I’ve seen Jared live a couple of times, had a beer with him and attended a master class/jam. He (and his band) answered questions for hours and played several songs. He passed his guitars around the crowd and invited dozens to jam with him. They didn’t stop til everyone had had a go. He is always chatty and funny and full of energy, a real pleasure to spend time with.
His use of open strings to reinforce the key he’s in is masterful. The harmonies bending into the root. What a player.
5 месяцев назад+13
I am left handed , and play "right handed" ...without a pick. Been playing for 60 years.I enjoy your playing , Jared. Another pickless virtuoso..Matteo Mancuso.
He is such a killer player and his finger style is unlike most players out there. So bored with people playing a million notes and not saying anything. You can learn alot just watching him use 20 different ways to play the same 5 notes and still make them fresh and new. Great interview.
A million notes always says something. It’s just that not all listeners appreciate that something. But plenty of other people do appreciate it. That’s why we have a variety of different music. Different players and listeners appreciate different musical feel.
@@pieflies agree, I think it's the little details that make Jared so special. There are thousands of white american dudes who play blues rock, but things like playing fingerstyle, the single p90, the les paul custom/junior hybrid on a unique colour, gigging and recording with $700 Epiphones in a genre full of snobs, playing in a trio and the general humbleness and good vibes of Jared all add up to make an excellent musician, the fact that he has ties with top tier musicians like Bonamassa or Zakk Wylde but still has the time to appear on youtube interviews and give clinics also make him feel like a very down to earth person who knows the modern working musician.
This is possibly the best guitar video I've ever seen, he covers everything as well as being brilliant. I'm seeing him live tonight for the first time, I can't wait.
I love how genuinely excited he comes off explaining the guitar, he has an infectious attitude for music that makes you want to play and get better. Great video.
Great interview... i have played 30 years with a pick and for the past year moved to fingerpicking and it has opened new doors and does increase creativeness massively. I need get more fluid with it and its tempting to go back to the pick, but I wish i had done it years ago.
Same here! i played with a pick for just over 30 years, and about 2 years ago, i changed my grip, similar to Cory Wong/Benson, but I still found myself losing grip on the pick, or it kept moving.....so I ditched it, and havent looked back. Revolutionized my playing, and its meant I have looked at new ways of playing things, whilst having more freedom and control.
@MarcysGuitars ha I am really struggling to hold the pick. Fine either with or without but holding the pick and fingerpicking😅😅. Watched chris bucks right hand for tips and almost made me give up. Getting there though... could never go back to just pick now.
@@steved1099 Im a minimalist, so im happy without, completely. feels very odd to me to use a pick at all, now. pick and fingers is a real skill. greg koch does some great stuff with both.
P90s are awesome. I think you really have to progress through the usual Fender type single coils then move to humbuckers before stumbling onto P90s to really appreciate them. I have a Riviera P93 and the tonal variations are endless.
I play using my fingers too - I havn't been playing for 22 years and when I returned to playing, I couldn't use a pick anymore. Playing with my fingers is much more natural and a lot more personal. 👍🏼
He is getting a pretty warm sound from a guitar with only a bridge pickup. And you could use a volume pedal to achieve much the same sort of thing--as a multi-instrumentalist I have to note that like many Hammond players I use the volume pedal to add gain and dynamics too (also I fiddle with the drawbars but that is a another discussion). Interesting to hear him refer to woman tone when he is just using a bridge pickup. And he nails it, too. I play with my fingers too but I strum a lot with my nails--but after watching this I am thinking I might want to dial back on that. I am reminded of an interview I once saw with Frank Zappa, who was considered blazingly fast. He politely corrected the interviewer, saying that he wasn't picking every note but was using a lot of hammer ons and pull offs. There is a LOT to Ruminate on in this video. Anyway, kudos to Jared. And Bravo!
great vid! Personally I played pickless for the gratest part of my stintin the former project, and for almost the first two years of my actual band, and I'm trying to re-learn the skill to add flavour and spice up some tunes with the unique feel that only playing without pick could archieve
This is so validating, I’m a finger style player and although a long way from mastering it I feel like I have way more control than when I tried to play with a pic. I think because I started playing on a classical guitar it felt more natural than playing with a pic. As Mr. Nichols demonstrates, you can incorporate a lot of different styles of playing and are not limited as some might assume. Great interview and profile on this talented, inventive artist.
@@vintagepipesnightmaresMaybe he does it less and less. He doesnt sound like he’s playing with a pick, and there’s no advantage to putting superglue on fingertips. More likely he uses it on his nails so they dont break, which is very common among fingerstyle players.
@@edwardjons8684 nope. He talked about it in older interviews. He came up with the idea. Because just the flash sounded to dark. He wanted the Rock sound .
Thanks for this. I spend too much time watching guitarists on youtube and not enough playing my guitar. Jared's attitude and approach inspired me to actually pick up my guitar and play it! It took me a coupe of days to watch the whole video but it was worth it
Lovely bluesman for sure, he's learned the right way to personalise his technique via proper tone, touch AND feel, I've done likewise and I've honestly only discovered him about 2 years ago, he's the absolute real deal, I wasn't one bit surprised to hear him mention who got him in the zone, my same 4/5 masters.
Wow! You’re saying exactly what I discovered. Playing loud and using the volume knob aloud me so many different tones and nuances. It was a big game changer.
@@guskalogeros9021i personally would be ok with a bridge pickup straight to the output jack. I don’t do anything remotely dynamic. I have two volumes, loud and off
@@Ottophil the singer and guitarplayer for Grouplove has a tele with the 2 pickups wire straight to the output jack. Its supposedly a very easy mod to do! Squier or Fender esquires also have this feature; the 3rd position on the 3 way switch is bridge pickup --> straight to the output jack. Have fun researching how to get this tone!
I used to use a penny as a pick, but for the last few years I've been on a journey much like yours. Since I've been playing primarily with my fingers my playing has improved so much it's almost like magic. It's so much more freeing and expressive. And the look on my friends faces sometimes when I whip out a cool new lick is worth millions!
I just bought his JJN signature Epiphone like he is playing here! Already loved it, but now I have a lot of nuances and ideas to explore. Oddly enough, I have already figured out that I like playing it without a pick. Love JJN!
Jared influenced me to play with my fingers more and just go for it. I completely resonate with the pick feeling like a disconnect between the circuit of being hands on with the guitar. Im much more comfortable and accurate when i don't us a pick. Bee playing twenty one years and decided to relearn with new techniques and information/concepts and theory about four years ago. Its harder to unlearn poor habits.
If Albert Collins and Leslie West had a baby.... Jared is a fabulous player who understands the emotional component and the harmonic options in a highly overdriven sound. The kind of sound that is thoroughly primal and could cause the earth to spin in the opposite direction if it was loud enough.
Excellent Video! I used a lot of my early years trying to play like everyone else instead of like me… I wish old me could have told young me the stuff in this video! Thanks! 😎👍
I've never found anyone that could put into words the reasons why I don't use a pick like this guy. It just feels more natural to me. I had trouble holding on to picks when I first started playing and basically just said, "this is stupid" and started figuring things out without one. He's far surpassed me, but it's crazy when he listed his influences, I almost laughed because mine are all the same players, especially Mark Knopfler. Crazy.
People always say you gotta play fingerstyle with finger picks or nails. Not true. Bare fingers always felt best to me. Do what feels good to you. That’s how you develop your own style. Thanks Jared for the inspiration
Im left handed too and i play right handed as well and that stuff on the pick not allowing you to feel the guitar is so true. I mostly play with my fingers as a result as well. Whenever i use a pick its like Im disconnecting from the strings and i cant feel them.
I've gotten to the hybrid picking phase and can go all fingers if need to. It's he is. a work in progress. It's perplexing why Jared isn't more well known than he is.
amazing player Jared, such a feel player with an extraordinary unique technique ... I could listen to him play all day. Those signature guitars of his are fantastic but the neck is way too chunky for me, but the guitars are incredible. I owned one and had to sell it because the neck was too chunky, and I bought an Eastman Double Cut with a single P90 pickup, amazing to have only one pick up and play with the tone and volume to get your sounds, incredible. Anyway, thank you for this video fantastic to hear younger players who understand what Kossof was about or Leslie West, very much feel players, probably no clue what they are playing ... just playing. Too many youtube sites stating that you must know all the notes, all the scales and modes, it's just not true. Play the guitar and express yourself be brave :)
He teaches you a lot, if you pay attention, humble, Jared seems like he is playing at full pump, full force, but that is an understatement, when you realize how much he cares, practices and knows about the most miniscule approach, in his attack to the strings, notes, and knobs, with the use of his 10 fingers to play, when you think about it, is so much easier to mute with the thumb side, the ring and the pinky, that yes, he is in more control and has a wider range of speed, note volume and choice, force, muting, etc. Two great finger picking players, that would be interesting to watch play with Jared: Matteo Mancuso and Mdou Moctar. Famous lefties playing right handed, Michael Angelo Batio, Duane Allman, Elvis Costello, Joe Perry, Johnny Winters, Mark Knopfler, Gary Moore, Shawn Lane, Robert Fripp, Kiko Loureiro, Steve Morse, David Bowie and Billy Corgan, so lefty not an issue, seems more like an advantage, approaching it in a different way, forced them to be more creative. Thank you. Cheers.
Yes, they are really good players, or with a special technique or style, maybe because they needed to be more creative, changing the dominant hand. Cheers@@Ottophil
Met JJN years ago right as he was starting to get traction. He was such a cool hang, and still seems like I guy I'd love to hang with and geek out on guitar stuff with. The purest definition of an everyman's guitarist.
You made me enthousiast! Lot's of technical guitar difficulties are because of the pick. You have to practice them over and over just to get it right. Another huge advantage for playing without a pick is it can't drop out of your hand anymore.
This was absolutely fantastic! What a treasure Jared is, watching this (alongside seeing the new initiatives from the Gibson brands) is really exciting and inspiring. What a breath of fresh air, it all feels like a new lease of life!
Every time I hear him describe his process of playing with his fingers, I want to dive into it…all is well until I get a blister, or two! Forget nails, mine are never strong enough not to rip. Finger picks feel so strange? He really is a great player, who just keeps getting better! I love what he does with his technique.
This is what rock and roll thrived and grew up on , creativity and artistry. Example- Bob Dylan plays “ knocking on heavens door “ and Guns and Roses plays “ knocking on heaven’s door “. Similar but totally different…. Artistry. My buddy asks me to sit in with him as he plays his cover songs, ok . He looks over at me and says “ that’s not how you play it “. Because I have to stretch it, I have to blues it up a bit. I’m am not Dylan or Slash, so why do I need to work to copy them note for note ? You can only do you, right ? Do you and make it sound great. That’s guitar playing.
I spent a lot of time learning on a classical guitar, but I love the electric for what it offers. I've found there certain tunes you just can't get the fluidity with a pick
P90's is the way! I used singles, humbs... but, after many years, i aquired a Jazzmaster with a varitone and double P90, i really enjoyed that a lot. Don't want to change for another.
Cool stuff I learnt the way you have and stuck to my way as it always felt for me better and has paid off, no plastic pick ever felt expressive enough for me, I think always loosening and borrowing plastic picks put me off, as there are out there many plastic pick collector’s and was always giving them away as I learnt both techniques but finely settled on finger styles, nails and no nails. Just goes to show everyone finds their own way, it is so important to pass on learnt skills from the master players of all styles and skills, at the end of the day it’s about beautiful music to our ears.
He had a ton of good insights in this interview. One of the most useful videos I've seen in a while. I'm not really that familiar with his music, but imma fixin' to dig into it.
The explanation about how to build speed with only fingers is essentially the economy of motion train of though. No wasted movements and sometimes that means hammers ons and pull offs to give yourself time to setup for the next run.
I used to get fake nails, glue on type, removable with acetone!! You can customize with a file!! My own nails wear down way low!! I like wooden picks, extra sharp!! With Jareds style. Its a hole other world, organic sounds!!
Primal is a great way to describe his playing. There’s a reason only a handful of electric players use finger style. That’s because it’s freakin hard! I will say that this made me rethink & rework my own style. But I think I’ll just focus on hybrid picking for now 😂 Thx for posting this, I got a lot from it
I saw understand what you’re saying. I took a guitar in my later years and the pic was impossible. That being said I do use a pic, but it just isn’t the same nuance and dynamics and everything are harder for me to attain with a pic but it’s getting better!thanks for the lesson
I’ve seen Jared live a couple of times, had a beer with him and attended a master class/jam. He (and his band) answered questions for hours and played several songs. He passed his guitars around the crowd and invited dozens to jam with him. They didn’t stop til everyone had had a go. He is always chatty and funny and full of energy, a real pleasure to spend time with.
Yes he tries to sell this guitar
A salesman then.
You must live in asguard
I TOTALLY sensed that…great story!
@@vintagepipesnightmares No, it was an old Gibson LP, not his signature model.
Great player. A true modern day guitar hero. He's beyond outside the box. He threw the box in the trash.
He’s in your sisters box
His use of open strings to reinforce the key he’s in is masterful. The harmonies bending into the root. What a player.
I am left handed , and play "right handed" ...without a pick. Been playing for 60 years.I enjoy your playing , Jared. Another pickless virtuoso..Matteo Mancuso.
That young man will inspire alot of future guitar players.
Johnny Winter and Jimi Hendrix did it for me.
He’s there, the guitar is a part of him.
Richie kotzen is a slayer with no pick as well :) rock on
Yes! Richie Kotzen is a monster!
I'll be honest, I'm just here because I saw the OR30 in the background. Sounds awesome!
Same here. Been window shopping that citrus beast for awhile now
He is such a killer player and his finger style is unlike most players out there. So bored with people playing a million notes and not saying anything. You can learn alot just watching him use 20 different ways to play the same 5 notes and still make them fresh and new. Great interview.
It depends who you listen to 🤷♂️
A million notes always says something. It’s just that not all listeners appreciate that something.
But plenty of other people do appreciate it.
That’s why we have a variety of different music.
Different players and listeners appreciate different musical feel.
@@pieflies exactly 👍
@@pieflies agree, I think it's the little details that make Jared so special. There are thousands of white american dudes who play blues rock, but things like playing fingerstyle, the single p90, the les paul custom/junior hybrid on a unique colour, gigging and recording with $700 Epiphones in a genre full of snobs, playing in a trio and the general humbleness and good vibes of Jared all add up to make an excellent musician, the fact that he has ties with top tier musicians like Bonamassa or Zakk Wylde but still has the time to appear on youtube interviews and give clinics also make him feel like a very down to earth person who knows the modern working musician.
This is possibly the best guitar video I've ever seen, he covers everything as well as being brilliant. I'm seeing him live tonight for the first time, I can't wait.
I love how genuinely excited he comes off explaining the guitar, he has an infectious attitude for music that makes you want to play and get better. Great video.
😁🤟
What a refreshing player and personality.
He pretty much validated a lot of my very own guitar beliefs and playing quirkiness.
Thanks for making me feel normal playing with my fingers, thought I was broken.
Great interview... i have played 30 years with a pick and for the past year moved to fingerpicking and it has opened new doors and does increase creativeness massively. I need get more fluid with it and its tempting to go back to the pick, but I wish i had done it years ago.
Same here! i played with a pick for just over 30 years, and about 2 years ago, i changed my grip, similar to Cory Wong/Benson, but I still found myself losing grip on the pick, or it kept moving.....so I ditched it, and havent looked back. Revolutionized my playing, and its meant I have looked at new ways of playing things, whilst having more freedom and control.
@MarcysGuitars ha I am really struggling to hold the pick. Fine either with or without but holding the pick and fingerpicking😅😅. Watched chris bucks right hand for tips and almost made me give up. Getting there though... could never go back to just pick now.
@@steved1099 Im a minimalist, so im happy without, completely. feels very odd to me to use a pick at all, now. pick and fingers is a real skill. greg koch does some great stuff with both.
Saw him open for J5. He's a guitar beast. Coolest Epiphone out.
P90s are awesome. I think you really have to progress through the usual Fender type single coils then move to humbuckers before stumbling onto P90s to really appreciate them. I have a Riviera P93 and the tonal variations are endless.
I play using my fingers too - I havn't been playing for 22 years and when I returned to playing, I couldn't use a pick anymore. Playing with my fingers is much more natural and a lot more personal. 👍🏼
Jared, This video of yours proved to me that I have always been right with myself over the last 30 years. Excellent style.🙏🙏🙏🤘🤘
Followed him since last 4 years ago. The type of technique he’s using has been more and more evolving. Just wonderful.
I love how beautifully simple that guitar looks and how surprisingly huge it sounds.
I’ve seen him a few times and he’s very accessible to fans and a very humble dude.
Badass blues player too
He plays in bars , guitar stores and ships. Why wouldn’t he be humble?
what are you doing? let's hear you play. Quit bashing him and quit trolling the message board.@@vintagepipesnightmares
He is getting a pretty warm sound from a guitar with only a bridge pickup. And you could use a volume pedal to achieve much the same sort of thing--as a multi-instrumentalist I have to note that like many Hammond players I use the volume pedal to add gain and dynamics too (also I fiddle with the drawbars but that is a another discussion).
Interesting to hear him refer to woman tone when he is just using a bridge pickup. And he nails it, too.
I play with my fingers too but I strum a lot with my nails--but after watching this I am thinking I might want to dial back on that.
I am reminded of an interview I once saw with Frank Zappa, who was considered blazingly fast. He politely corrected the interviewer, saying that he wasn't picking every note but was using a lot of hammer ons and pull offs.
There is a LOT to Ruminate on in this video.
Anyway, kudos to Jared. And Bravo!
great vid! Personally I played pickless for the gratest part of my stintin the former project, and for almost the first two years of my actual band, and I'm trying to re-learn the skill to add flavour and spice up some tunes with the unique feel that only playing without pick could archieve
Best upload I’ve heard all month. This is master class.
This world needs jared
Top Tier guitarist.
This is so validating, I’m a finger style player and although a long way from mastering it I feel like I have way more control than when I tried to play with a pic. I think because I started playing on a classical guitar it felt more natural than playing with a pic. As Mr. Nichols demonstrates, you can incorporate a lot of different styles of playing and are not limited as some might assume. Great interview and profile on this talented, inventive artist.
He puts super glue on his fingers. It hardens and acts like picks.
He forgets to say this more and more
@@vintagepipesnightmaresMaybe he does it less and less. He doesnt sound like he’s playing with a pick, and there’s no advantage to putting superglue on fingertips. More likely he uses it on his nails so they dont break, which is very common among fingerstyle players.
@@edwardjons8684 nope. He talked about it in older interviews. He came up with the idea. Because just the flash sounded to dark. He wanted the Rock sound .
Mr Nichols ????🤣🤣🤣
I think you work for mr Nichols.
I could not agree more about that open E. Coming back to it or starting on it. It just hits different
artist and philosopher
Thanks for this.
I spend too much time watching guitarists on youtube and not enough playing my guitar. Jared's attitude and approach inspired me to actually pick up my guitar and play it!
It took me a coupe of days to watch the whole video but it was worth it
Me 2. It's An, Avoidance.
Every technique has its advantages and its limitations.
Lovely bluesman for sure, he's learned the right way to personalise his technique via proper tone, touch AND feel, I've done likewise and I've honestly only discovered him about 2 years ago, he's the absolute real deal, I wasn't one bit surprised to hear him mention who got him in the zone, my same 4/5 masters.
Where the hell has this guy been my whole life??!! What a DUDE… awesome player with a great disposition…
I am left handed and naturally started playing the same way. Everyone has told me the same stuff and then I found this video today!! I am blown away
Wow ! Im a finger picker & this video is what i needed to confirm it can be done.The way i feel.Thankyou
Wow! You’re saying exactly what I discovered. Playing loud and using the volume knob aloud me so many different tones and nuances. It was a big game changer.
Joe Bonamassa has a few great videos on getting all sorts of tones from just volume knobs and the tone knobs
@@guskalogeros9021i personally would be ok with a bridge pickup straight to the output jack. I don’t do anything remotely dynamic. I have two volumes, loud and off
@@Ottophil the singer and guitarplayer for Grouplove has a tele with the 2 pickups wire straight to the output jack. Its supposedly a very easy mod to do! Squier or Fender esquires also have this feature; the 3rd position on the 3 way switch is bridge pickup --> straight to the output jack. Have fun researching how to get this tone!
Yeah! Love JJN! Facts! You have to feel it!
I used to use a penny as a pick, but for the last few years I've been on a journey much like yours. Since I've been playing primarily with my fingers my playing has improved so much it's almost like magic. It's so much more freeing and expressive. And the look on my friends faces sometimes when I whip out a cool new lick is worth millions!
I just bought his JJN signature Epiphone like he is playing here! Already loved it, but now I have a lot of nuances and ideas to explore. Oddly enough, I have already figured out that I like playing it without a pick. Love JJN!
What a player and what a guy.. I saw him supporting Mr.Big recently at Rock City and he spent the entire time after his set talking to fans by the bar
Beautiful feel. I'd forgotten how good that sound makes me feel. I was a big Clapton fan. Keep it up Jared 👍
Jared influenced me to play with my fingers more and just go for it. I completely resonate with the pick feeling like a disconnect between the circuit of being hands on with the guitar. Im much more comfortable and accurate when i don't us a pick. Bee playing twenty one years and decided to relearn with new techniques and information/concepts and theory about four years ago. Its harder to unlearn poor habits.
So cool. Very similiar story as Andy Martins Andydemos . Beautiful tone Jared
i absolutely love that guitar, i think it’s one of the coolest things and have no reason behind it
If Albert Collins and Leslie West had a baby.... Jared is a fabulous player who understands the emotional component and the harmonic options in a highly overdriven sound. The kind of sound that is thoroughly primal and could cause the earth to spin in the opposite direction if it was loud enough.
I never heard of this gentleman but I'm an instant fan now.....love his theory on understanding the guitar !
Thanks for your thoughts guys
Excellent Video! I used a lot of my early years trying to play like everyone else instead of like me… I wish old me could have told young me the stuff in this video! Thanks! 😎👍
This guy is fantastic.
I've never found anyone that could put into words the reasons why I don't use a pick like this guy. It just feels more natural to me. I had trouble holding on to picks when I first started playing and basically just said, "this is stupid" and started figuring things out without one. He's far surpassed me, but it's crazy when he listed his influences, I almost laughed because mine are all the same players, especially Mark Knopfler.
Crazy.
People always say you gotta play fingerstyle with finger picks or nails. Not true. Bare fingers always felt best to me. Do what feels good to you. That’s how you develop your own style. Thanks Jared for the inspiration
Love your playing dude. Amazing. Thank you for your story and your lessons. 🤘🍻
Only recently discovered Jared and have to say what an inspiration, extremely talented and all round good guy he seems to be🤟🏻🤟🏻😎👌🏻
Im left handed too and i play right handed as well and that stuff on the pick not allowing you to feel the guitar is so true. I mostly play with my fingers as a result as well. Whenever i use a pick its like Im disconnecting from the strings and i cant feel them.
I've gotten to the hybrid picking phase and can go all fingers if need to. It's he is. a work in progress. It's perplexing why Jared isn't more well known than he is.
First I've heard this guy, but I love his playing!
amazing player Jared, such a feel player with an extraordinary unique technique ... I could listen to him play all day. Those signature guitars of his are fantastic but the neck is way too chunky for me, but the guitars are incredible. I owned one and had to sell it because the neck was too chunky, and I bought an Eastman Double Cut with a single P90 pickup, amazing to have only one pick up and play with the tone and volume to get your sounds, incredible. Anyway, thank you for this video fantastic to hear younger players who understand what Kossof was about or Leslie West, very much feel players, probably no clue what they are playing ... just playing. Too many youtube sites stating that you must know all the notes, all the scales and modes, it's just not true. Play the guitar and express yourself be brave :)
Oh man, you're reminds in the simplest words all of most important things. Thanks and keep rockin brother
He teaches you a lot, if you pay attention, humble, Jared seems like he is playing at full pump, full force, but that is an understatement, when you realize how much he cares, practices and knows about the most miniscule approach, in his attack to the strings, notes, and knobs, with the use of his 10 fingers to play, when you think about it, is so much easier to mute with the thumb side, the ring and the pinky, that yes, he is in more control and has a wider range of speed, note volume and choice, force, muting, etc.
Two great finger picking players, that would be interesting to watch play with Jared: Matteo Mancuso and Mdou Moctar.
Famous lefties playing right handed, Michael Angelo Batio, Duane Allman, Elvis Costello, Joe Perry, Johnny Winters, Mark Knopfler, Gary Moore, Shawn Lane, Robert Fripp, Kiko Loureiro, Steve Morse, David Bowie and Billy Corgan, so lefty not an issue, seems more like an advantage, approaching it in a different way, forced them to be more creative. Thank you. Cheers.
Dude he plays guitar. He didn’t cured cancer. Take it easy!!
Indeed, never wrote he did, but thank you for reading and commenting!!@@vintagepipesnightmares
I don’t like left handed people. But all those ones you listed are what I like to call “the good ones” those who do things the RIGHT way
Yes, they are really good players, or with a special technique or style, maybe because they needed to be more creative, changing the dominant hand. Cheers@@Ottophil
This interview made me a fan.
Met JJN years ago right as he was starting to get traction. He was such a cool hang, and still seems like I guy I'd love to hang with and geek out on guitar stuff with. The purest definition of an everyman's guitarist.
That´s a free masterclass. Thanks.
This is SO inspiring!
You made me enthousiast! Lot's of technical guitar difficulties are because of the pick. You have to practice them over and over just to get it right. Another huge advantage for playing without a pick is it can't drop out of your hand anymore.
Dude loves guitar, it’s infectious
Saw JJN in Glasgow last month. Blew me away as a performer and player.
This was absolutely fantastic! What a treasure Jared is, watching this (alongside seeing the new initiatives from the Gibson brands) is really exciting and inspiring. What a breath of fresh air, it all feels like a new lease of life!
Great guy, gets me excited about going back to fingers and after years of trying the pick using fingers still feels better
I can relate to this so much.
I love this guy .
Every time I hear him describe his process of playing with his fingers, I want to dive into it…all is well until I get a blister, or two! Forget nails, mine are never strong enough not to rip. Finger picks feel so strange?
He really is a great player, who just keeps getting better! I love what he does with his technique.
That was a great video-got a lot out of it; thx!
Best video so far to get inspiration. Thank you so much, Jared!
Seen him a few times, only on video. I think this is the first one I've heard him out of an Orange. It sounds great!
That one part around 13 mins so reminded me of something from Buckethead. The greatest riff lord of all time
Cool, humble guy. Amazing talent🎸
I fingerpick and it feels totally natural. I can play with a pick but its not the same. I agree with Jared
lovely
Could listen to him talk all day!
Lovely guy and lovely playing
This is what rock and roll thrived and grew up on , creativity and artistry. Example- Bob Dylan plays “ knocking on heavens door “ and Guns and Roses plays “ knocking on heaven’s door “. Similar but totally different…. Artistry. My buddy asks me to sit in with him as he plays his cover songs, ok . He looks over at me and says “ that’s not how you play it “. Because I have to stretch it, I have to blues it up a bit. I’m am not Dylan or Slash, so why do I need to work to copy them note for note ? You can only do you, right ? Do you and make it sound great. That’s guitar playing.
I spent a lot of time learning on a classical guitar, but I love the electric for what it offers. I've found there certain tunes you just can't get the fluidity with a pick
What a great style! Really enjoyed watching this .. some good ideas to integrate into my own playing. Thanks!
P90's is the way! I used singles, humbs... but, after many years, i aquired a Jazzmaster with a varitone and double P90, i really enjoyed that a lot. Don't want to change for another.
Cool stuff I learnt the way you have and stuck to my way as it always felt for me better and has paid off, no plastic pick ever felt expressive enough for me, I think always loosening and borrowing plastic picks put me off, as there are out there many plastic pick collector’s and was always giving them away as I learnt both techniques but finely settled on finger styles, nails and no nails. Just goes to show everyone finds their own way, it is so important to pass on learnt skills from the master players of all styles and skills, at the end of the day it’s about beautiful music to our ears.
Phenomenal
What a great video!
Thanks
30 min of JJN playing?!!! Yes please!!!
He had a ton of good insights in this interview. One of the most useful videos I've seen in a while. I'm not really that familiar with his music, but imma fixin' to dig into it.
Thanks for a great video, really enjoyed the insights! Love Jared's expressiveness and attitude toward playing!
Wow, what an articulate interesting guy.
i love jared's style and i can play lead with my fingers, but i have a really hard time playing rhythm without a pick
In older interviews he said that he puts super glue to his fingers. When it dries up his sound is more like a pick sound.
The explanation about how to build speed with only fingers is essentially the economy of motion train of though. No wasted movements and sometimes that means hammers ons and pull offs to give yourself time to setup for the next run.
Fantastic!!!
I used to get fake nails, glue on type, removable with acetone!! You can customize with a file!! My own nails wear down way low!! I like wooden picks, extra sharp!! With Jareds style. Its a hole other world, organic sounds!!
JJN YOUR ON
🔥🔥🔥MAN brillaint..love it
Thank you
Primal is a great way to describe his playing. There’s a reason only a handful of electric players use finger style. That’s because it’s freakin hard! I will say that this made me rethink & rework my own style. But I think I’ll just focus on hybrid picking for now 😂
Thx for posting this, I got a lot from it
I saw understand what you’re saying. I took a guitar in my later years and the pic was impossible. That being said I do use a pic, but it just isn’t the same nuance and dynamics and everything are harder for me to attain with a pic but it’s getting better!thanks for the lesson
very intresting
I play acoustic guitar only fingerstyle but electric only with a pick
Stellar player