Homeskoolin’ Volume 318, Tom Bukovac, “How To Write A Song”

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  • Опубликовано: 2 июл 2024
  • Thanks for watching friends
    I wanted to give a sincere thank you to Doug Jarrell for the fine work on my instruments
    To D’Addario and Andy Pitcher for the supplies
    To the boys at Goodrich Sound for the bangin’ new volume pedal.
    Upcoming things to look out for:
    In Stereo vinyl will be here in early July, appreciate your patience on that
    There are still a handful of tickets left for the Guthrie and Uncle Larry record release parties in august 16 and 17…it’s about to be sold out
    There are still tickets around if you wanna come see old Larry plunkin in the band behind Vince Gill at the Ryman for a few nights August 1-4
    Guthrie and I are going to Hotlanta next week to film an episode with Rick Beato talking about our new record as well, so keep an eye out for that too friends
    If you are getting something out of these videos, every little contribution helps
    My PayPal is tombukovac@gmail.com
    My Venmo is @Tom-Bukovac-1
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Комментарии • 375

  • @Terry_Dale
    @Terry_Dale 12 дней назад +8

    "The corporate eye" what a great expression, could be a good band name or song title... Love your channel Tom...thx.

  • @joebill663
    @joebill663 12 дней назад +17

    We just love predictability. Makes us feel safe. But if you don't switch up your walk home, the wolf will getcha

    • @christopherweise438
      @christopherweise438 12 дней назад +2

      That damn wolf. Always been afraid of him.

    • @chrischarles1468
      @chrischarles1468 11 дней назад

      Hey Uncle Larry I’ve got three comments. 1. Mandolin??? Bust one out on us please. 2. Tribute bands-Unfortunately blame the lack of rock radio for the over abundance of classic rock cover and tribute bands. Where do you get your original shit played … although you and Guthrie maybe breaking some ground. 3. Prog rock for children- play “Close To The Edge” loud for your kids. I did for my son when he was young. It freaked him out, but he definitely didn’t ask, “Is that even music.” As always much love from NC.

  • @miguelluismusic4181
    @miguelluismusic4181 12 дней назад +12

    Tom my writers block vanished as soon as I heard that mystical background cricket... thanks champ... you inspire me and relax my dog with your voice...

    • @501chorusecho
      @501chorusecho  12 дней назад +8

      you got it chief

    • @sangertx9077
      @sangertx9077 7 дней назад

      @@501chorusecho - I like it when champ and chief bond like that in our VCB.

  • @tejas.darwin
    @tejas.darwin 12 дней назад +14

    Some Jazz is un-listenable, some of it is dull, but some of it is pure Genius!

    • @ManchurianCounterweight
      @ManchurianCounterweight 12 дней назад

      sort of like everything, huh?

    • @vhollund
      @vhollund 12 дней назад +2

      Who doesn't love Ben Webster and Oscar Peterson

    • @halvach1998
      @halvach1998 12 дней назад +2

      That applies to all genres, 10% worth listening to....

    • @jamesBrian-lu4kj
      @jamesBrian-lu4kj 11 дней назад

      88.3 in San Diego plays the best jazz you will ever hear...it's my go-to when out and about

    • @Strongholle
      @Strongholle 11 дней назад

      @@halvach1998 I'd say maybe more so for jazz. On one side, many jazzheads get too caught up in a race of who can come up with the wackiest, most complex and overcooked shit out of sheer pretention, on the other jazz usually involves complex rhythm, harmony and feel so tons of people who'd do fine in other genres can't wrap their heads around all that and end up repeating the same progressions and licks to an extent that makes Greta Van Fleet sound groundbreaking vs. Zeppelin.

  • @sangertx9077
    @sangertx9077 12 дней назад +32

    I love the line in “Victim of Love”…”I could be wrong…but I’m not.”

  • @mikewren7532
    @mikewren7532 12 дней назад +10

    Really dig the budget “era”(as the kids say) Larry! Fun to see what a guy who has holy grail instruments around thinks of some of the more affordable lesser vintage options out there

  • @jimmyfrombrooklyn8550
    @jimmyfrombrooklyn8550 12 дней назад +5

    So glad my musical moral compass was shaped by classic 60s/70s guitar centric music. It’s helped tremendously to fend off the assault of 4 chord pablum, made me a bit of a snob. But that brought me to you. Oh, most 60s/70s bands are tribute bands at this point.

  • @robolivermusic
    @robolivermusic 12 дней назад +6

    As someone who gives beginner lessons, whenever I show a student the modern simple 4 chord song template, they’re usually either happy that it’s so easy or disappointed to find out the song actually doesn’t even change. There’s an art to making something simple have complexity. Some of the modern songs pull it off, and many of them do not. Great video, Tom.

  • @houndjr3983
    @houndjr3983 12 дней назад +4

    I like any chord progressions that evoke emotion and resolve.

  • @seanzinger
    @seanzinger 12 дней назад +4

    I heard Johnny Rzeznik once say that when you have writer’s block you’re actually still writing the whole time-you just hate everything.
    It was really eye opening. I like your philosophy too. Try to come up with something that doesn’t bore you, and hopefully it doesn’t bore everyone else too.

  • @r0bophonic
    @r0bophonic 12 дней назад +4

    Like addicts, we musicians have spoiled our brains for the simple music that casual listeners love. We’ve heard it all before. We need ever increasing novelty and complexity to keep us interested. Hence postwar jazz, fusion, serialism, art music, and so on.

  • @MrRhythmguitar
    @MrRhythmguitar 12 дней назад +3

    There is an old adage, usually regarding solos, "less is more." I'm thinking that to some folks jazz sounds like an onslaught of notes that is hard for their ears to parse. If a song can make its point with three or fours chords and a nice melody that is just enough for a lot of people. Not everyone is lucky enough to play an instrument and to have trained their ear in the process.
    Depending on my mood, I like artists like Miles Davis, Django Reinhardt (see the Hot Club of France recordings), and others, but I mainly enjoy The Who, Pink Floyd, Roy Orbison (fantastic voice), crunchy rock, and a wide range of other artists and performers.
    I would like to thank Tom for taking the time to make these videos. A friend of mine turned me on to them a few weeks ago and I've been working my way through them. There is so much useful information in these episodes! Tom is a real inspiration, I wish that there had been a mentor like him around when I was first learning to play guitar.

  • @jasonwooler801
    @jasonwooler801 12 дней назад +5

    My fav tribute band was Yellow Matter Custard. Matt Bissonette, Paul Gilbert, Neal Morse, Mike Portnoy, Kasim Sulton doing Beatles numbers. It was a lot of fun.

  • @SeeCSeesCC
    @SeeCSeesCC 12 дней назад +7

    ❤ Skool loves all the videos you post Tom anytime any day

  • @ironikaika
    @ironikaika 6 дней назад

    For me, the conditioning isn’t happening because I don’t really listen to anything new in the popular music world.
    New music for me consists of your three releases.
    Bryan Beller’s Scenes From The Flood and The Aristocrats. Anything else I purchase is old catalog stuff. I’m mostly stuck in the music I was into from mid 70s to mid 2000.
    Thanks, Uncle Larry for all you share. It is truly a gift.

  • @jbpmusic4900
    @jbpmusic4900 9 часов назад

    Thanks for sharing your insights man! It seems like the guys that share the tricks of the trade are truly the humble but also great at what they do. I put everything you teach to use. Thanks dude!

  • @petedunning_SG
    @petedunning_SG 12 дней назад +5

    "No, we're not going to play jazz odessy tonight!"

  • @RatherBeRiffing
    @RatherBeRiffing 12 дней назад

    Scored my tix for Aug 16. Can't wait!

  • @bobryan8793
    @bobryan8793 12 дней назад +3

    Met you at the guitar show in Orange county...your biggest fan my Brother owns Goodrich Sound..and is proud your using his pedal....

  • @americanworldsuperbi
    @americanworldsuperbi День назад

    All I play is my own shit... Thank you for justifying my approach to playing. 🙏

  • @deadwood3764
    @deadwood3764 12 дней назад +3

    A Pleasure watching you play.

  • @krisptaco
    @krisptaco 12 дней назад +5

    Dangit, now I have to listen to the entire album. 😜😜

  • @MoReverb
    @MoReverb 12 дней назад

    Very cool way you played the chorus on the intro bit , really liked that slower feel, Thanks

  • @brians5791
    @brians5791 12 дней назад +3

    I agree with you 100% on Jazz

  • @marioalberto8529
    @marioalberto8529 12 дней назад +1

    Good news!!! Keep on rocking

  • @Bond-dy6cb
    @Bond-dy6cb 12 дней назад +2

    Most awesome guitar channel ever; thanks for all the kick ass music. 💪🎸

  • @gratefulpipeandcigar3239
    @gratefulpipeandcigar3239 12 дней назад +2

    Sounds like uncle Larry's got a cricket or two in the kitchen. Love that sound.

  • @mikedr1549
    @mikedr1549 12 дней назад +1

    Sometimes I'll forward through the intro song (I know I know) - but this one had be glued to the computer! Nice haunting version played superbly! Love you Tom!

  • @PhilsArtDotCom
    @PhilsArtDotCom 12 дней назад +2

    HAA!! That's the best explanation of jazz I've ever heard.

  • @donwershba2319
    @donwershba2319 12 дней назад

    Looking forward to The Rick Beato episode - should be great!

  • @dlmyrs
    @dlmyrs 12 дней назад +1

    Beautiful Deluxe, Tom. And that slide song on the Fernandez could make a grown man cry.

  • @ap7498
    @ap7498 12 дней назад +2

    Thanks Uncle Larry, happy to hear you and Guthrie are going to Atlanta to talk about your album!

  • @Damdochax
    @Damdochax 12 дней назад +2

    Tom, I’ve been watching your channel for sometime now and you just have an incredible tone no matter what guitar you’re playing. Good luck with the new house that’s an exciting purchase. Cheers.

  • @rileybria
    @rileybria 12 дней назад

    Doug's gotta be one of the best to do it. He's performed some miracles on some tough repairs for me and I'll always sing his praises. Jared Peterman's another absolutely great tech as well as a monster player. So lucky to have so many great techs in our little big town in TN

  • @rigelloar7474
    @rigelloar7474 12 дней назад +1

    Larry, I am a jazz musician, but YOU are #1 on my list of musicians who prove that music doesn't have to be jazz to be harmonically rich and interesting. Your music is beautiful, and your videos are great. You are doing a wonderful thing for the musical community, and your generosity is as remarkable as your music. Kudos and thanks to you! Play on . . . . . .

  • @gj5250
    @gj5250 10 дней назад +1

    I totally agree mark. 👍

  • @TimTame1
    @TimTame1 12 дней назад +2

    I do know what you're talking about. The pop song model has become perfect with its production, structure and heart strings. It does draw you in but it's all to perfect and unfortunately all sounds the same (within each genre). For me, it too has become the eternal background music. Thank for everything Tom!

  • @Mr.Owl9
    @Mr.Owl9 12 дней назад +1

    Agreed, Been committed to D'Addario strings for the last 30+ years now, they are the best...

  • @andy.pitcher
    @andy.pitcher 8 дней назад

    Tom! You’re so welcome, glad to get good strings your way again.

  • @johngoodrich3536
    @johngoodrich3536 12 дней назад +1

    Doug's worked on my guitars. He's great man. Used to hang out with him when he worked at Rock block upstairs.

  • @mikes2270
    @mikes2270 10 дней назад

    Such a great video, Tom, on so many levels. Thanks for the recommendations for guys who work on guitars. My wife and I are musicians and probably moving to Nashville next summer because we love it there. One of my Les Pauls needs new frets so I’m going to look up Dougie. Mostly, I played GHS boomers and have for years; I’ll have to give D’addario another try. Finding vintage pickups in a project guitar that you thought was meh. It’s like finding buried treasure. On the subject of being bored with hearing yourself, play the same stuff over and over, we are all prisoners of our conventions and conveniences. What I have found is really interesting is playing guitar while I’m watching TV and only half paying attention to what I’m playing somehow it lets me detach from my conventions and reach out past it all and let new and different stuff come out. It’s like my playing is not being limited by my expectations. It’s cool. I hear what you’re saying about jazz being background music to most of the world; but I feel a bit differently about it. For me, jazz has always been the music of summertime. It puts me in a certain state of mind that only jazz will do. Although Donald Fagen’s Night Fly album and Steely Dan does it too. It’s awesome stuff. And finally, I have to agree with Marshall that a colony of slippermen is not really my favorite song from the Lamb lies down. Especially when there are so many other great songs on that album like fly on a windshield or anyway or hairless heart. I love all that old Genesis stuff. I love playing blood on the rooftops, Squonk, ripples, cuckoo cocoon on guitar. Have a great weekend and good luck with the new house.

  • @michaelnc4450
    @michaelnc4450 11 дней назад

    Great Stuff!!! Pulling the intro for another great Tom Bukovac Ringtone! Have a great weekend at the pool Tom and kiddos 😎👍

  • @da324
    @da324 12 дней назад +3

    I have a very simple formula to determine what I consider good music. If my foot is tapping, it's a winner.

  • @ScottMcdonaldMusic
    @ScottMcdonaldMusic 9 дней назад

    2 of the best recent concerts I’ve been to were a Pink Floyd and a Led Zeppelin tribute. Pro level

  • @jeffreyswansey5195
    @jeffreyswansey5195 12 дней назад +1

    You just wanted your boy's to have a pool in the Nashville heat, and you moved whatever mountain needed to be moved and you made it happen, The "Dad" in you is strong and you impress this 66 year old guitar playin' Grandfather of 6 more and more all the time.
    Good work Tom, Good worrk. 👍💪

  • @futternut55
    @futternut55 12 дней назад

    Love your delay sound.

  • @mikeg3754
    @mikeg3754 9 дней назад

    Tom, We are very close in age and I listen to all types of music. I have always leaned towards blues, rock and country but I find myself listening to jazz more and more. I now find myself hunting down jazz on vinyl. It's not for everyone but really good jazz holds it's own.

  • @donmorton7179
    @donmorton7179 12 дней назад

    The "Victim of Love" intro is SPOT ON, Larry! Great old song.

  • @Goodrichvp
    @Goodrichvp 12 дней назад

    You are a Badass! Thanks for the Goodrich Sound shoutout. We are fans of all the players in the musical trenches

    • @501chorusecho
      @501chorusecho  12 дней назад

      Thank you bro…very kind of you to send it my way

  • @ryangunwitch-black
    @ryangunwitch-black 10 дней назад

    I think the simplicity of the 3 chord song or the 4 chord song is what makes the good ones work. Especially when you find the 4th or 5th chord and elevate the thing in a great middle 8. It takes something special to write that simply and connect.

  • @Nozmo_King_NJ
    @Nozmo_King_NJ 12 дней назад

    Love those old Fernandes copies! The looks like a good one. Been using D'Addario XL 10's for a while, love them.

  • @slgam
    @slgam 12 дней назад +1

    The four chord phenomenon is not new. I’m 75, and all of the music I grew up with, from doo-whop hits of the 50s and 60s are *all*, basically, variations of the 4- chord hit. From, He’s still the boy I love, to Surfer Girl, to Country Roads, to Amarillo by Morning, to We’re An American Band, to Born to Run … it’s endless and timeless. Those simple chord progressions are easy to learn and remember, and that makes them catchy - for almost everyone in our western culture. Purple Irises! You said it yourself .. “I don’t know, but that sounds like a fuckin’ hit to me!”

  • @dahlbaker
    @dahlbaker 12 дней назад

    Plunkin' Tele from Chopper World. Congrats on the new digs.

  • @user-ks6up1vi5t
    @user-ks6up1vi5t 12 дней назад

    Thanks again Uncle Larry, I'm with you on the "tribute" or "cover" band thing, I want to just create my own, period, I'll be 70 in July, ain't got time to be an echo, a voice is what I want.

  • @devincrinklaw2104
    @devincrinklaw2104 12 дней назад +2

    Tom, you are my favorite Living guitar player! Love all your stuff brother. Thank you!

  • @tdguitar
    @tdguitar 12 дней назад +1

    Hi Uncle Larry. I read somewhere that the human brain makes automatic and active choices. Automatic choices can be walking, talking, enjoying things You already have accepted, liking people You already understand etc. Active choices are trying to understand something new, getting to know people, learning a craft, accepting differences etc. The normal divide between automatic and active choices is 95% to 5%. Some peolpe claim that if algorithms keep giving people only what they already have acceptet, they might stop trying using the «active» 5%. Trying to keep the active part of the brain alive seems important. So keep those complicated chords coming. Love the show

  • @zenellis
    @zenellis 11 дней назад

    For me, music evokes emotion. It's like food... sometimes you want the comforting familiarity of a 4 chord burger and fries and sometimes you want the adventure of something you've never heard. Like I grew up on AC/DC, Zeppelin, Black Sabbath etc but when Bjork came along, she blew me away and I enjoy almost all kinds of music.

  • @alrightseeya
    @alrightseeya 12 дней назад +3

    “Desert Man” for song of the year

    • @501chorusecho
      @501chorusecho  12 дней назад +1

      thank you bro, that's a sweet little tune

  • @andrewmanara5289
    @andrewmanara5289 5 дней назад

    Feeling you on tribute bands.

  • @piktormusic2538
    @piktormusic2538 7 дней назад

    I heard Sting remark to Beato that if a new song doesn’t surprise him in the 30(?) seconds, he losses interest. That’s close to describing what I feel sometimes, but if a song with a stock chord progression is played with some amazing groove, cool tone, interesting rhythm, brilliant lyric, etc. there’s a pretty good chance that I make it past thirty seconds. At the same time, while there is lots of elements to appreciate, for me there’s nothing as satisfying musically as an original and surprising chord progression.

  • @krisptaco
    @krisptaco 12 дней назад +5

    The exception for tribute bands is Brit Floyd - Pink Floyd. They are amazing, and the only way you're ever going to get to see the whole Pink Floyd theatrical show now. Energy-wise it's not the same as a normal live concert, but technically, theatrically and musically they're well worth the money.

    • @dlmyrs
      @dlmyrs 12 дней назад +1

      El Monstero in StLouis. About 7 Christmas shows. Amazing musicians from local bands. They started as a way to blow off steam and play Pink Floyd songs without pressure in the late 90s. Now it’s a full on Pink Floyd show. The music is 💯 and the stage show amazing. Last time I saw them they opened with Not Now John on a dark stage that lit up on the first note and exploding confetti. That show they played a song off the cuff from Meddle so that their set included a song from every Floyd album.

    • @davidpepper442
      @davidpepper442 12 дней назад +1

      I've heard a lot of good things about Brit Floyd

  • @gwbuilder5779
    @gwbuilder5779 12 дней назад

    How true on the chords Tom. I've been slowly working on writing songs again and I find myself using a lot of 4 chord progressions with single note walking in between to kind of lead the melody and move the feel of the song.
    Your recent wordless songs have been very familiar.
    Funny how that works in music.🤙

  • @simonmelrose7637
    @simonmelrose7637 12 дней назад

    Haha, man you are one hell of a guitar player, but I don’t even come here for that anymore. Some of your philosophy, observations, and attitudes just ring so true for me. It’s like therapy and sometimes I find myself just laughing and nodding my head. Some times all you want in this world is to be leveled with and there’s nothing but truth on this channel. Keep it up!

  • @kylegrieser6194
    @kylegrieser6194 12 дней назад

    I'm being conditioned by Uncle Larry! And I'm 100% on board for it.

  • @stringlocker
    @stringlocker 12 дней назад +6

    I've learned 30 years ago or more that D'Addario's do not break

    • @gwbuilder5779
      @gwbuilder5779 12 дней назад +2

      XLs are the ticket.👌
      I prefer the 11-52 customs for my acoustic and mostly 10s, sometimes 11s on electric.🤙

    • @stringlocker
      @stringlocker 12 дней назад

      @@gwbuilder5779 I always wanted to call D'Addario and ask them why their strings don't break. I used Slinkys for the longest time and they broke every 5 minutes.

    • @halvach1998
      @halvach1998 12 дней назад +1

      for Acoustics, Martins are Ok too, 6 a one, 1/2 doz of the other..

    • @stringlocker
      @stringlocker 12 дней назад +2

      @@halvach1998 yeah there's a lot of good sounding strings out there. I keep using D'Addario Strings because of the strength. It's been so long maybe other companies have caught up I wouldn't know

    • @gwbuilder5779
      @gwbuilder5779 12 дней назад +1

      @@stringlocker
      Still pretty much the same.
      Most pros use the XLs unless they are sponsored by someone.
      Every once in a while I'll try different strings, but always go back to the XLs because they sound better and last a really long time.

  • @NickGranville
    @NickGranville 12 дней назад +2

    Totally agree with your comments about Jazz vs pop. And that’s coming from a fellow session man who plays a lot of jazz and released Jazz-ish albums. Sad isn’t it how conditioned people have become.

  • @brutus6328
    @brutus6328 11 дней назад

    I thought that cricket was in MY room! Had to hit the pause button to check! LOLOLOLOLOLOLOL

  • @guitarz
    @guitarz 12 дней назад +8

    Cricket stole the show from that fantastic LP deluxe.

  • @discotex2236
    @discotex2236 12 дней назад +1

    Here in Bangkok we have a local named Champon who does stellar re-frets and other guitar work, Jescar re-fret $55, stainless $90 insane deal! Oh yeah, I just bought another Bogner LaGrange, the red ecstacy is awesome too, but that plexi pedal is fantastic, feels/sounds like the most versatile Marshall of your dreams.

  • @gratefulpipeandcigar3239
    @gratefulpipeandcigar3239 12 дней назад

    Here in little Simi Valley, I recently saw an Elton John tribute band and the guy looked like Elton but, more importantly, he really really sounded exactly like him and the rest of the band was pretty good. It was a lot of fun. And I do love a really good Pink Floyd copy like Australian Pink Floyd. It's something to behold to hear all of the original sounds expertly re-created.

  • @SeeCSeesCC
    @SeeCSeesCC 12 дней назад +3

    ❤ hey Tom, you’re the guy who makes the original licks

  • @tylerholloway_gitpikin
    @tylerholloway_gitpikin 12 дней назад

    I had Tony fix a CS Tele i was having an issue w/ for me way back in 2001. god that was forever ago. Great guy

  • @sevenpoundsalad3878
    @sevenpoundsalad3878 12 дней назад

    Lamb Lies Down was the album that got me into Genesis, but I was in college by then. They lyrics are brilliant.

  • @utubeneer
    @utubeneer 11 дней назад

    hey, gotta say, I'm a jazz hound and I loved the "pop" riff because it was so soaked in feeling. And the "jazzy" thing sounded more like "gospel" to me. But whatever, it's great stuff, keep on rollin Tom!

  • @duggl
    @duggl 12 дней назад +1

    Aww man. Hate to hear that you have to give up the Monte Carlo. Also, I see your mug is on the d'addario website now. That was quick. Congrats!

  • @7mtex300
    @7mtex300 12 дней назад

    I think people like music that has a beat, tempo, or a pulse that kind of goes along with our own inner heart beat or pulse. It's comforting. Jazz, to me, doesn't lineup with my inner pulse. Now, I went to this joint many years ago in Oswego NY that had a jazz band playing and I sat up fairly close and was really diggin' it. Or maybe it was the scotch.

  • @philf4086
    @philf4086 2 дня назад

    UL, I like the addition of chapters for the video. Nice touch.
    For historical purposes, this video might have set your personal record for name dropping. Not that it matters to me, I don't know any of the names that you mentioned.

  • @dirkkampa1232
    @dirkkampa1232 12 дней назад

    Hi Tom, i like a good 4Chord song with good lyris an passion the same as a tricky composition, that has to be listened carefully.....depend on my mood

  • @timrichey7452
    @timrichey7452 12 дней назад

    My favorite uncle growing up and presently is my mom's baby brother, nonother than Uncle Larry Argenbright from Ringold, Ga. so found it funny when Tom took on the Uncle Larry alias,...love it!
    Hey Larry, i have a hell of an extensive guitar collection(67) all top shelf like Martins(10)/Top Shelf, Gibby's, both elec & acoustic, exquisite Kevin Ryan w/bevel ed sound flutes(stunning guitar!), a gorgeous jumbo Guild 12-banger in maple bk & sds, spruce top, also have a sweet Guild JF 6-sting in rosewood bk n. sides, a killer 66' Gibson Byrdland freshly signed by the Motorcity Madman himself after the Boots in the Sand show at the Hertz Arena in South Fl., partied with Skynyrd and the boys before they took the stage after Nugent finished their set, it was a multi band gig, Gavin Degraw, and several others played before i got there only seeing Ted & Skynyrd play,...got a beautiful Collings CJ in mint cond as most all of my guitars are, yes im one of "them"/picky fucks. 😮 got a gorgeous Dana Bourgois Presentation model in snake headstock, very sweet ever played Larrivee D-09 w/beautifully figured brazilian back n sides, Martin CSN&Y Jerry Toler Tribte model(NEVER) played,...and an ass-ton more high end guitars both electric and acoustic,...only reason selling is my crusty 68 y/o hands are terribly arthritc coupled with Trigger finger making it impossible to play, even had to quit my band of 16 years,...SUCKS! :-(😢
    Hey Larry, if you or any other Skoolers might be interested in adding another one to their "herd" gimmee a shout,...850-218-1629 Tim
    Keep pickin it pretty Larry,...and thank you for gracing us with your up close and personal techniques allowing we mere mortals a birdseye view of how a true Master of the instrument gets it done,...pure melodic magic!
    Oh, my wife is from Reynoldsburg, just outside of Cleveland,...Go Browns- Go Tribe!
    Also my channel: Tim Richey...there are a few more Tim Richey's so plug in a song like Fire and Rain or Everything I Own, then the rest of vids should come up ...Cheers Lads!

  • @Sammywhat
    @Sammywhat 12 дней назад +1

    Don't forget Scotty over at Harpeth Guitar... that boy does some wonderful work!! Catch his skills on RUclips! ✌😊

  • @JamesDillard-gk2xb
    @JamesDillard-gk2xb 11 дней назад

    Best explanation of these process I’ve heard in a long time…
    My students ask me this question all the time and I like… I’m constantly fishing for notes… or searching for the next new chord and then find another chord to rub up against it and then you start hammering it out… could be a day.. could be years ?

  • @stratjammer80
    @stratjammer80 11 дней назад

    Saw Felder 4 years ago..still smokin' 🍻

  • @Vaughn6886
    @Vaughn6886 12 дней назад +1

    I did the tribute band thing for a bit. It was a Skynyrd tribute so it was a lot of fun to play. I learned a lot and got the good pay and fun gigs, but ultimately I got out because I didn’t want to get stuck. It’s a dangerous trap to fall into. One of the odd things I experienced is how strange and intimate it is to learn a player’s catalogue/parts/inflection/vibrato/etc note for note. It kind of feels like walking around in their mind a bit and seeing how they think. I ended up developing this weird connection with them, which is another reason I wanted to get out. It’d be easy to lose yourself. (For me anyway) I’m guessing that’s what happens to the majority of Elvis impersonators.

  • @PianoDentist
    @PianoDentist 12 дней назад

    I used to listen to a lot of Jazz Funk/Fusion/acid. You get to keep much of the complexity and interest offered by jazz, with something that has some balls and get up and dance to it. Stuff from Herbie Hancock , Billy Cobham, Roy Ayers, David Axelrod and early Level 42 are great to my ear. I do like lots of other genres though.

  • @michaeld.3504
    @michaeld.3504 10 дней назад

    Agreed. D’addario 9-40 Super Light Balanced Tension Electric Guitar Strings. The BEST! 😊 👍❤️🎸🎶✌️

  • @johnbhumphrey
    @johnbhumphrey 11 дней назад

    Only the old school appreciates what goes into writing and producing a song. The younger generations have been exactly what you said, conditioned. I call it something else but it's the same thing.

  • @Reformed_Hamburglar
    @Reformed_Hamburglar 12 дней назад

    I had a rude awakening with Jazz at a young age decades ago. I was going to jams in Chicago when there was just a tiny bit of the old guard still around and the jams were at spots which still had glittery geometric patterns etched in the mirrors, guys with purple suits plus a feather in the cap and slick intelligent bartender ladies who called you "honey."
    So, I'm at this jam watching the scene play out and there's these college age kids like me along with others. Mid jam an older guy walks in wearing painting clothes, overalls, looking like he just got off the job....and he did, his work van was parked outside. He makes a motion, sits behind the drums, they call a tune and the guy just kills it. Monster!!
    After listening to a lot of the older guys one thing was clear....lots of these cats grew up playing all day long at each other's houses. The best players would hold court at their residence, play all day with the other musicians on the block then gig at night. Everyone else would try to keep up. Aside from NYC, all these cities like KC, New Orleans, Chicago, Detroit, Philly, Baltimore, etc were just chock full of jazz joints way back when and most of the talent was right around the block.
    If you didn't grow up like that learning at the best players houses from a young age? Man, it's a mountain to climb. If you did? There's still kids coming out of Baltimore, New York, New Orleans & Philadelphia who play like they were born knowing the music.
    I grew up on AC/DC in nowheresville, so climbing that Jazz ladder is a tall order. Part of that music, you could argue the root of it, is culture.

  • @gratefulpipeandcigar3239
    @gratefulpipeandcigar3239 12 дней назад

    There are some really iconic jazz tunes that are mainstage stuff. Also, I think really good jazz is more for the self satisfaction of the players and other musicians who can appreciate it. It's a very in the moment thing otherwise it does just fade into the background for most people.

  • @JeffreyDopp
    @JeffreyDopp 12 дней назад

    NYXL 9.5 (cause I’m a fence rider) all day long!
    If I can’t find them on the road I’ll get Stringjoy.
    Bro you nailed the song/riff writing!

  • @chadwickhurlburt6529
    @chadwickhurlburt6529 12 дней назад

    Best Les Paul I've ever played is a 75' Deluxe with the bridge pickup routed for a humbucker. The neck is the original. I love the maple neck, very strong. The neck pickup is original, the bridge is a Lindy Fralin. They are perfectly balanced. It's on its fourth set of frets. A testament to how good it is. It started as a tobacco burst, cannot know that now by looking at it. It looks like a fully faded burst. Nobody has done anything to change how it looks besides simply playing it.

  • @jaxflguitar
    @jaxflguitar 12 дней назад +2

    Music can be music and it can be art but art appeals to a much smaller group.

  • @majikmuzik8036
    @majikmuzik8036 12 дней назад

    Always a good hang in here Tom, always!
    I think maybe it has to do with Golden Ratio-we need the right blend of familiarity/surprise. Maybe those 4 chords just provide all the harmonic tension/reso most need or can handle. I personally love 'functional harmony', up to say 'Late Romantic'. Any more and I glaze over.
    I like to tell kids we (Gen X) spent decades trying to add too many notes, and the rest learning to remove them, so others can enjoy. Jazz is wanky (to me too).

  • @jasonkeaton5140
    @jasonkeaton5140 7 дней назад

    I'd love to find an old les Paul. Nuce bonus on the pickups
    I stop in to rumble seat just to check it put whne I'm in Nashville. It's super cool

  • @javierbh1
    @javierbh1 12 дней назад +1

    That Japanese guy who covers Led Zeppelin is Jimmy Sakurai. Great guitar player. There´s a video of Jimmy Page himself attending one of his gigs. A bit of a shame he doesn´t do music of his own really, as much as I like to watch him do the Zeppelin thing

  • @gratefulpipeandcigar3239
    @gratefulpipeandcigar3239 12 дней назад

    I just went and listened to the colony of slipper men. I kind of dig it but it just sounds like weirdness in the 70s. Jethro Tull is my jam. Even their weird stuff like a passion play. Very similar but at least it puts me somewhere else in history. From the dark and middle ages and up through time.

  • @scottshand8559
    @scottshand8559 12 дней назад

    Man the stuff coming out of Japan in the late 70s thru the early 80s is pretty sweet, no idea who was winding pickups back then but they were good.

  • @TheArmydiver
    @TheArmydiver 12 дней назад +1

    I've only heard the word "pablum" used in conversation by another amazing human, Jean Shepherd (author of A Christmas Story) and now you. Your vids are kind of like the vintage late night radio show that he used to host. Thanks again for the entertainment as well as the education sir.

    • @501chorusecho
      @501chorusecho  12 дней назад +1

      Thank you for the kind words my friend

  • @thefungui4389
    @thefungui4389 10 дней назад

    Thank those tribute band members because I couldn't do it either but I definitely enjoyed the cover bands I've seen

  • @gordonroylambert
    @gordonroylambert 12 дней назад +4

    we are being assimilated by the 4 chord Borg…..

  • @kdavis63
    @kdavis63 12 дней назад

    I have been listening to a lot of Miles and Coltrane lately...I live in Honolulu, we have always been late for everything here. I remember in the early 80s we would get TV shows one week after the mainland and even movies were releases a bit later than the mainland. As for music, we have our island style, but to be honest, I am stuck in the now oldies (60-70-80s) music. I grew up in the midwest in the 70s and we had all types, but mostly country and rock. Jazz has always been around, I played music (trumpet) back in those days, so it was always leaning towards that. Now after playing guitar for 30 years or more, I really enjoy to figure out the jazz stuff. But you know, there is nothing like listening to a killer solo by Jimi or EC. The blues have always been in my DNA, give me some T-Bone or Muddy...

    • @tratko3150
      @tratko3150 8 дней назад

      What do you think of Hapa? I found them in the late 90s whilst visiting the Big Island. I really like them.