SCAM ALERT: ignore any comments that appear to be from me telling you that you've won something on Telegram or anywhere else. These are SCAMMERS and they will steal your money.
I know this video has been up for a while, but I think you'll find that monochromatic lick/trick a lot in Gatemouth Brown's stuff. I'm not sure what incarnation of him it was, he had a few different and distinct eras but he definitely messed around w/a lot of the chromatic stuff that Stevie utilizes a lot.
Thank you for your concise techniques playing the blues. I've been playing metal for years. Now I have fun expressing my string bends in the blues. Thank you for what you do.
Nearly forty years ago at a very low point in my life, flat broke and with my wife in hospital and my children living with their Grandparents, I was driving home very late and very depressed when on the car radio I first heard Stevie - playing Testify. It was so riveting I had to pull over and it was so strong that it gave me the lift I needed. My situation gradually improved and a few months later I got to see Stevie live.
I got to see Stevie several times from 85 to 91. In fact I had a ticket for his last show at Alpine Valley but wasn’t able to go. Which I hate till today cause it was his very last performance. In 89 I got to meet him back stage at what was called Deer Creek amphitheater in Noblesville Indiana. I had a friend who used to set up the stage equipment who got me backstage passes where I got to meet him a few moments that I’ll never forget. He was a real inspiration for my playing along with the greats like BBKing Albert King Lonnie Mack Albert Collin’s Muddy Waters and so on. Keep up your hard work brother.
I purchased one of your DVD lesson videos. Anyone reading my comments...the videos are very well made, and easy to pick up these amazing licks. Cheers from Ohio.
from your legendary playing to your legendary pov for making learning easier. you have influenced so many people like the great legends alive. TXBA is awesome!
Dan Palmer comment here. Check his comment. He's saying rhythmically like Johnny Winter but he doesn't remember J.W. ever doing it. It DOES sound like something J.W. would have done. That Dan guy may have nailed it.
@@Texasbluesalley Not exactly the same lick, but here Jimi using the b9 chromatically. Also an amazing lick! You should check it out! ruclips.net/user/clipUgkxWmR7VdbU5WUIMOkxjI0dy9aMxQRyzaF4 It's playing live after Buddy Guy at a bar. It uses lots of techniques and cool ideas, and sounds badass. Might be a good idea for a lesson :p
HAPPY ANNIVERSARY! I was living in Austin in 1982-85. It was awesome to be there when Steve was busting out. Every Tuesday he had a free concert at Town lake. With more blues greats than I can list. Thank you for all the excellent teaching and material!
I am so grateful that I found Stevie Snacks. You and Griff Hamlin are the best internet teachers. And the pro player is awesome. Thanks, Anthony and congrats!
Thanks Ken. Griff is so great. I've had the chance to hang out and go to dinner with him at NAMM in years past and it's obvious why he's been so successful.
Happy anniversary, awsome channel. And what a beast of a player Mathew Scott has turned into, must make you proud to know he and many others are watching and learning from you.
WOW! My first step into guitar was learning Pride and Joy from you back in 2008/9ish. I've been following Matthew Scott recently and to see he was your first comment is a really cool coincidence. You really started my guitar journey, and for that I thank you so much.
In what world is this the first time I've ever come across you? Been a Stevie fan for 20 years. Can't wait to go back through your videos and learn from you!!
Thank you so much for all your content and lessons over the past 15 years. I still remember when I first discovered your channel over 10 years ago. Life moves by so fast! I was still in high school when I found your channel and was starting to branch out from playing general rock music, into blues. One of the first videos I ever seen by you was your lesson on "the grip". I must've watched that video a dozen times, as it taught me how to do proper string bending. To my knowledge, it was the only video on RUclips back then with a teacher showing how to properly do string bends and position your thumb over the low E string (this made me realize the advantages of playing a guitar with a thick neck) You also had several videos on rake techniques back in the day. Over the years, I would send those videos to friends who were looking for help with blues guitar and how to properly bend strings. Thank you again for all your content and lessons over the years. You have given the world a treasure trove of knowledge.
Best lesson I've seen on that lick. Hendrix played a similar lick but used the B note instead of the B flat. Also I just noticed the similar lick on Johnny Winter's Hustled Down in Texas, descending the B, B flat to A. Really enjoy your channel!
This lick appears almost the same in the second phrase of Texas Flood intro, but is played in the 3-5 frets instead. Great class, thank you bro, salutes from São Paulo - Brazil!
Sometimes you never get to realize your influence and effect on viewers. In life, much of our interactions can fade in our memory while they grow and thrive in those we touched. Cool influence on Matthew Scott!
Seen him 3 times already, and the man is built for blues! I hope he goes far! First album Mirrors is excellent for his first, tasty all the way through
great lesson I was playing in a club called Gatsbys on Morris ave which had a row of clubs I walked outside during a break and heard a wailing guitar coming from the cobblestone bar so i walked in and there was SRV sitting at the front of the stage playing his ass off to nobody but the waitress and bartender so walked up and sat directly in front of him and couldnt believe what I was seeing this was 3 months before he burst on the scene and something I'll never forget in Birmingham Al
Thanks for your insights! I found the first 8 bars of Pride and Joy in Scotty Moore’s 2nd lead in Elvis’s Good Rock’n Tonight. He borrowed from the greats like most greats do:) Many Cheers!
I guess T-Bone Walker was an inspiration for that lick. He very often used to start a lick this way but that flat9 is something very typical for Stevie
I think I heard Hendrix do that little half tone hammer on & off on the top string before. Always wondered how he did it til I heard you demonstrate it in a vid years ago. It's a regular in my playing now. Works really well in faster shuffles too.
Great lesson! Then AND now! I think I heard this lick or similar from one or both of Mike Bloomfield or Johnny Winter. Maybe Albert Collins too. But it definitely registers as SRV the way you’re playing it. It’s awesome and congrats on your 15 years!
Anthony, Congrats on your 15 year anniversary! I have for many years been fascinated by SRV adding the 9th and b9th to a dominant 7th chord. Being a bit of a theory geek, I've often wondered was he conceptualizing playing an E blues scale over the A7 chord. This to my mind is a very common improvising device which would be used by a jazz guitar player. He did cover "Chitlins Con Carne" by Kenny Burrell. Rock On! Blues On! Jazz On!
Don't tear up it's music! There was a Time I was wone of the best bluse player around,all buy here before Ist 4 cords fond key an had song nailed! BONE MARO TRANCSPLIAN ! (CANCER) Tucke me to my needs learning what I new how to play Thank you!😎🇺🇸👍⚓️
Congratulations man I’m so glad I found you! Can’t really learn from most of these guys except you and Marty! Don’t tell Marty but I think you’re better 👀
The difference between me and Marty is that this is the only thing I CAN do well. He’s a great teacher and person. It’s an honor to even be mentioned alongside him.
Everyone knows SRV was inspired by a number of great Blues guitarists. As he was learning and developing his OWN style and sound, I’m guessing Stevie made that lick his own signature lick. Just like he did with his string gauge selection. JMO
I think you should know that, several years back you did a review on a Fender Blues Jr amp. Back then, (circa, 2011'ish), it was your review that prompted me to purchase a new Blues Jr NOS, and I am still using it as my main amp. Just wanted to thank you. :)
Big Mama Thornton - Ball n Chain at around 32 seconds the guitar plays something similar but it sounds more of a pull-off than a hammer on. That’s the earliest version of that lick that I have personally heard and again… it’s not exact but it sounds like SRV could’ve put his own spin on it perhaps? Who knows.
I was in a house band in the 90s with another, better, SRV fan, so I purposely never learned this. Now I can enjoy it (but I'm a bit worried that since I can finally play it right I'll just HAVE to use it when we jam for fun :) I know my bro, he's gonna look over like "Really?!" Lol. Thanks this was so much fun.
SCAM ALERT: ignore any comments that appear to be from me telling you that you've won something on Telegram or anywhere else. These are SCAMMERS and they will steal your money.
I know this video has been up for a while, but I think you'll find that monochromatic lick/trick a lot in Gatemouth Brown's stuff. I'm not sure what incarnation of him it was, he had a few different and distinct eras but he definitely messed around w/a lot of the chromatic stuff that Stevie utilizes a lot.
Thank you for your concise techniques playing the blues. I've been playing metal for years. Now I have fun expressing my string bends in the blues. Thank you for what you do.
Duh. Why even draw attention to it.
Nearly forty years ago at a very low point in my life, flat broke and with my wife in hospital and my children living with their Grandparents, I was driving home very late and very depressed when on the car radio I first heard Stevie - playing Testify. It was so riveting I had to pull over and it was so strong that it gave me the lift I needed. My situation gradually improved and a few months later I got to see Stevie live.
Mate that’s brilliant Thankyou for sharing this with us!
That's awesome.
Sweet 💣 that's awesome
BLESSINGS TO YOU BROTHER!
Thanks for sharing! His music was and is transformative!!!
Respect Teacher. Jimi played this Lick in various solos, as red house and stuff. Thank you for redoing it…
I got to see Stevie several times from 85 to 91. In fact I had a ticket for his last show at Alpine Valley but wasn’t able to go. Which I hate till today cause it was his very last performance. In 89 I got to meet him back stage at what was called Deer Creek amphitheater in Noblesville Indiana. I had a friend who used to set up the stage equipment who got me backstage passes where I got to meet him a few moments that I’ll never forget. He was a real inspiration for my playing along with the greats like BBKing Albert King Lonnie Mack Albert Collin’s Muddy Waters and so on. Keep up your hard work brother.
Saw SRV in 87 at Nassau Coliseum. He played a Olympic white strat( Scotch ) almost the whole show. Sounded amazing, soo glad I got to see him live!!
Your deconstruction of SRV’s style is a magnificent piece of analysis and teaching. Congratulations.
I purchased one of your DVD lesson videos. Anyone reading my comments...the videos are very well made, and easy to pick up these amazing licks.
Cheers from Ohio.
from your legendary playing to your legendary pov for making learning easier. you have influenced so many people like the great legends alive. TXBA is awesome!
I've been enjoying your lessons for well over a decade now. Cheers and thank you!
I watched that vid when it came out. Now searched you because started playing again after 7 years. Glad you never stopped!! Thx
Just started out 2 years ago and really loving your SRV teachings. Thanks
I think that lick is an evolution of some licks T-Bone Walker played. Of course Jimi used it, but not as much as SRV.
Good point about T-Bone Walker. I gotta go back and see if I can spot this anywhere in his playing.
I always thought he borrowed a lot from Fenton Robinson too. Good point on the T-bone walker.
Dan Palmer comment here. Check his comment.
He's saying rhythmically like Johnny Winter but he doesn't remember J.W. ever doing it.
It DOES sound like something J.W. would have done.
That Dan guy may have nailed it.
@@Texasbluesalley Not exactly the same lick, but here Jimi using the b9 chromatically. Also an amazing lick! You should check it out! ruclips.net/user/clipUgkxWmR7VdbU5WUIMOkxjI0dy9aMxQRyzaF4
It's playing live after Buddy Guy at a bar. It uses lots of techniques and cool ideas, and sounds badass. Might be a good idea for a lesson :p
HAPPY ANNIVERSARY! I was living in Austin in 1982-85. It was awesome to be there when Steve was busting out. Every Tuesday he had a free concert at Town lake. With more blues greats than I can list. Thank you for all the excellent teaching and material!
I live in Austin and ride around town lake everyday on my ebike and always solute the SRV statue when I drive by.
Austin was definitely magical then.
I am so grateful that I found Stevie Snacks. You and Griff Hamlin are the best internet teachers. And the pro player is awesome. Thanks, Anthony and congrats!
Thanks Ken. Griff is so great. I've had the chance to hang out and go to dinner with him at NAMM in years past and it's obvious why he's been so successful.
You are a good man, Tim. Been with you since 2009
Great job Anthony, you're a great player and a great teacher. You deserve the success you're having!!!
Always a great lesson to be found here! Thank you very much!
Happy 15th. The amount I’ve learned from you over the years has helped me in my guitar journey vastly.
Happy 15th Anniversary Mr. Anthony, Appreciate you, Long Live SRV...and long Live Texas Blues Alley....peace Brother ....
Happy anniversary, awsome channel.
And what a beast of a player Mathew Scott has turned into, must make you proud to know he and many others are watching and learning from you.
WOW! My first step into guitar was learning Pride and Joy from you back in 2008/9ish. I've been following Matthew Scott recently and to see he was your first comment is a really cool coincidence. You really started my guitar journey, and for that I thank you so much.
Thank you for teaching this great lick of SRV. I am a loyal follower from Turkey . ❤🙋♂
Cant believe i just found your channel..2023..Im starting to learn Srv style today!!
Welcome aboard!
Absolute GOLD! Thank you, thank you, THANK YOU! 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👍
Glad you enjoyed it!
EXCELLENT Teaching, Can actually SEE what your doing, and played slow, so I can first learn it, then speed it up !! THANK YOU ! Philip.
In what world is this the first time I've ever come across you? Been a Stevie fan for 20 years. Can't wait to go back through your videos and learn from you!!
FANTASTIC JOB TEX!
Thank you so much for all your content and lessons over the past 15 years. I still remember when I first discovered your channel over 10 years ago. Life moves by so fast! I was still in high school when I found your channel and was starting to branch out from playing general rock music, into blues. One of the first videos I ever seen by you was your lesson on "the grip". I must've watched that video a dozen times, as it taught me how to do proper string bending. To my knowledge, it was the only video on RUclips back then with a teacher showing how to properly do string bends and position your thumb over the low E string (this made me realize the advantages of playing a guitar with a thick neck)
You also had several videos on rake techniques back in the day. Over the years, I would send those videos to friends who were looking for help with blues guitar and how to properly bend strings.
Thank you again for all your content and lessons over the years. You have given the world a treasure trove of knowledge.
Best lesson I've seen on that lick. Hendrix played a similar lick but used the B note instead of the B flat. Also I just noticed the similar lick on Johnny Winter's Hustled Down in Texas, descending the B, B flat to A. Really enjoy your channel!
This lick appears almost the same in the second phrase of Texas Flood intro, but is played in the 3-5 frets instead. Great class, thank you bro, salutes from São Paulo - Brazil!
🏁 Excellent,thanks
The demonstration is great teaching. Slow. Explained. And chunked together well.
Thank you!
Sometimes you never get to realize your influence and effect on viewers. In life, much of our interactions can fade in our memory while they grow and thrive in those we touched.
Cool influence on Matthew Scott!
Mathew Scott is amazing
Seen him 3 times already, and the man is built for blues! I hope he goes far! First album Mirrors is excellent for his first, tasty all the way through
Rhythmically, it sounds like a Johnny Winter lick, but Johnny never did it with the flat 2nd like SRV did. Truly unique to Stevie. Great video!
Now that you mention it...maybe J.W. DID do it at some live show or reorded on a deep cut?
You may have nailed it. 👍🙏
Alvin Lee from the Band „Ten Years after“ played this lick as well… and that was way before SRV… every man has it‘s Idol..
Happy Anniversary! I'm so loking forward to rejoining the Locals ❤
Congrats! 15 years is an amazing accomplishment
Congrats on the 15 years! Stevie based that lick on a lick T-Bone Walker used a lot! I think he was the first.
Really like the camera angle, very helpful! Great lesson!
I like how this channel hasnte devolved into a gear review channel like most RUclipsrs. Such quality stuff.
Well I’ve pretty much stopped posting at all because almost nothing short of clickbait bullshit gets any traction, so I’m not sure if that’s better.
Happy anniversary! Have been watching since the Stevie Snacks days and now a TBXA local.
Thank you for all your hard work to make it easier for us!
Congratulations, Anthony!!
great lesson I was playing in a club called Gatsbys on Morris ave which had a row of clubs I walked outside during a break and heard a wailing guitar coming from the cobblestone bar so i walked in and there was SRV sitting at the front of the stage playing his ass off to nobody but the waitress and bartender so walked up and sat directly in front of him and couldnt believe what I was seeing this was 3 months before he burst on the scene and something I'll never forget in Birmingham Al
Congrats on 15! Here’s to 15 more! Thanks for sharing your knowledge.
Congratulations 🎉15 years on YT! July 23rd, 1987 was the last time I saw SRV in concert, over 35 yrs ago!👍🎸🇨🇦
Congratulations 🎉 I've been following you for years.
Awesome! You have a great technique for teaching. Thank you so much!
Thanks for your insights! I found the first 8 bars of Pride and Joy in Scotty Moore’s 2nd lead in Elvis’s Good Rock’n Tonight. He borrowed from the greats like most greats do:) Many Cheers!
Congratulations on 15 years!!!
I guess T-Bone Walker was an inspiration for that lick. He very often used to start a lick this way but that flat9 is something very typical for Stevie
Great job Anthony! Thank you for the hard work and help. Keep going.
You sir 🫵🏾 are amazing 🎸
Happy birthday, excellentes vidéos, la France aime le blues Texan...
I think I heard Hendrix do that little half tone hammer on & off on the top string before. Always wondered how he did it til I heard you demonstrate it in a vid years ago. It's a regular in my playing now. Works really well in faster shuffles too.
This is awesome! thank you for sharing!
Congrats on 15 years!
mastering this lick before i leave the house this is sick
Great lesson! Then AND now! I think I heard this lick or similar from one or both of Mike Bloomfield or Johnny Winter. Maybe Albert Collins too. But it definitely registers as SRV the way you’re playing it. It’s awesome and congrats on your 15 years!
Happy 15th Anniversary Anthony and TXBA.
happy anniversary dude I've been watching and learning from your free lesson Friday since 2016
Thx for The all The years! Since Stevie snacks!
Anthony, Congrats on your 15 year anniversary! I have for many years been fascinated by SRV adding the 9th and b9th to a dominant 7th chord. Being a bit of a theory geek, I've often wondered was he conceptualizing playing an E blues scale over the A7 chord. This to my mind is a very common improvising device which would be used by a jazz guitar player. He did cover "Chitlins Con Carne" by Kenny Burrell. Rock On! Blues On! Jazz On!
Well done sir! I’ll member up. Love this 🤙🤙
Awesome lick, very useful..
congrats Sir.
If you look up Eric Clapton “Stock Phrases” he use is it as a launching point for a lot of solos.
Great video and explanation. Subscribed !
Santana in Samba pa ti worked that hammer on/off a lot before going into the unison bends
Thx for the lesson!
Thank you for everything
Don't tear up it's music! There was a Time I was wone of the best bluse player around,all buy here before Ist 4 cords fond key an had song nailed! BONE MARO TRANCSPLIAN ! (CANCER) Tucke me to my needs learning what I new how to play Thank you!😎🇺🇸👍⚓️
Shalom brotha man, I'm so going to practice this lick, thank you for sharing this... 👍😁😎💯🎸
Nice job as always, God bless
That's really cool.
Congratulations brotha
Happy Anniversary!
That is Solid, man. 🎸
Thank you so much 🥰
THIS IS GOLD!!!
Thx for sharing…sounds a bit like Hendrix in the opening solo of Red House.
happy 15th anniversary!!! also, i think the lick can be traced back to taj mahal & t-bone walker.
Congratulations!
Congrats bud...great job
So Cool. Thanks so much!
Congratulations 🎸👍👍‼️
Thank You so Much
Hendrix played this lick - check out Red House - live at the Albert Hall 1969 (I think)
Your action look impossibly high, I don't know how you do it!
That lick reminds me of chuck berry. It's the mixolydian mode with a passing note
Congratulations man I’m so glad I found you! Can’t really learn from most of these guys except you and Marty! Don’t tell Marty but I think you’re better 👀
The difference between me and Marty is that this is the only thing I CAN do well. He’s a great teacher and person. It’s an honor to even be mentioned alongside him.
Everyone knows SRV was inspired by a number of great Blues guitarists. As he was learning and developing his OWN style and sound, I’m guessing Stevie made that lick his own signature lick. Just like he did with his string gauge selection. JMO
I think you should know that, several years back you did a review on a Fender Blues Jr amp. Back then, (circa, 2011'ish), it was your review that prompted me to purchase a new Blues Jr NOS, and I am still using it as my main amp. Just wanted to thank you. :)
Awesome!
Big Mama Thornton - Ball n Chain at around 32 seconds the guitar plays something similar but it sounds more of a pull-off than a hammer on. That’s the earliest version of that lick that I have personally heard and again… it’s not exact but it sounds like SRV could’ve put his own spin on it perhaps? Who knows.
Johnny Winter does something similar to that lick, check out 1981 with Albert King.
Thanks, I've been trying my best to learn that damn lick for the better part of 4 years! I was close but could quite get that second phrase 👍🏻👍🏻
T-Bone Walker in "mean old world" did something like this lick
I was in a house band in the 90s with another, better, SRV fan, so I purposely never learned this. Now I can enjoy it (but I'm a bit worried that since I can finally play it right I'll just HAVE to use it when we jam for fun :) I know my bro, he's gonna look over like "Really?!" Lol. Thanks this was so much fun.
Hendrix plays it in power of soul, from the both sides of the sky album
@@bobzinator4457 I think you’re right. I can hear that hammer-on/pull-off right around 1:26.
Good stuff brother! 👍