Born in Chicago - Cool Blues Harmonica - Paul Butterfield Cover
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- Опубликовано: 15 окт 2024
- Cover of Paul Butterfield's version of the song "Born in Chicago", midtempo version.
At 2:02 I play Paul Butterfield's harmonica intro from the song "Walkin' Thru The Park" on Muddy Waters' album "Fathers and Sons" from 1969.
At 2:26 I play Paul Butterfield's harmonica intro from his version of Little Walter's song song "Mellow Down Easy". It's on PBs album "The Paul Butterfield Blues Band" from 1965.
At 3:14 I play some of the harmonica parts from Paul Butterfield's version of the famous blues song "The Thrill Is Gone".
Watch all my Paul Butterfield covers and lessons with tabs here. Also backing track for this version:
• Paul Butterfield harmo...
Hakan Ehn plays Hohner Golden Melody harmonica in D, keyboards and percussion.
Shure 545SD microphone connected into vocals processor Digitech Vocal 300 connected into Boss recording studio.
Digitech Vocal 300, vocals processor:
distortion, equalizer, delay, reverb
Boss BR-1200CD, digital recording studio:
bass and drums backing track
.
That was definitely an interesting treatment of Butterfield's music.
I can't believe my hears. And I thought I was getting any good, you humble me. You make me feel so groovy and kinda moody at the same time.
Absolutely brilliant
Thanks so much!
BRAVO BRAVO. HAKAN
Thanks!
Ive been playing harp over 35yrs, you have it in your soul. Keep harpin! Love your sound and tone and the soul you put into it.
Hawk; Check out some of my freestyle harp playing on utube. Key in one called Jimmy C and E C and all of them should come up.
Never seen such a thing 4 great songs in one. Applause to you King...
Thanks so much!
FANTASTIQUE mind blowing performance Hakan
Personal favorite
Thanks!
Probably half a dozen years after it was recorded but I thoroughly enjoyed this. It is fun and another interpretation of Butterfield. Especially liked the parts starting around 3:14 where he starts playing individual licks with good spaces between them (means I can cop them). And keeps playing them with variations. Thank you!
With all that space in there, there is room to copy, change, improvise, grow, which is what it is all about in my humble opinion.
What I have trouble with ('Hello, my name is Ron and I have trouble with staying within the structure') is the ease Butterfield has in switching between changes and always coming back inside the chord structure. He could be flying lost over the Antarctic and still know the way home to Chicago.
Thanks!
@@HakanEhn
Don't thank me. Thank you!
I had a Norwegian friend one time when I was growing up (nicest person you could meet) and one day a few years later his mother told me that he had suffered from heat stroke on a freighter. I should have sent him a letter but I didn't. No excuse.
Never the less one day about eight years later I was carrying hod on an English construction site - going up a ladder with 60-70 pounds of bricks on my shoulder and the same thing happened to me. The world started spinning around me and I stopped moving and hung on to the ladder to not fall off. I remembered Sigurd then and managed to struggle to the top, where I found a tiny piece of shade and spent five minutes there. The bricklayer was a little annoyed and I said I would try to do better.
But I still remembered Sigurd and when I got down off the ladder I went straight to the water supply and poured a bunch of cool water on the back of my neck to cool down.
They fired me for it, but I say Thank you Sigurd.
Pretty good! I had Butterfield's first LP back in 1965 when it first came out. They toured the San Francisco area and I went to see them play in Berkeley. Someone called the Jefferson Airplane opened for them. What a group they were! Mike Bloomfield, Elvin Bishop, Paul Butterfield blew the roof off the place! I don't know of anyone else playing around San Francisco back in those days that sounded remotely like the Butter band. I was just a kid in high school at the time.
You have Paul's harp nailed, thanks a lot for sharing. Paul may be gone but we have Hakan Ehn to show us how it's done!
Awesome !
Thanks!!
This is SO good! Thank you, this was a kind of unexpected pearl for me :)
OMG best song i have ever herd on a hermonica
@Janharmonica
Thank you so much!
I love listening to your great music that you play. It is so relaxing, and pugs me in anther zone. Thank you for such great entertainment Hakan. Bruce P.
I have the same harmonica but in C. Is it possible to sound this song like your style using a C instead of a D? Thanks
i said it once and i'll say it again.
F*cking awesome Hakan you ROCK!!!
Smokin every note into history! Could listen all nite if the tobacco and beer holds out.
Thanks!
@blackwaterdan
Thank you so much!
Thanks!
Excellent Hakan !!
Thank you very much my friend.
See you
STeph.
@JoeRomanowski1
Thank you very much!
@blackwaterdan
Thank you! I produced it. I just uploaded it (and also the fast version) on RUclips for you to play along with.
WOW!
@NikeBlus
Thanks!
Excellent!
@SickAirGuitarSolos00
Thank you!
Class
Wow, that tone gave me shivers man.
+PhiI93 Thanks!
@Tsutsomu
Thanks Steph!
Håkan
Thanks! HakanEhn I am impressed. Great stuff !
blackwaterdan
cool!
Out !! Standing !! I Love Butterfield , Great Job !!
Where did you get the track ?
hi Hakan, i'm an italian harpsucker & i often take a look 2 your news on video! :D please to meet ya! can you tell me where did u find your "4pin to 1/4 jack" adapter for your Shure 545? i'm desperate, i cannot find it!!!
Many thanx man!
Stefano
Nice job broham!!
Sir, you are rediculous good!@
O MAN
Hur länge kan Hohner Golden Melody harmonica D hålla? Innan den går sönder eller så.
Hell yeah!!!!
impressive!!!
what book do you recommend to get started? ;)
nice
I'm used to it bout 1/4 faster but helps to hear it at that speed.
How can I see the tab for this?
how do you get that good
fuckn' a!
Very nice indeed so clean yet dirty!
Love that tone ....Just how do you cook that up bro?
+chaulzer Thanks! It's the shades. And the mic.
Thanks!
Thanks!