first to use it, but he was the first rock and blues player to noticeably incorporate it into his playing style.

    • @RandyResnick
      @RandyResnick 4 года назад +2

      Yes, your declaration is true! It's right when we were both in Pure Food & Drug in the early 1970's. He'll confirm he first saw me tapping, then developed his own use.

  • @hugoleonardoamaral586
    @hugoleonardoamaral586 4 года назад +127

    There's also a Queen song that uses tapping. When asked where he took inspiration, Brian may said he took it from Billy gibbons in the song "beer drinkers and hellraisers" I'm pulling it all from memory right now but I still have this interview somewhere in my guitar magazines

    • @rickyperaza411
      @rickyperaza411 4 года назад +8

      Hugo Leonardo Amaral the song is called it's late 👍🏼👍🏼

    • @norman3605
      @norman3605 4 года назад +10

      “It’s Late” from News of the World (1977). First VH album 1978. May did something quite different than Van Halen’s work on first album, as May incorporated heavy string bending using his left hand with the tapping of his right hand. In both cases you get a solo that sounds like something other than a guitar, but both styles sound quite different from each other.

    • @KelliHell
      @KelliHell 4 года назад +6

      There are also a few tapped notes right at the end of the solo in "Bohemian Rhapsody"

    • @andjustjizzforall
      @andjustjizzforall 4 года назад +5

      @@KelliHell No there definitely is not any tapping in that

    • @KelliHell
      @KelliHell 4 года назад +3

      @@andjustjizzforall Sorry, it's later on; right before "Nothing really matters.. etc." ruclips.net/video/fJ9rUzIMcZQ/видео.html

  • @charlesperry671
    @charlesperry671 4 года назад +11

    The magic about tapping is that back in the early 50’s - late 70’s, before the internet, it was a technique you had to figure out yourself. I couldn’t imagine the excitement artists like Eddie felt after figuring out how to do it in their bedroom as a teen.

    • @socialdef3
      @socialdef3 4 года назад

      Imagine poor Eddies surprise when Steve Hackett had been doing it for years already.

    • @RogueReplicant
      @RogueReplicant 4 года назад +4

      @@socialdef3 Why would he be surprised? He figured it out on his own, stylized it and made it his own.

    • @socialdef3
      @socialdef3 4 года назад +2

      @@RogueReplicant you're absolutely right, I should re-phrase: "imagine evh fanboys surprise to learn he wasn't the first and isn't the end-all, be-all of tappy guitarists.

  • @Dan-C-71
    @Dan-C-71 4 года назад +16

    Can’t really talk about tapping without a mention of Emmett Chapman and the Chapman Stick, most notably used by bass player Tony Levin of King Crimson and Peter Gabriel fame.

  • @randyhammill9021
    @randyhammill9021 3 года назад +1

    The live version of Get Thy Bearings by King Crimson at the Plumpton Jazz Festival in 1969 has two-handed tapping, although certainly not the EVH style. As Robert Fripp notes, “I experimented, clumsily, with right-hand tapping in 1969 but never developed the idea.
    Steve Hackett is the first that I know that was similar, not just Giant Hogweed, but Supper’s Ready, Dancing with the Moonlit Knight (which also includes early sweep picking), etc.
    One of the things that was unique about early Genesis is you had a guitarist trying to sound like a keyboard, and in many cases the keyboard sounding like a guitar. So his focus was more “classical” in approach, being part of an ensemble and playing voicings and patterns that would be more characteristic of keyboard than guitar.
    Eddie, of course, made the technique the focus of his playing and writing, with the music built around that technique. Which not only revolutionized playing, but writing for guitar.

  • @hansvandermeulen5515
    @hansvandermeulen5515 4 года назад +4

    In the Genesis song The Return Of The Giant Hogweed has a recurring riff using tapping, it's doubled on organ so it's used compositionally, well before EVH.

    • @jmjeffries2
      @jmjeffries2 3 года назад

      watch the video, I guess. Why do people comment beforehand?

  • @EXMORr
    @EXMORr 4 года назад +14

    Eddie (EVH) Made Tapping His Own and Brought The Technique To The Forefront !!
    Like Everything That EVH Does !!
    He Didn't Invent The Guitar , He Reinvented it To His Own Liking and Need !!
    The Samething Applies To Tapping He May Not Have Invented it , He Just Put His Own Spin on it and Reinvented it For His Own Use and Liking , and in So Doing Made The Technique a Part of Everyday Music !!
    Thank You Mr. Eddie Van Halen !!
    The One Thing That Eddie Really Did Was Made Playing The Guitar as Hard as HELL and The Most Fun I've Ever Had All at The Same Time !!

  • @gigitonsvajv
    @gigitonsvajv 2 года назад

    Thank you for giving credit where credit is due! RIP EVH. ❤️

  • @zaneroote5798
    @zaneroote5798 4 года назад +50

    I'd like to add 2 musicians that I can name of from the top of my head seen using a tapping technique similar to EVH's
    Ace Frehley was seen using it at KISS' appearance of the Midnight Special
    Brian May uses a similar tapping technique in the solo of "It's Late"
    You didn't ask for this so here you go.

    • @TribalGuitars
      @TribalGuitars 4 года назад +1

      A lot of that tapping was often just using the pick to trill the string here and there, usually on one string for a few seconds at most. It's a tapping technique but it's not what we now know as tapping.

    • @zaneroote5798
      @zaneroote5798 4 года назад +1

      @@TribalGuitars That's a considerable shout, but I do recall in an instructional video that Brian did, he was using his index finger instead of a plectrum or his usual sixpence piece. Correct me if I'm wrong.

    • @vaporman442
      @vaporman442 4 года назад +1

      Yes, Ace taps on the extended solo on the live version of Shock me (KISS ALIVE II.) I think Gene was familiar with VH by this time, so it is possible Ace picked it up from Eddie (even though this recording was made before the VH debut.)

    • @TylerFromKansas
      @TylerFromKansas 4 года назад

      @@vaporman442 he was familiar. He recorded and shopped their first Demo tape, known as the zero album. He saw them live and attempted to out them on the map. This was around 76 or early 77. Eddies tapping started somewhere in 76 based on live recordings of them at the time, especially the solo he woulr play that would become eruption, but with earoier recordings sans tapping.

    • @johnp.johnson1541
      @johnp.johnson1541 2 года назад

      Ace Frehely is a "musician?" You use that word quite broadly.

  • @Doc_Le_Rock
    @Doc_Le_Rock 4 года назад +66

    Zappa had an influential type of tapping with the side of his pick, he kinda used as an overtone but I count it.

    • @LeSpulch
      @LeSpulch 4 года назад +5

      I was gonna say, I imagine Vai's tapping influence primarily came from Zappa and not Van Halen. I really like those real quick and chirpy Zappa taps.

    • @hectormichelin
      @hectormichelin 3 года назад +2

      Black napkins in 1976 live he does it

    • @caiocury7655
      @caiocury7655 3 года назад +2

      The earliest recording I know of is the end of the Inca Roads solo on the One Size Fits All album... From a 1974 live recording and released in 1975

    • @mraycgz
      @mraycgz 3 года назад +1

      Of course it was Frank! Who else was doing anything like him at the time? Maybe captain beefeheart but that’s similar but different.

    • @jackworman6780
      @jackworman6780 2 года назад

      @@caiocury7655 yes that’s undoubtedly something he should have mentioned

  • @chutneyferret3569
    @chutneyferret3569 2 года назад

    Your channel is so thorough, seriously.

  • @Kylora2112
    @Kylora2112 4 года назад +2

    Steve Hackett also had an amazing tapping lick in Gensis's "Supper's Ready."

  • @elliottclark1340
    @elliottclark1340 2 года назад +1

    People seem to forget that Rory Gallagher was tapping in the irish blue rock group taste in the mid to late 60s. Brian May also tapped on It’s Late in 1977 from the News of The World album.

  • @dannycottar3737
    @dannycottar3737 2 года назад +1

    The 1st tapping I heard was Terry Kath of "Chicago" on "Freeform Guitar" from their 1st album. It was more of a wild noisy feedback thing , sort of like when Hendrix did his fireworks . On one tune (live) on an album , on the very last chord , Hendrix kind of bumped the fretboard while holding the last chord of a tune. Plus , on Hear My Train A Coming , live , he pushes the strings BEHIND the nut , like Jimmy Page did on Heartbreaker. Ralph Towner taps on acoustic 12 string , as a guest , on the 1st Weather Report album . Zappa tapped before I ever heard of Van Halen , as well.

  • @ronfalkoff
    @ronfalkoff 4 года назад

    Love the toccata and fugue!!! Keep Tapping and Shredding!!!

  • @nirki
    @nirki 2 года назад +2

    In Dancing with the moonlit knight (Gensis 1973) you can hear Steve Hacket tapping for a longer time.

  • @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache
    @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache 4 года назад +24

    The popularization of tapping on the guitar has really turned out quite well, hasn't it.

  • @JUSTICE971
    @JUSTICE971 3 года назад +10

    Eddie Van Halen was the greatest tapping guitar shredder of all time imo

  • @jonathanfillmore
    @jonathanfillmore 4 года назад

    Loved @ 2:25, lots of blues licks, though! So good!

  • @dannycottar3737
    @dannycottar3737 2 года назад

    Don't forget Michael Hedges , RIP , on acoustic. Plus now a days many people do it . Khaki King , Andy McKay (spelling ?). And the ones you mentioned . Cool presentation that you made ! I did not know George Van Epps did it . I saw him open up for Rosemary Clooney , outdoors at the Silverado Country Club , in California . He did not do any tapping that I noticed , but he WAS amazing ! A drummer friend of mine used to tap on guitar , a little bit . He was not really a guitarist though . Holdsworth did it some , also David Torn.

  • @jorissirre5131
    @jorissirre5131 4 года назад +2

    Finally someone who recognize the brilliance of Steve Hackett

  • @ReasonableRam
    @ReasonableRam 4 года назад

    My favorite type of content from this channel. The informative research videos are the best.

  • @ziggylayneable
    @ziggylayneable 4 года назад +1

    I'll tell you for a fact in 1971 on nursery cryme Steve Hackett was using tapping but he was using a guitar pick cupped in his right hand instead of his finger.

  • @bLackmarketRadio
    @bLackmarketRadio 4 года назад +122

    Nothing says "I'm a guitar channel" like a hip hop outro.

    • @Brewed.tea.
      @Brewed.tea. 4 года назад +5

      Clay Old yep I might dislike the video just for that. edit. I did

    • @erwin2869
      @erwin2869 4 года назад +1

      @@Brewed.tea. agreed

    • @nehemiahzo_
      @nehemiahzo_ 4 года назад

      I think it’s because it appeals to more people

    • @nucleardancemoves255
      @nucleardancemoves255 3 года назад

      @@erwin2869 maybe, but the people who that’d be intended for aren’t really found here

  • @ClaudioDiBiase16
    @ClaudioDiBiase16 4 года назад +2

    I have always known, deep inside, that steve hackett was the first to use tapping as we know it. I suggest to listen to "Dancing with the moonlit knight" solo ('73)

  • @James-we9ro
    @James-we9ro 4 года назад +129

    "Mum can we pick up some John Mayer at the shops?"
    "We have John Mayer at home"
    At home: Music is Win

    • @moufuzz2759
      @moufuzz2759 4 года назад

      I don't see the problem

    • @sparklydiamondz5464
      @sparklydiamondz5464 3 года назад

      You think he’s bad at guitar?

    • @James-we9ro
      @James-we9ro 3 года назад

      Ask one of the 117 people who understood the joke to explain it

    • @t.k.326
      @t.k.326 3 года назад

      @@sparklydiamondz5464 I think he’s saying the exact opposite of what you said

    • @nocturnal7345
      @nocturnal7345 3 года назад

      @@t.k.326 Usually, the context of this meme is that the thing at home is a mediocre version of what the person actually wants to buy, so I can't blame him if he mistook it easily, same as I did. They're both amazing anyways.

  • @michaelmoore7975
    @michaelmoore7975 4 года назад +4

    *Honorable Mention* In the early-mid 70's there were 3 guys starting to make waves in Texas: Eric Johnson, Stevie Ray Vaughn, and Rocky Athas. Of the 3 it was Rocky, The Texas Tornado, The Malice From Dallas, The Young Eric Clapton, The Last Great Bluesbreaker Guitarist who was voted Most Likely to Succeed.
    Any body whoever seen Rocky back then would attest to his blazing and frenetic tapping style predating EVH as a part of his compositions in his band Lightning.
    Even though worldwide success eluded him, he played with Black Oak Arkansas, Joe Walsh, Glenn Hughes, Buddy Miles, John Mayall's Bluesbreakers and Double Trouble. You can still hear him playing in and around Texas.

    • @doitnowvideosyeah5841
      @doitnowvideosyeah5841 4 года назад

      Where does he play usually? Dallas? I never heard of him round Austin I want to check him out

  • @Xari.04
    @Xari.04 4 года назад +16

    Yo Tyler what the hell, The return of the giant hogweed is literally composed on a tapping riffand it's from the same album as The musical box. Don't get me wrong tho, great video but I'm not able to agree with Eddie being the one who used first tapping as a compositional tool.

    • @nathaniellawrence3395
      @nathaniellawrence3395 3 года назад +6

      Not only that, but Steve Hackett's Voyage Of The Acolyte has a track named shadow of the hierophant. That track literally has a tapping solo in it, and it could very well have been EVH if you listen to it without knowing who it is. Steve also tapped on Supper's Ready :)

  • @monkehm
    @monkehm 4 года назад +63

    1:11 Ichika Nito would like a word with you.

    • @angadgianirogers1844
      @angadgianirogers1844 4 года назад +21

      Tbh this low fi chill pop guitar playing nowadays is overrated. Not saying that the people who play it aren't talented. But it's just not my thing. Well that's just my opinion.

    • @magpiemuneca
      @magpiemuneca 4 года назад +11

      @@angadgianirogers1844 *math rock

    • @angadgianirogers1844
      @angadgianirogers1844 4 года назад +5

      @@magpiemuneca thanx for clarifying.

    • @SetsuForReal
      @SetsuForReal 4 года назад +5

      Clee Clee ehhh I wouldn’t say math rock is overrated though people don’t actually know it’s math rock they assume it’s lofi

    • @flutterwind7686
      @flutterwind7686 4 года назад +3

      @@angadgianirogers1844 Its not really meant to be in your face. It's good for a background soundtrack

  • @p4nico20
    @p4nico20 4 года назад +124

    there are plenty of genesis and hackett songs with tapping:
    the return of the giant hogweed
    the musical box
    suppers ready
    and so many more

    • @erikberg5363
      @erikberg5363 4 года назад +14

      Yeah, and while it is only "fragments", I would definitely say it was used as a compositional tool.

    • @pumbar
      @pumbar 4 года назад +17

      Dancing with the moonlight knight has atonal finger picking and sweep picking too.

    • @loganressler9173
      @loganressler9173 4 года назад +30

      My first thought, I expected this whole video to be about Steve Hackett

    • @p4nico20
      @p4nico20 4 года назад +3

      @@erikberg5363 yeah! totaly!

    • @p4nico20
      @p4nico20 4 года назад +15

      hackett definitely don't use tapping for showmanship

  • @jamesglacken6170
    @jamesglacken6170 4 года назад

    Loving the vids really wish u would bring the podcast back

  • @twinborn6028
    @twinborn6028 4 года назад +1

    This was a really cool video! I would love to see more videos based on the history of certaon aspects of guitar, and you bringing up important players who played that way or did a certain thing to sound a certain way or make this noise. This should be a series!

  • @wayneclark3020
    @wayneclark3020 4 года назад +1

    First thing I thought of was " I wonder if he will mention Steve Hackett or the 1950s spanish guitar guy?" Great job. Glad to see credit given to players who deserve it in the proper historical context.

  • @MrEric622
    @MrEric622 4 года назад

    I really enjoy these musical history lessons- truly cements the legends into your head.

  • @hefenzy
    @hefenzy 2 года назад

    A few days ago I developed some trick on guitar. I call this palm tap harmonics. You know there are tap harmonics - you pick note on string before 12 fret, and then touch it octave higher. I invented way to make a pinch harmonic effect on actually tapped note - you need to tap a note and slightly touch the string with palm near neck pickup. With this trick you can record solos and confuse those who will try to pick them by ear. I want to do that in my heavy metal project

  • @rowenlampe7426
    @rowenlampe7426 4 года назад +220

    cmon man we all know it was Taylor Swift, don't you know she is our generations EVH!

    • @rockaddict3744
      @rockaddict3744 4 года назад +20

      Pretty certain lil wayne is our generation's Eddie Van Halen 😁😉

    • @yellowshark8483
      @yellowshark8483 4 года назад +1

      Rock Addict I agree

    • @TheZooropaBaby
      @TheZooropaBaby 4 года назад +2

      @@rockaddict3744 actually Playboi Carti is this generation's EVH

    • @BubbaBass_Official
      @BubbaBass_Official 4 года назад

      Get the f out of here now go back to where you peppy hip hop heads belong. People who said that deserve to be hang.

    • @nehemiahzo_
      @nehemiahzo_ 4 года назад +1

      Jason Voorhees man Taylor Swift isn’t hip hop. Some pop music is good, e.x Shawn Mendes because he’s actually playing an instrument, and some hip hop is good e.x Post Malone, who is trying to keep rock alive too.

  • @Wakenbake7101
    @Wakenbake7101 4 года назад

    Awesome video my man 🙏🏼 always fun learning the history of stuff like this

  • @zeppelincurse8381
    @zeppelincurse8381 4 года назад

    Awesome...thanks for sharing!🎸🎶😎

  • @djdolceproductions899
    @djdolceproductions899 3 года назад

    EXCELLENT and informative video!! Thank you!

  • @kevinbrady6075
    @kevinbrady6075 4 года назад +1

    Nice,all awesome guitarists! Page,if you can find it,he taps out at the end of "The Rain Song" short,beautiful.

  • @snixelpig
    @snixelpig 4 года назад

    Great video! More in depth than I have seen on the matter. Wish to ad Vito Bratto and Reb Beach as amazing at this.

  • @johncrafton8319
    @johncrafton8319 4 года назад

    Don't forget our boy, Roy Clark. He was also shown tapping back in the black & white days.

  • @anthonylaplantepaquin3053
    @anthonylaplantepaquin3053 4 года назад

    That PRS is just incredible.

  • @randykrochak
    @randykrochak 5 месяцев назад

    Very good video and thank you. I would have to however disagree with "it was used in fragments and it was not used as a compositional tool prior to Eddie". As a big Genesis fan Steve Hacket was highly compositional as can be heard in Musical Box, Suppers Ready etc. Thanks again and keep up the good work!

  • @santaclause6839
    @santaclause6839 4 года назад

    This video was good, well done. Your editing is getting really good too. Almost at a million man 👍

  • @TruthGuitar
    @TruthGuitar 4 года назад +1

    I very much enjoyed this video. Any kind of music history is always an addiction for me. Cool Video bro.

  • @doitnowvideosyeah5841
    @doitnowvideosyeah5841 4 года назад +3

    First tapping I saw was Adrian Belew he used it mostly to achieve huge intervals like a low F to a d above high C. Differnet from the Hackett/Van Halen style which I think Zappa called bag pipe guitar

  • @dictatorrich3412
    @dictatorrich3412 4 года назад +5

    I saw a video of Chet Atkins playing the "hot for teacher" tapping part in a live performance, almost note for note....BEFORE Van Halen recorded it!

    • @raceredgt5962
      @raceredgt5962 3 года назад +1

      It’s the Orange Blossom Special Live Performance

    • @johnp.johnson1541
      @johnp.johnson1541 2 года назад

      Eddie stole most of his foundation licks from Jim McCarty during his stint in Cactus.

    • @markr.devereux3385
      @markr.devereux3385 2 года назад

      @@johnp.johnson1541 cool❤️

  • @RC32Smiths01
    @RC32Smiths01 4 года назад +12

    It's good to bury that hatchet of those who claim that EVH invented Tapping, when he in reality didn't, but definitely the one who popularized it to the mainstream, and made it a household name in the realm of technique.

  • @MaidenKnowledge
    @MaidenKnowledge 3 года назад

    I will stand by, through and through, that Steve Hackett the original "tapping" player. EVH just took it to a whole new level

  • @chrispetersen4863
    @chrispetersen4863 4 года назад

    Another awesome bit of education courtesy of Tyler! Thank you!

  • @sirzap7542
    @sirzap7542 Год назад

    This video was well done! EVH will always be KING!

  • @DukeofItaly
    @DukeofItaly 2 года назад +1

    Listen to suppers ready by Genesis. Its after musical box but before Van Halen. There's a 2 minute guitar solo with a huge tapped part that blows my mind way more than almost any other solo I've ever heard

  • @July-gj1st
    @July-gj1st 4 года назад

    I really loved this video! Here’s some ideas I’d love to hear in this format:
    Origin of sweep picking
    Origin of pinch harmonics

  • @craigharrison5406
    @craigharrison5406 2 года назад

    Eddie may not have invented tapping but the things he did with it are mind blowing. The intro to Meanstreet put my jaw on the floor when I was a kid. Lightning fast tapped runs across the strings, tapped harmonics, tapped bends, nobody else was doing that stuff back then.

  • @blayneolson2585
    @blayneolson2585 4 года назад

    Hey Tyler! Long time viewer here. This was a cool video and I’d definitely like to see more content like this!

  • @Darqueness
    @Darqueness 4 года назад

    Dude, awesome. Just reinforces that the greats are considered greats for damn good reasons. Would love to see more lookbacks and deep dives into guitar technique history like this.

  • @noahwebster6076
    @noahwebster6076 4 года назад +1

    This is my favorite channel

  • @costalongajp
    @costalongajp 3 года назад

    Watched it just one day after EVH passed away. His music and tappings will last forever. RIP, EVH!

  • @wowbaggerTIP
    @wowbaggerTIP 4 года назад +131

    Wait, the very first guy you showed, Vittorio Camardes, was doing that, but you said it was compositional and therefore more akin to bass. So why does Eddie tapping compositionally count, but not Vittorio? This seems directly contradictory

    • @MusicisWin
      @MusicisWin  4 года назад +54

      *in a rock context*
      Vittorio's technique is not what most would associate with tapping, even though he indeed was tapping that thang

    • @mistalee9300
      @mistalee9300 4 года назад +9

      @@MusicisWin I would say people like Yvette Young or Shalfi would be a quality comparison to Vittorio

    • @TheZooropaBaby
      @TheZooropaBaby 4 года назад +7

      @@MusicisWin Vittorio's technique seems a bit more akin to what guys from CHON or Yvette Young do now....or maybe Ian Williams?

    • @deldia
      @deldia 4 года назад +6

      It's definitely what I associate with tapping. As far I know he's the clearest earliest reference.

    • @jacobflint9359
      @jacobflint9359 4 года назад +1

      @@mistalee9300 Yvette young is brilliant

  • @Axe_Slinger
    @Axe_Slinger 3 года назад

    DOKKEN guitarist George Lynch corroborated this, mentioning that both he and Van Halen saw Mandel employ "a neo-classic tapping thing" at the Starwood in West Hollywood during the 1970s. Mandel used extensive two-handed tapping techniques on his 1973 album "Shangrenade".

  • @williamcampbell7387
    @williamcampbell7387 4 года назад

    The first bars of "Toccata & Fugue... " gave me schwing because of the original "Rollerball"; and then, I remembered James Caan with that helmet, sweat, and blood-- uh, never mind.

  • @denisden934
    @denisden934 4 года назад

    Steve Hackett also used the tapping technique on Supper's Ready, from the Foxtrot album.

  • @tommiepattonkendrickiii1617
    @tommiepattonkendrickiii1617 4 года назад

    I love your channel!!! ✌️

  • @Val_Cla
    @Val_Cla 4 года назад

    i discovered tapping with Yvette Young. it opens up a whole new dimension of guitar playing !

  • @vxluka998
    @vxluka998 4 года назад

    We like these kinds of videos keep the good work up

  • @misterroberts4240
    @misterroberts4240 4 года назад +44

    you should have at least mentioned Stanley Jordan

    • @gustavohenriqueperez
      @gustavohenriqueperez 4 года назад

      and Reb Beach

    • @misterroberts4240
      @misterroberts4240 4 года назад

      @@gustavohenriqueperez he does tap, have you seen Tina S tap and shred

    • @viewoftheaskew
      @viewoftheaskew 3 года назад

      first time I saw Stanley Jordan on Johnny Carson/Tonight show it blew my mind lol. Played it like a piano!

  • @joesmythe2774
    @joesmythe2774 4 месяца назад

    Harvey Mandel's 1974 album Shangrenade has tapping all over it but in more of a jazz fusion context.

  • @RaZvanRZ
    @RaZvanRZ 4 года назад +1

    For those interested, look up the musical box by genesis live on belgian tv, you can see Hackett taping on his guitar around 4min05!

  • @tannercroteau869
    @tannercroteau869 4 года назад

    bro I love your work Tyler your awsome

  • @alanvashovsky8047
    @alanvashovsky8047 4 года назад

    Fun fact Buddy guy tapped at montreux in ‘74, Making him the first bluesman to incorporate it.

  • @richardmcpike
    @richardmcpike 4 года назад

    Another nice one cheers

  • @trujustice8628
    @trujustice8628 3 года назад

    Nice piece on the subject. I stumbled upon it when learning blues and blue grass while doing hammer transitions. I also used to do it when I was trying to learn to read music and was given scales to practice for the following week and my teacher asked me if I practiced and I Nodded and began to two handed tap them out just to be a smart aleck. Then he gave me a whole duet song to practice for following week. We started playing together and then I started winging it and playing a counterpoint and he stopped. I thought I made him mad. I said I was sorry. He said let's keep going and finish this. He didn't give me a new assignment for the next week. He ghosted me. This happened to me twice. I told my dad i would just play for myself. I don't want to waste your money. Years later I learned why the teacher stopped. He told my dad he had never seen anyone play like me who couldn't read music. He thought he would ruin me. If only I had known. I never played as seriously as I did then. Who knew. I still used my abilities to compose music when we needed it for videos as an editor and cam person that did not have music rights. I played a keyboard. I don't know how to play piano or read music to this day.

  • @lapinus
    @lapinus 4 года назад

    As an italian that pronunciation at 0:50 hit me hard

  • @e.overbay7949
    @e.overbay7949 4 года назад

    Awesome video!

  • @chi3knees
    @chi3knees 4 года назад

    Great vid man thanks

  • @Sparkythehedgehog11
    @Sparkythehedgehog11 4 года назад

    Great video!

  • @pasi8800
    @pasi8800 4 года назад

    Yes, you mentioned Steve Hackett!

  • @Cultural_Supremacist
    @Cultural_Supremacist 4 года назад

    Nicely done, sir. Because, inquiring minds wanna know!

  • @billmcelgunn7819
    @billmcelgunn7819 4 года назад

    Tapping makes you feel badass 100%

  • @derkletron6292
    @derkletron6292 4 года назад

    Well put

  • @indymudshow
    @indymudshow Год назад

    First person I saw or heard do it before Eddie was ace frehley. Parts of his solo from Kiss alive 2, was directly taken and used for eddies eruption.

  • @theuniquefoundations1730
    @theuniquefoundations1730 3 года назад

    An innovator and a pioneer