Jim bought the Roland G-700 synthesizer and G-707 guitar from me at Arnold & Morgan Music Company in Garland, Texas! A way fun day, as you can imagine.
He was on his way, from Branson, to Los Angeles, i bet, or, on his way, back, as he might have shattered his first purchase, on the Tonight Show Stage and 40,000 shards flew out. That's too many, i know, but, he shard that Crowd, to hell! Yippy kiyyay......et ceteraaaaa.
Yeah. He handled it very well. You had to be ahead of the beat, but do it consistently and you had to not pay attention to the backing band, or you'd fall behind.
This was one of the coolest toys when it came out. It might seem odd to see Jim Stafford playing one but he was always a great entertainer and did a great job with it!
I remember when this originally aired, when I was still a young teenager, but it was one of those rare occasions when I missed it and had to hear my dad tell me how cool it was. So awesome to be able to finally see it over thirty years later.
Never see any one play one today? Just the fad back then I guess? He is vary talented and able to adapt to the times. Long live Jim Stafford..great post.
Jim pulled it off great... despite the technological issues he had to overcome with that mid 80's Roland guitar synth setup. Yes, I can attest to the G-707's tracking and latency issue... the analog to digital technology hadn't really been perfected in that 24 pin hexaphonic system.. it was like having to relearn how to play an entirely new instrument. ..at least as far as playing technique and the approach.
Astounding he had the balls to attempt this on late night prime time. This is actually much harder than you think. The newest gear is much easier. I played one of these for a little bit of time when they came out. It was in a music store and I didn't buy it because it was freakin' expensive. I'm sure Johnny wasn't really impressed, and most weren't, but I have to give Stafford props for even attempting this on late night TV and trying to make it entertaining for average people. Anyway, check out other vids to realize that Stafford is actually a good musician. He presented himself a certain way to develop a career. Nothing wrong with that, and he did a good job, as he was consistently entertaining every time I saw him on TV when I was a "young lad". Good for you, man!
***** Paul Battis below mentions the Roland 707 which is a drum machine, he meant to say Roland G-707, which is the guitar synth. Over time the Roland models evolved and the tracking speed got much better. The sloppiness you hear from Stafford in this vid is not really him as a player, as this guitar was hard to play clean by even good players. There were a few other companies trying to do that at that time as well, and their products were even worse. Nowadays tracking is not a big deal, though I've personally not had a chance to play those myself. You would not want to get an old G-707 setup today, as current Roland setups are way better. That odd angle brace at the top of the guitar was to keep the whole thing stiff and rigid, which is why with later setups as add-ons for existing guitar bodies, people liked to use something solid and stiff like Les Paul bodies or Paul Reed Smith.
***** The frets are fine. The problem was getting the string vibration through the pickup through the input of the synth fast enough. Much longer than today's setups. I don't know what would happen if you plugged the guitar into a new Roland synth. It would either be faster or would not be compatible at all. The problem is that you hit the string and you want to hear a quick response so that you have a good feel and timing. If you listen to Stafford on a regular guitar you hear what a great player he is. In this Roland vid you can hear timing and control problems. That's why I said he had a lot of balls attempting this in public. I'd be scared to do it!
Ah you must be referring to latency and possibly signal strength from the strings. Yeah, back then MIDI was controlled through a guitar like this using all analog meaning voltage readings of either -15 volts to 0 volts or 0 volts to 15 volts. So between the two Im sure it was problematic especially if youre getting a delay from the house PA when not using monitors. I thought this dude was screwing up a lot for a live performance but when you factor in these things I highly doubt anyone could have done it better.
I am so surprised to be seeing Jim play one of these guitars... the only one I had seen till now was one that David Sterry of Real Life ("Send Me An Angel") played. How great to be seeing Jim spreading his wings and doing something so different. He really is a great musician.
Most people didn't use the G-707 guitar, because, well, it looks ridiculous. Roland's G-505, G-202, G-303, and G-808 were all compatible with the GR-700, and Roland licensed the synth interface to a number of other companies who built compatible instruments. When they were in GTR, Steve Hackett had a Schecter Strat style guitar with the guitar synth electronics and Steve Howe had a Les Paul that Gibson built for him (Gibson also offered a synth compatible Explorer, but I never saw anyone playing one). Henry Kaiser had a Modulus Graphite guitar, Al Di Meola had a PRS, and John McLaughlin a Pedulla, all of them using them with the Synclavier. John Abercrombie had a Ibanez (Steve Howe had one of those too, but he said he didn't like it, and it was stolen a couple months after he got it). David Gilmour had a couple different Strats with the synth interface, though I only remember seeing him playing them twice (once being the Guitar Greats concert MTV aired at the end of 1984, the other being when he played with Bryan Ferry at Live Aid and the synth guitar died during the first song and he had to swap guitars while one of the other guitarists in Ferry's band played a solo).
I still have that guitar with the unit and a midi controller I think it was almost 3 grand back in 85 or 86. You can just feel the struggle with that thing tracking the right note. That is the hardest thing about that is you have to be so accurate or it will just glitch Wow. Feelin the old now Ouch
Props to you Jim......great job with the holiest of holy GR700. I own one too, as well as a Roland GR500 and SPV355 pitch to voltage (which I worship).
Excellent use of the synthesizer. I have an Ibanez X-ing IMG2010 (1986 model). Similar in control and appearance, except with out the bar over the neck. Jim's a funny guy and an excellent picker. Thanks for sharing.
John Abercrombie had one of those that he used with his GR-700, and I remember reading about a guitarist in New Orleans, can't remember his name now, who used the Ibanez MIDI rig to do a "one man band" thing, where he triggered full band arrangements from his guitar. Steve Howe had one too, but he said he didn't like it, and that it was stolen after he only had it for a few months (he said that the thief stole the guitar, but not the rack unit, saying "There's some silly person out there who doesn't have the rack unit that goes with the guitar").
Nancy Davis we used to go to Branson between 1997 and prob 2000, stayed at Lodge of the Ozarks right across from Jim Stafford's place. Always wanted to go bc the brochure made it sound awesome. We never went :(
If you would read the description, it clearly says it's the Tonight Show...these are just clips from Jim on past shows...the ad at the end is for his show in Branson. Thanks...
I love Jim because he is as talented as anyone..but he never went for the quick buck or did ANYTHING people expected him to do..he just did what he wanted
Absolutely, you should see my face when my dick is in my hand, my wife's breast, Chinese chop sticks, a weed whacker, it's the same face no matter what's in my hands.
Very interesting clip. Thanks for sharing. Along the same lines, RUclips used to have a clip of Donny Osmond playing a pretty wicked synthesizer solo on a modular Moog. I can't find it. Maybe someone else can find a link or repost it.
Wow. I am a guitar synth player and what Jim played is hard enough on my modern stuff. The 707 was horrible to play, terrible sounds and lots of latency. The Latency is so bad that when I played one back in 1990 some of the notes are still to trigger! Jim was very brave to play it live!
Lost, here, is how the great Tommy Newsom whipped up a band arrangement to accompany Jim, likely that morning, just for this one performance. Something he did on a daily basis for 30 years!
They did that all the time. Those guys were veteran studio musicians, they had to whip up arrangemetns on the fly back in the 60's, because you basically had one afternoon to knock out a single, and maybe a week, if even that, to do a whoel album (mind you, back then albums were less than 30 minutes long). You had to be able to sightread to get those kind of gigs. Given the popularity of Axel F, its likely they alreayd had an arrangement at hand, because I could see that being the kind of thing they'd go out and play when doing concerts, they just had to drop out the parts that Stafford himself was playing. So this was nothing new to them. If you want to see something REALLY impressive, looking up the Tonight Show Brass playing True Gravity and Kind Of Bird with the Allman Brothers Band. It was two different appearances, one in 1990, the other in 1991. But that'll knock your socks off, as the Tonight Show guys had probably never heard either number before the day of taping, and again, the charts were probably prepared ahead of time, stuck in front of them, and they just sightread the hell out of it, knock out a couple takes in rehearsal, and then you're ready to rock n roll.
I have a red one. It plays and feels great. The synth unit didn't track this good. I put it in storage and a tornado hit it. I only ever cared about the guitar anyway.
Actor David Koechner is from Tipton, Mo. Jim Stafford is not "from" Branson, Mo., but, i think he lived and/or lives, there, at one time or an other and my former Boss, "Glen", is from a Town, near Boss, Mo. and, i am lost, but, i love Bacon and, please, enjoy your Bacon, Kevin Cline. Well, i tried.
Another top guitarist that mixes humour with music, to be able to play like he does taken talent,devotion and passion! Frank zappa asked the question.. Does humour belong in music? Of course it does! But frank would be the first to tell you .. He took both VERY SERIOUSLY!!! IF you asked him Stafford if he plays guitar just for fun... I'd be surprised if he didn't turn deadly serious on you.
I forget who it was who told me he interviewed drummer Mickey Hart from the Grateful Dead once. At one point, the guy asked Mickey "What's your favourite drummer joke?". Mickey, very deadly seriously responds, "There's nothing funny about drumming". The guy said Mickey was definitely NOT joking.
This shows just how bad the tracking was on this unit, probably the worst ever. These were totally unforgiving. any tiny glitch in the player's hands would be blurted out at full volume as these didn't have much in the way of dynamic range. The guitar itself was not at all bad & I play one to this day, only w/ a new synth pickup thru a new unit.
@gdwest999 Absolutely; I still use my GR30--even this past weekend. The samples are no longer amazing like they were in 1998, but they still hold their own in a bar. As you said, the lag is abysmal, so for timekeeping I'll reduce the guitar volume a bit and use the mixed tones. The piano is still discernible but no longer obviously late. Great fun to see the "thirstier" patrons peering through the gloom to find the keyboardist. I just noticed your comment is 4y old. Oh well *submit anyway*
Amazing, made me subscribe. You need to play to understand the synthesizer..... It's the whole band he was just playing. I tried the floor version one time, don't remember the wattage but it made the hair on your arms stand up when you were at the keyboard. Kinda like a alien pipe organ.,..LOL ! I had no idea until I came across this there was a guitar version of one. Amazing talent .
Jim Stafford is a great guitarist but I'm so glad guitar synths never became a big thing. Latency is not good here. The band's having a hard time syncing up.
I think someone like Rob O'Reilly could really change the game for guitar synthesizers; his MIDI guitar controller doesn't even use pitch detection at all to determine the MIDI notes, but rather it calculates where your fingers are pressing on the fretboard to determine the MIDI notes... even before you start strumming the strings! And you know what makes it even better? It is actually a real guitar as well; it's not just another one of these "guitar-shaped MIDI controllers that are not actually guitars". So it can be amplified and played just like any other guitar. You can expect to pay something like 3000 dollars for it though :((
Awesome singer and guitarist
He has Always been a great artist!
Jim bought the Roland G-700 synthesizer and G-707 guitar from me at Arnold & Morgan Music Company in Garland, Texas! A way fun day, as you can imagine.
Lee Sebel ayyyye! shoutout to garland
wow!
He was on his way, from Branson, to Los Angeles, i bet, or, on his way, back, as he might have shattered his first purchase, on the Tonight Show Stage and 40,000 shards flew out. That's too many, i know, but, he shard that Crowd, to hell! Yippy kiyyay......et ceteraaaaa.
Them early synth guitars are near impossible to play the latency is insane he did incredibly well
Yeah. He handled it very well. You had to be ahead of the beat, but do it consistently and you had to not pay attention to the backing band, or you'd fall behind.
One of our best entertainers!
A superb guitarist.
This was one of the coolest toys when it came out. It might seem odd to see Jim Stafford playing one but he was always a great entertainer and did a great job with it!
I'd never seen Jim Stafford play anything but acoustic guitars. That was pretty cool.
He plays banjo , organ, harmonica, fiddle, piano and he’s self taught.
Wow. I was just telling a friend I remembered some country dude going on Carson and playing on, and this clip was up here!
I saw him at an outdoor show in San Diego in 1983. Just him on the stage and he did put on a great show.
Further proof that Jim Stafford is Pure Genius!
I remember when this originally aired, when I was still a young teenager, but it was one of those rare occasions when I missed it and had to hear my dad tell me how cool it was.
So awesome to be able to finally see it over thirty years later.
Your facial expressions while playing are priceless :D Excellent performance :)
Never see any one play one today? Just the fad back then I guess? He is vary talented and able to adapt to the times. Long live Jim Stafford..great post.
Jim pulled it off great... despite the technological issues he had to overcome with that mid 80's Roland guitar synth setup. Yes, I can attest to the G-707's tracking and latency issue... the analog to digital technology hadn't really been perfected in that 24 pin hexaphonic system.. it was like having to relearn how to play an entirely new instrument. ..at least as far as playing technique and the approach.
They were so unforgiving. You had to play so precisely - and the timing was still off.
Cela valait une fortune, le design était très séduisant mais finalement c'était une escroquerie car c'était injouable !!!
LOVE JIM'S TALENT AND CONFIDENCE
Astounding he had the balls to attempt this on late night prime time. This is actually much harder than you think. The newest gear is much easier.
I played one of these for a little bit of time when they came out. It was in a music store and I didn't buy it because it was freakin' expensive.
I'm sure Johnny wasn't really impressed, and most weren't, but I have to give Stafford props for even attempting this on late night TV and trying to make it entertaining for average people.
Anyway, check out other vids to realize that Stafford is actually a good musician. He presented himself a certain way to develop a career. Nothing wrong with that, and he did a good job, as he was consistently entertaining every time I saw him on TV when I was a "young lad". Good for you, man!
*****
Paul Battis below mentions the Roland 707 which is a drum machine, he meant to say Roland G-707, which is the guitar synth. Over time the Roland models evolved and the tracking speed got much better.
The sloppiness you hear from Stafford in this vid is not really him as a player, as this guitar was hard to play clean by even good players. There were a few other companies trying to do that at that time as well, and their products were even worse.
Nowadays tracking is not a big deal, though I've personally not had a chance to play those myself.
You would not want to get an old G-707 setup today, as current Roland setups are way better.
That odd angle brace at the top of the guitar was to keep the whole thing stiff and rigid, which is why with later setups as add-ons for existing guitar bodies, people liked to use something solid and stiff like Les Paul bodies or Paul Reed Smith.
***** The frets are fine. The problem was getting the string vibration through the pickup through the input of the synth fast enough. Much longer than today's setups. I don't know what would happen if you plugged the guitar into a new Roland synth. It would either be faster or would not be compatible at all.
The problem is that you hit the string and you want to hear a quick response so that you have a good feel and timing. If you listen to Stafford on a regular guitar you hear what a great player he is. In this Roland vid you can hear timing and control problems. That's why I said he had a lot of balls attempting this in public. I'd be scared to do it!
Ah you must be referring to latency and possibly signal strength from the strings. Yeah, back then MIDI was controlled through a guitar like this using all analog meaning voltage readings of either -15 volts to 0 volts or 0 volts to 15 volts. So between the two Im sure it was problematic especially if youre getting a delay from the house PA when not using monitors. I thought this dude was screwing up a lot for a live performance but when you factor in these things I highly doubt anyone could have done it better.
Excellent musician!
yep, incredible that he changed to all those patches on the run...
A very underrated guitarist.
He’s a great guitarist that inspired me
I am so surprised to be seeing Jim play one of these guitars... the only one I had seen till now was one that David Sterry of Real Life ("Send Me An Angel") played. How great to be seeing Jim spreading his wings and doing something so different. He really is a great musician.
Most people didn't use the G-707 guitar, because, well, it looks ridiculous. Roland's G-505, G-202, G-303, and G-808 were all compatible with the GR-700, and Roland licensed the synth interface to a number of other companies who built compatible instruments. When they were in GTR, Steve Hackett had a Schecter Strat style guitar with the guitar synth electronics and Steve Howe had a Les Paul that Gibson built for him (Gibson also offered a synth compatible Explorer, but I never saw anyone playing one). Henry Kaiser had a Modulus Graphite guitar, Al Di Meola had a PRS, and John McLaughlin a Pedulla, all of them using them with the Synclavier. John Abercrombie had a Ibanez (Steve Howe had one of those too, but he said he didn't like it, and it was stolen a couple months after he got it). David Gilmour had a couple different Strats with the synth interface, though I only remember seeing him playing them twice (once being the Guitar Greats concert MTV aired at the end of 1984, the other being when he played with Bryan Ferry at Live Aid and the synth guitar died during the first song and he had to swap guitars while one of the other guitarists in Ferry's band played a solo).
Wow... I remember we played Axle F for our 8th grade band concert! Obviously had nothing like this...
Pretty cool thanks for the upload!
I still have that guitar with the unit and a midi controller I think it was almost 3 grand back in 85 or 86. You can just feel the struggle with that thing tracking the right note. That is the hardest thing about that is you have to be so accurate or it will just glitch Wow. Feelin the old now Ouch
I have a GR50 and newer stuff.
Props to you Jim......great job with the holiest of holy GR700. I own one too, as well as a Roland GR500 and SPV355 pitch to voltage (which I worship).
Didn't know there was such an instrument. Didn't know Stafford was such a talented guitar player.
Excellent use of the synthesizer. I have an Ibanez X-ing IMG2010 (1986 model). Similar in control and appearance, except with out the bar over the neck. Jim's a funny guy and an excellent picker. Thanks for sharing.
John Abercrombie had one of those that he used with his GR-700, and I remember reading about a guitarist in New Orleans, can't remember his name now, who used the Ibanez MIDI rig to do a "one man band" thing, where he triggered full band arrangements from his guitar. Steve Howe had one too, but he said he didn't like it, and that it was stolen after he only had it for a few months (he said that the thief stole the guitar, but not the rack unit, saying "There's some silly person out there who doesn't have the rack unit that goes with the guitar").
Love it ! ♡
He is in his own little world!
Sitting on them sacks of seeds.lol
@@jimmychanbers2424 🤣🤣🤣
Stafford was One of a kind
He’s a great guitarist who inspired me so much
I SAW HIM IN BRANSON IN 1993 IT WAS A GREAT SHOW
Nancy Davis we used to go to Branson between 1997 and prob 2000, stayed at Lodge of the Ozarks right across from Jim Stafford's place. Always wanted to go bc the brochure made it sound awesome. We never went :(
He’s a great guitarist that inspired me so much
this is amazing
Killin it!!
That's so cool 😎 😍 😄
If you would read the description, it clearly says it's the Tonight Show...these are just clips from Jim on past shows...the ad at the end is for his show in Branson. Thanks...
He was never listed as one of the greatest guitarists. But . I would put this man against any rock guitarist out there anywhere and anytime
Jim Stafford is the greatest always loved his music as crazy as some of it was, one of my personal favorites is swamp witch, Google that check it out
Just watched swamp witch this morning, when I got home after work! I remember hearing it when I was young. I'm 58, and still remember!
Jim also did The Wildwood Weed played to the tune of the Wildwood 🌺 flower
I was born in 98 but that sounds so awesome but I wish I could see what it was like when it originally aired
I love Jim because he is as talented as anyone..but he never went for the quick buck or did ANYTHING people expected him to do..he just did what he wanted
sounds pretty awesome
so awsome
At the risk of sounding like Uncle Rico..., God - I miss the '80s!
ME TOO!!!!!!!
@Iam Amc
@Lord Of The World, Precisely! 👍
I want one!!
He’s a great guitarist that inspired me
Guitar players seem to do guitar faces no matter what they have in their hands.
Violet Deliriums That’s part of the fun of it!
Absolutely, you should see my face when my dick is in my hand, my wife's breast, Chinese chop sticks, a weed whacker, it's the same face no matter what's in my hands.
@@DetVen LMAO 😁😂🤣
Yeah we guitar players call that the *"Oh shit I hope they don't notice I just fucked that part up"* face.
Same thing with Banjo player's making Banjo player faces! 🤣 I know, I'm one!
Super badass
i still have that guitar and have not change from that guitar
The G707 was a pretty amazing piece of technology for its time.
So fun!
He is a very good musician. Funny too
Thanks for the insight.
Very interesting clip. Thanks for sharing.
Along the same lines, RUclips used to have a clip of Donny Osmond playing a pretty wicked synthesizer solo on a modular Moog. I can't find it. Maybe someone else can find a link or repost it.
Do you mean this?
ruclips.net/video/iXcj8dFOd1E/видео.html
Very good..
Very Cool
Roland GR-700 Guitar Synthesizer & Roland G-707 Guitar Synthesizer Controller.
Took balls to pull that off live. He came close to disaster a cpl times but somehow made it work.
LOVE IT
That's pretty sweet.
2:25 He making that stank face 🤣👌
I wonder why bands don't use them and add those cool sounds:) This guy is amazing,I never really knew of him,only his name.
The Roland G-707... I remember this show...
Only Jim would try this.
i freaking want that guitar!
I love midi guitars
"Cool.....totally!"
COOL 👍🏻‼️
legendary
Cool!!
Wow. I am a guitar synth player and what Jim played is hard enough on my modern stuff.
The 707 was horrible to play, terrible sounds and lots of latency. The Latency is so bad that when I played one back in 1990 some of the notes are still to trigger! Jim was very brave to play it live!
So Jim...
Did you debut that guitar on Carson so you could pay for it?
None matter either way, WILD DUDE, just WILD.
THANKS FOR THE MEMORIES!!!+!
The famous Roland "Dalek's Handbag".
So Johnny did a show from Brandon Mo as the header says?
❤❤❤❤
This is so cool! It's actually Axel F
How neat is that?
Lost, here, is how the great Tommy Newsom whipped up a band arrangement to accompany Jim, likely that morning, just for this one performance. Something he did on a daily basis for 30 years!
They did that all the time. Those guys were veteran studio musicians, they had to whip up arrangemetns on the fly back in the 60's, because you basically had one afternoon to knock out a single, and maybe a week, if even that, to do a whoel album (mind you, back then albums were less than 30 minutes long). You had to be able to sightread to get those kind of gigs. Given the popularity of Axel F, its likely they alreayd had an arrangement at hand, because I could see that being the kind of thing they'd go out and play when doing concerts, they just had to drop out the parts that Stafford himself was playing. So this was nothing new to them.
If you want to see something REALLY impressive, looking up the Tonight Show Brass playing True Gravity and Kind Of Bird with the Allman Brothers Band. It was two different appearances, one in 1990, the other in 1991. But that'll knock your socks off, as the Tonight Show guys had probably never heard either number before the day of taping, and again, the charts were probably prepared ahead of time, stuck in front of them, and they just sightread the hell out of it, knock out a couple takes in rehearsal, and then you're ready to rock n roll.
it would be great if these type of guitars be used on heavy metal bands(sorry for bad english)
A metal band named "Orgy" used this very guitar in thier music video "Stitches"
A great example of what the Roland 707 is capable of.
When did Carson move to Branson?
I think it was after his house slid off the cliff and into the ocean. He was like, "You know what? Screw this. I'm outta' here." =)
Awwww man at 1:50 you really start getting into that shit.
Jim? Or us?
Interesting sounds! Whatever happened to this guitar?
❤
2:35 = shred face
I don't play any instrument of any kind, but I want whatever this guy has.
I have a red one. It plays and feels great. The synth unit didn't track this good. I put it in storage and a tornado hit it. I only ever cared about the guitar anyway.
He’s a great guitarist that inspired me
didn't glenn tipton have one of those like 20 years ago?
delt alifalafel This performance was like 30 years ago.
Actor David Koechner is from Tipton, Mo. Jim Stafford is not "from" Branson, Mo., but, i think he lived and/or lives, there, at one time or an other and my former Boss, "Glen", is from a Town, near Boss, Mo. and, i am lost, but, i love Bacon and, please, enjoy your Bacon, Kevin Cline. Well, i tried.
Another top guitarist that mixes humour with music, to be able to play like he does taken talent,devotion and passion! Frank zappa asked the question.. Does humour belong in music? Of course it does! But frank would be the first to tell you .. He took both VERY SERIOUSLY!!! IF you asked him Stafford if he plays guitar just for fun... I'd be surprised if he didn't turn deadly serious on you.
You are comparing Jim Stafford and Frank Zappa ? I guess they both have feet.
I forget who it was who told me he interviewed drummer Mickey Hart from the Grateful Dead once. At one point, the guy asked Mickey "What's your favourite drummer joke?". Mickey, very deadly seriously responds, "There's nothing funny about drumming". The guy said Mickey was definitely NOT joking.
@pazzensutra The osmonds clip probably was. It used to be on RUclips. Oh, our transient history!
I really want one! LOL
This shows just how bad the tracking was on this unit, probably the worst ever. These were totally unforgiving. any tiny glitch in the player's hands would be blurted out at full volume as these didn't have much in the way of dynamic range. The guitar itself was not at all bad & I play one to this day, only w/ a new synth pickup thru a new unit.
Kept waiting to hear crazy frog.
Glad i wasnt around in the 80s :)
Wow
I do have this tipe of guitar the Roland G707
@gdwest999
Absolutely; I still use my GR30--even this past weekend. The samples are no longer amazing like they were in 1998, but they still hold their own in a bar. As you said, the lag is abysmal, so for timekeeping I'll reduce the guitar volume a bit and use the mixed tones. The piano is still discernible but no longer obviously late. Great fun to see the "thirstier" patrons peering through the gloom to find the keyboardist.
I just noticed your comment is 4y old. Oh well *submit anyway*
Amazing, made me subscribe. You need to play to understand the synthesizer..... It's the whole band he was just playing. I tried the floor version one time, don't remember the wattage but it made the hair on your arms stand up when you were at the keyboard. Kinda like a alien pipe organ.,..LOL ! I had no idea until I came across this there was a guitar version of one. Amazing talent .
1:24 YOU JUST SLAUGHTERED THE SONG AT THIS POINT. THIS GUITAR HAD ANOTHER INTENT THAN PLAYING THIS STUFF WITH. NO OFFENSE.
From his short lived days as a Roland rep
+alphadogstudio short lived?
anybody who actually just found this video just like me
that duck sound is all these days music all about
he messes up at 1:28 and you can see the frustration in his face haha
its that guitar, not easy to play....latency
Title is wrong this is not in Branson Mo.
Jim Stafford is a great guitarist but I'm so glad guitar synths never became a big thing. Latency is not good here. The band's having a hard time syncing up.
I think someone like Rob O'Reilly could really change the game for guitar synthesizers; his MIDI guitar controller doesn't even use pitch detection at all to determine the MIDI notes, but rather it calculates where your fingers are pressing on the fretboard to determine the MIDI notes... even before you start strumming the strings! And you know what makes it even better? It is actually a real guitar as well; it's not just another one of these "guitar-shaped MIDI controllers that are not actually guitars". So it can be amplified and played just like any other guitar. You can expect to pay something like 3000 dollars for it though :((
Fir those who dont know.. this is WAY tougher than it looks.
Do they still make this Guitar? Is it on the market?
Thanks!