John Fahey - On the Sunny Side of the Ocean

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
  • 78 Hamburg

Комментарии • 240

  • @karenturner9423
    @karenturner9423 6 лет назад +230

    See the strip of wood behind his chair? Reminds me of when he came to Bellingham, WA to play at Western Washington State College (now WWU) in '72 or '73. Two bandmates & I were asked by the Student A&E director to play some acoustic 'warm-up' tunes if John felt like he wanted to loosen up backstage for a longer period. 'Loosening up' for John was simply checking the tuning on his guitar and applying Jack Daniels liberally to get that mellow effect. We got to share the bottle with him and then it was "Yeah, let's do it". The stage in the Viking Union hall was a 4' riser against the back wall and curtain and John was set up with a mike and chair. Since we'd been backstage with him, we had great views from immediate stage right. Part way through his set, he was really in to one of his long compositions and we could see that his chair was slowly 'walking' back toward the wall. He got right to the edge of the riser and the back legs dropped into the void behind. Why we didn't react quicker is still unclear to me (Jack Daniels Syndrome?) but we got him upright and way forward on the stage and he carried on as if nothing untoward had happened. He may have struggled with some demons in life, but what wonderful music he created. Just glad I got to share a little time with him.

    • @davidseabury2481
      @davidseabury2481 4 года назад +8

      Wow. Amazing story.

    • @useyourimaginasean
      @useyourimaginasean 4 года назад +7

      Lovely story, thank you for sharing. Hope you're enjoying a peaceful existence from wherever you see this.

    • @PeterPan-nh7yx
      @PeterPan-nh7yx Год назад +2

      @Karen Turner
      Well i have to admit: I'm just a jealous guy.
      How often can you find heartwarming stories like this in the RUclips comments section?

    • @stephencindrich6787
      @stephencindrich6787 Год назад +1

      Very cool.

    • @Orcastruck
      @Orcastruck 10 месяцев назад +2

      Jack danels on the guitar strings or drinking it?

  • @slubberde
    @slubberde 13 лет назад +49

    The thing about Fahey's music is that he takes you somewhere you have never been before when he plays. His guitar is the "vehicle" and the "place" is somewhere in your subconscious mind. He opens the door of consciousness by the creation of Alpha waves when he plays. Fahey understood music and its purpose better than anyone who ever picked up a guitar; that is why he is so special...

  • @MarkSeibold
    @MarkSeibold 10 лет назад +83

    @John White- I was driving in my car in I think late 1998 or early 1999, when a local radio station in my home town of Portland OR, announced that John Fahey would play for free this afternoon in the Eastside Music Millennium Record Store where I had bought many recordings over the years. I raced there to find people standing out the front door to get in. I politely wedged my way through the crowd and walked to the upstairs. The place was jam-packed as I looked down to the lower level, a grungy street bum looking guy moseyed in the front door. He was disheveled and wore a tee-shirt with stains and holes all over it and carrying a well worn guitar case. It was Fahey in his finest form. He sat down and looked upstairs to us, asking if someone had a spark plug or a screwdriver or a wrench. An employee in the store tossed down a screwdriver, I think it was. Fahey picked it up off the floor and began scratching the guitar strings in an unstructured ambient form for maybe 10 minutes. Then he set the screwdriver down and began to play Oh Come All Ye Faithful in the finest classical traditional playing that I have ever witnessed live. There were people in the crowd literally in tears. He played a few more of his favorite compositions for maybe a half hour, then everyone lined up to buy his new CD, City of Refuge and he autographed an 8 X 10 glossy portrait of himself with sunglasses to go with the purchase, as I'm sure you've all seen it on that CD inside liner notes and other online sites. I had to shake his hand and tell him how honored I was to meet him and watch him play for my first time, [little did I know then it would be my last] and I asked him what he thought of recording Leo Kottke. I am still mesmerized today 16 years later as I recount this experience on that cool grey rainy day there. I accidentally saved a stack of old New York Times in my home, packing up to recycle one day in early 2001, and accidentally paged across the obituary of John Fahey, not knowing that he passed away several months earlier that year in a Salem Oregon hospital near my home town of Portland Oregon. Still today, as I read this obituary, I weep at the raw humanity of this mans truth. Here is that obituary, that I still have the copy of today with the small photo of Fahey at the top, (this is the NY Times electronic archive version without photo). > ttp://www.nytimes.com/2001/02/25/nyregion/john-fahey-61-guitarist-and-an-iconoclast-is-dead.html

    • @teethdontgrind
      @teethdontgrind 10 лет назад +7

      awesome story. thanks for sharing.

    • @shatchett0
      @shatchett0 9 лет назад +1

      teethdontgrind
      Yea, tell it again.

    • @chrisp8259
      @chrisp8259 6 лет назад +2

      I'm sure many people will dismiss it,but that you for sharing this story

    • @micahmadore
      @micahmadore 6 лет назад

      Thank you

    • @zorbanongreco
      @zorbanongreco 5 лет назад +1

      Mark Semibold : thanks for great story about this inspirational guitarist😀.Can you please tell us what he said about Leo Kottke !??🐂💨💨💨

  • @acebodine
    @acebodine 12 лет назад +6

    Seeing people try to compare Fahey and Kottke here reminds me that I once (a long time ago) heard John Fahey say in an interview, "I've just written a new song. I can't play it, but Kottke can."

  • @terrypussypower
    @terrypussypower 10 лет назад +39

    Fahey can make grown men cry.

  • @kelseys5807
    @kelseys5807 3 года назад +6

    John Fahey taught me the power of open strings.

    • @dekin819
      @dekin819 7 месяцев назад +1

      I'm pretty sure Al Wilson taught him

  • @scanamantitis
    @scanamantitis 5 лет назад +29

    Sometimes I’m on the dark side of the moon and other times I’m on the sunny side of the ocean

  • @scaredypicker
    @scaredypicker 7 лет назад +12

    I don't know how, but Fahey's playing always makes me feel really emotional. Sublime.

  • @dullarddom
    @dullarddom 3 года назад +5

    The main thing is the beauty of the music. That said I've been playing guitar twenty years and it blows my mind how still his left hand looks compared to the sound he gets. Its a primitive american orchestra in his right hand and that's what I wish I knew when I picked up guitar. You can wank the fretboard all day with your left hand and it wont mean anything if your right isn't paying perfect precision.

  • @jrh11254
    @jrh11254 4 года назад +8

    In 1973 one Houston’s rock stations would play Peter Lang’s, “Future Shot at the Rainbow.” I quickly bought the LP that featured that song (it was on Takoma Records). Later I bought Takoma’s, “Lang, Fahey, and Kottke,” with 4 songs by each artist. I bought it because of Lang but found myself only listening to Mr Fahey’s - they just seemed to have more gravity and seriousness. I sought out many of his records. Years later - I think in ‘86 - I got to see him at Anderson Fair. Strange to see his hulking presence. Fair owner, Tim Leatherwood, would bring out pitcher after pitcher of what looked to be Coca Cola. I’m sure now it was more likely bourbon and coke. The man obviously needed lots of fuel to keep going - whatever it was. What a thrill - and honor - to see him. Rest his soul.

  • @MrPlatypus70
    @MrPlatypus70 15 лет назад +13

    John Fahey is the first master of the solo acoustic guitar. He took blues based riffs and his own ideas and strung then together into instrumental pieces that were the basis for Kottke and evryone else to follow. This piece is one of his best and the peferformace is outstanding. Thanks for posting!!

  • @Bagster26
    @Bagster26 4 года назад +13

    Overwhelmingly, heartbreakingly beautiful. Thank you, John.

  • @JDBoelter
    @JDBoelter 10 лет назад +27

    I got hold of the tablature for this song and discovered that the open tuning in "G" actually makes this fairly simple to play. But I never played it this well, or with this amount of soul. Man, what a composer and performer he was!

    • @jeremylavine
      @jeremylavine 9 лет назад +18

      You can buy a booklet with the "official" tabs. However, these match the earliest recordings from the '50s-'60s, and not the significantly modified (and, in my opinion, improved) versions shown in these videos of Fahey's '78 Hamburg performance. The fingering with the left hand is not too challenging with the open chord tuning, as you say, however the plucking with the right hand is tricky and getting the timing and intensity of the plucking just right really makes all the difference, in my opinion.

    • @JDBoelter
      @JDBoelter 9 лет назад +5

      Absolutely true, and well said.

  • @alfredpeteneuttigieg3548
    @alfredpeteneuttigieg3548 8 лет назад +32

    every time i listen to this alien being emit his note hoard, i become engorged with currents upon currents of heavy feeling.Not a sadness really. Not bleakness. Not emptiness. More alike some odd fullness, or completeness, to which i feel something of a stranger to myself. Attaining such fullness, i know the feeling of completion and totality, at which moment i am certain beyond the bounds of thought, that now, that at this time i am freed of some NEED to live, rather, it is a lovely time, as lovely as those notes, to die. .. to die with beauty and without regret of a thing missed. rip john 2001

  • @majorhoop
    @majorhoop 12 лет назад +12

    Fahey opened the door. Kottke is deeply soulful and faster. For me, when I listen to Fahey deeper emotional tones (if you will) are reached. Kottke is great. Fahey is in another zone. Both are in that league of players where "better" is an inoperative word.

    • @mrskinszszs
      @mrskinszszs 3 года назад +8

      Kottke is too busy for me, almost like he's showing off. Fahey has a better sense of composition and restraint to my ears. Very melodic and tasteful.

    • @zatoichimasseur6767
      @zatoichimasseur6767 2 года назад +2

      Fahey and Basho are light-years above and beyond kotke..

    • @zvonimirtosic6171
      @zvonimirtosic6171 5 месяцев назад +1

      Knock it off. All those players have completely different style and different stories to tell.

  • @Kingdagmarius
    @Kingdagmarius 14 лет назад +2

    this is another world created by mister john fahey

  • @ruthdixon7807
    @ruthdixon7807 Год назад +2

    fahey was a cult figure with a style as idiosyncratic as it was complex. this track is beautiful and impressionistic yet slightly bluesy and dissonant. it displays the man's technical genius and his weird and wonderful musical vision.

  • @NickJones55
    @NickJones55 17 лет назад +2

    IMO, Fahey was THE MAN when it came to fingerpicking acoustic guitar (sorry, Leo). I was graced to have seen him live at a pub in Cambridge, MA in the mid-80's. He played off the stage; I was almost close enough to touch him. He seemed to be, um, a little 'toasted' at the time, but you couldn't have told by his performance that night. One of the best live music experiences of my life.

  • @whosiskid
    @whosiskid 13 лет назад +3

    I had tickets to see him play only 4 or 5 months before he died. It was heart breaking. He was literally dying but had to tour because he didn't have health insurance. On the whole Fahey versus Kottke, I prefer Fahey, though I love both. Fahey is more of an innovator and can play more musically complex stuff (even if Kottke may have a better picking hand). But I love Kottke's personality onstage. They've both great.

  • @gbossaboy
    @gbossaboy 3 года назад +3

    John was a gift!

  • @francesfree
    @francesfree 15 лет назад +5

    Fahey is a new discovery for me. I find the energy and power of his music quite amazing.
    Wish there was someone comparable playing his stuff who would tour (the UK) - maybe there is...

  • @alcoholya
    @alcoholya 9 лет назад +41

    this is my favorite Fahey tune, and I'm going to die trying to play it on guitar half as good as him.

    • @erricomalatesta8741
      @erricomalatesta8741 9 лет назад +7

      Machete Moonlight yeah me too. and there's a lot to choose from. i love the beautiful melancholy at 2.32. so moving.

    • @missbknodel
      @missbknodel 6 лет назад +3

      Goals. Gotta have 'em. 🙌🏼

    • @nonzerosum8943
      @nonzerosum8943 2 года назад

      @@erricomalatesta8741 E. Malatesta
      I 1st heard him play after buying an LP in 60's .The name of album was "Blind Joe Death " a alter ego Fahey invention. I was playing some guitar then and with no instruction I figured out an open tuning, on a tuning if you're not familiar with..is you can have a pleasant consonant sound without fingering and you just "noodle" around for notes in that key, Most Occidental music is based on a three chord system called in Roman numerals I IV V..quite easy when you catch on so ie...key G (I chord) C = IV. & D,-D7 = V chord..it's based on starting chord. With open tuning all you need to do Is as Fahey does is barre 5th fret =IV. & 7th fret = V. ( A "barre is placing left index finger across all strings or ½ barre ) in practically EVERY piece Fahey does he uses open or alternate tuning and just uses that simple technique. It actually is derived from "old school blues " like Robert Johnson and Son House..nothing more..IMHO Fahey is no genius he just has put on this 60's hippie oddball character and stretches out these long improvised noodling pieces. If anyone who understands basic old blues will tell you, he's just no genius.

    • @danycorona6788
      @danycorona6788 2 года назад +4

      @@nonzerosum8943 I think you are missing the point if you judge Fahey’s music in those terms, for me it’s about what his playing makes you feel and where it takes you. A lot of people can play as good or better than him and create more theoretically complex/innovative music but not many can take you into deep places with them like Fahey does.

  • @64samm
    @64samm 14 лет назад +10

    I think one of the most beautiful fingerpicking style guitar songs i've heard so far... It really gets some kind of extra charisma when fahey plays it.

  • @CultureFusionSite
    @CultureFusionSite 12 лет назад +2

    I could listen to Fahey for hours: and have.

  • @slzckboy
    @slzckboy 3 года назад +3

    privileged to witness that

  • @yurykubrin
    @yurykubrin 5 месяцев назад

    Это что то !!! Слушаю и восхищаюсь !!!?

  • @jrw344
    @jrw344 11 лет назад +2

    Feel blessed to have been to a half- dozen of his concerts during my years in Seattle. From the first one at the UofW in '68, to the last one at a Ballard club just a few years before his death.

  • @LorettaCarrillo
    @LorettaCarrillo 9 дней назад

    Here we are in the era of artificial intelligence and it could never match the beauty and soul of John Fahey’s music. Couldn’t touch him.❤

  • @freak49
    @freak49 13 лет назад +1

    John Fahey was one of my earliest influences on guitar. I saw him.in Ohio at a local club in the 90s. I thought this would be the only time I would get to see him. He showed up onstage totally shitfaced, gave the sound man endless grief, and took a piss break in the middle of the show for about a half hour. Me and my friend left after about an hour.

  • @glasgowdmon
    @glasgowdmon 14 лет назад +6

    one of my favourite acoustic pieces of all time, so moving

  • @jrw344
    @jrw344 15 лет назад +1

    I felt so fortunate to see him in concert so many times, during my 40 years in Seattle. Saw him at Meany @ U.W., Seattle concert theater (long gone), Blue Moon, the HUB @ U.W., & Backstage (long gone), as well as MOHAI at Montlake. Was introduced to his music by a friend in our '67 Ravenna boarding house, when he played one of the early Takoma albums on his little Philco record player. Though scratchy, the sound mesmerized me...

  • @TheBanjopilot
    @TheBanjopilot 8 лет назад +12

    Four decades of fingerpicking guitar and scrugg's banjo and feel like a kid again, jazzed hearing some of best acoustic music as is this piece. I am sure John refined this piece as time went on, whatever age it began. I believe, easily, he did this as a teenager. I too have a couple of pieces like that and now, even some of the best players at workshops will stop and wonder. You had hours of the day to be with your strings because you just had to. Returning to the guitar more now after ten years of scrugg's hard work [and it is hard guy,s but worth it if you want it] it really is a new world to have videos available lightning fast, ten songs in less than an hour. To hear these works of so many players; M J Hurt, Rev Gary Davis, Taj Mahal etc. took months, years or not at all by mail, or hanging with jam joints. I have learned Poor Boy' early John just in the last two months, listening and watching his chord forms in open D. Music is not sport. It is art. Now, to be able to gain, borrow [someone ask's where that come from tell 'em or it's stealin'}. If I can maintain a" jazzed kid again" outlook the next ten years I'be quite satisfied, long comment, just sayin'...

    • @elenareed2103
      @elenareed2103 8 лет назад +1

      I have been having such a great time listening for hours online, RUclips in particular, so easy to just follow a musical thread and end up in new listening spaces. And here is the inimitable John Fahey from decades ago! Terrific. :>)

  • @MP60
    @MP60 16 лет назад +1

    I heard "Sunflower River Blues" on the radio late one night many years ago and went and ordered the album Peter Lang John Fahey & Leo Kottke the very next day. This has since becme my favourite piece from that outstanding album. I saw Kottke in Sydney a few years ago - absolute genius.

  • @cunninglinguist28
    @cunninglinguist28 9 лет назад +9

    It's a Martin D-35. You can tell it's a D-35 and not a D-28 because the fingerboard's bound in white. If he flipped it around you'd see that gorgeous three-piece rosewood back.

  • @TheIkaraCult
    @TheIkaraCult 14 лет назад +4

    this was the one that won me over, none of us can review how amazing this is.

  • @ficheye00
    @ficheye00 5 лет назад +6

    What is he doing with his head? One of the best guitar players ever. So sorry he's gone.

    • @anauticalgate5496
      @anauticalgate5496 3 года назад +5

      working his way through a portal to another dimension

  • @jimwalter6
    @jimwalter6 13 лет назад +1

    I have an interview where Fahey states this is the first song he ever wrote when he was 12 or 13. That's worth keeping in mind while debating the worth of this song and performance.

  • @Raymantico
    @Raymantico 16 лет назад +3

    Fahey elevates my spirit every time, & has for decades...this is poetry

  • @ourbearskins
    @ourbearskins 13 лет назад +1

    this sounds like the kind of songs my dad used to play when i was a kid.

  • @walterneff
    @walterneff  7 лет назад +5

    he wrote this song when he was 15.......self taught.........PRAISE HIM

  • @bloozplyr
    @bloozplyr 14 лет назад +4

    Amazing how everyone's suggestions are different as far as which lps they got/get behind so much they'd pick them to start someone down Fahey's path.
    The two that I'd pick for you to start with would be "America" and "The Legend of Blind Joe Death". The "America" album is truly a masterpiece. If you can get that in vinyl, the booklet inside will keep you occupied for some time as well.

  • @goodtimefolkrock
    @goodtimefolkrock 12 лет назад +1

    Fahey was Kottke's mentor and teacher as well as fellow label mate on Tacoma Records along w/ Michael Hedges ....they all play mostly instrumental, open tuning, ambient guitar music so comparisons are gonna be inevitable but i agree no need to put anyone down ...they are all great in their own way

  • @kingofthedeep
    @kingofthedeep 15 лет назад +2

    Wow. This is brilliant. A little like Kotkke, but easier to "understand". If you were going to buy 2 or 3 of his albums, which ones would be a place to start.
    Great,great stuff. I want to hear more. Videos don't do justice, albums are what I need. People at one time used to listen to them, you know what I mean.

  • @irchristo
    @irchristo 14 лет назад +2

    @PaulAndrewsVideos I must agree with you. I have heard many fine guitar players cover him, but Fahey strikes the strings with an authority which no one else duplicates. He wrenches sounds out of the guitar and tears from my eyes.
    Played by others, many of these tunes seem unremarkable. Played by Fahey they make my adrenaline pump and my imagination soar.

  • @adurtube
    @adurtube 9 лет назад +1

    I just discovered John Fahey and man, what a great talent! There's this canadian band the Tea Party, i don't think they're together anymore, that reminds me a lot of Fahey's style...

    • @sweethair2310
      @sweethair2310 8 лет назад

      +adurtube wow someone actually references "the" tea party. Thats like a hot shit sandwich rite there..

    • @adurtube
      @adurtube 8 лет назад

      +sweet hair Haha, yeah it would seem so... But The Tea Party (the band) actually formed back in the late 90's, long before the abomination that is the American movement sprang out of the depths of political hell.

    • @sweethair2310
      @sweethair2310 8 лет назад

      Im sorry bro. But the fuckin Tea Party? All those dudes came out of their moms #2, Strait up worst eyesore of a rock act that I've ever laid eyes on. SO BAD.

  • @Neocelt146
    @Neocelt146 16 лет назад +1

    Now this just is. Unreal. Well done, John. You were the man then, you the man now.

  • @NuG919
    @NuG919 16 лет назад +2

    truly a masterpiece...brilliant

  • @taurtue
    @taurtue 11 лет назад +1

    Didn't know this artist and glad to have discovered him today, he's very inspiring. Wish I could find his disks in popular shops.

  • @mountainfoot
    @mountainfoot 4 месяца назад

    the greatest.

  • @StoyTheOld
    @StoyTheOld 14 лет назад

    Have always loved Kottke , but Fahey takes my mind to different places . Was fortunate to see Fahey at a small Indy club - the Hummingbird . Sat about 6 feet away and had a beer with him on his break . He was touring the country in an old station wagon back then . I think this song was his first original composition . Sure gonna miss him .

  • @brianwhite7345
    @brianwhite7345 3 года назад +1

    Warms my heart. I appreciate you sharing this.

  • @rimbaud1020
    @rimbaud1020 16 лет назад +2

    even his mistakes are better than what is now on the radio

  • @jeeperforlife
    @jeeperforlife 17 лет назад +3

    So sad that hes gone. Thanks for posting

  • @superstarajl
    @superstarajl 11 лет назад +1

    this is so good. i keep coming back to it. as a piece of music, just gorgeous, and really not like too much else out there.

  • @Whoisthiskid1
    @Whoisthiskid1 9 месяцев назад

    Fahey fully locked in right here

  • @russelsheartinacage
    @russelsheartinacage 15 лет назад +4

    definately start from the beginning, The Legend of Blind Joe Death is his first and is brilliant.

  • @malbuff
    @malbuff 11 лет назад +2

    Like another of my favorite guitarists, John Cipollina, Faheny's technique is all about the right hand. Brilliant unorthodox playing, and that doesn't even take into account his rich musical vocabulary and incredible sense of timing.

  • @daviddoyle4516
    @daviddoyle4516 5 лет назад

    Papa John at his best,,,,,I used to see him and talk to him in the flesh at the Ash Grove

  • @captxunderpants
    @captxunderpants 15 лет назад +1

    I don't have a single favorite album, but "Death Chants, Breakdowns and Military Waltzes" and "The Legend of Blind Joe Death" are two good places to start.

  • @dingoswamphead
    @dingoswamphead 15 лет назад +1

    Yes, it was an early Takoma LP with Leo Kottke, Peter Lang and John Fahey, with good stuff by all three. Fahey plays this tune on it and it is profoundly beautiful. You get to wallow in those wonderful descending discords. It is available on Amazon.

  • @GaryHurd
    @GaryHurd 17 лет назад +2

    I sure do miss John. Thanks for the clip. It is good to watch him play even thought there is no comparison to the sound of a session recording.

  • @greese007
    @greese007 7 лет назад +1

    Fahey first mesmerized me 50 years ago, and still does. He gets lost inside his music, and we are along for the journey. As a solo artist, Tash Sultana may be his reincarnation.

  • @crotonrivernet
    @crotonrivernet 12 лет назад +1

    Nice rendition. This is the Fahey tune I most enjoy playing myself. I was lucky enough to see a number of the great fingerstyle artists in person, including John Fahey once, Leo Kottke many times and also Michael Hedges several times. Will always remember seeing Leo and Michael in the same concert come out for an encore and play several tunes together. Now THAT was an interesting cross-pollination of styles. (to be continued...)

  • @ziaFlora
    @ziaFlora 13 лет назад +1

    love him.

  • @wclyne
    @wclyne 5 лет назад +2

    A SYMPHONY FROM A WOODEN BOX.

  • @giorgiopicker
    @giorgiopicker 12 лет назад

    78! the year i learnt this
    saw him a few years later...eeehhh

  • @hgievcm
    @hgievcm 14 лет назад +2

    Fahey is a great reminder that something like guitar playing, or lifestyles, can be approached from infinite directions. Mr Fahey takes me somewhere nobody else does.

  • @bjorntooski
    @bjorntooski 15 лет назад

    John Fahey...guitar god...
    John Fahey...comb-over KING

  • @sanclementekid
    @sanclementekid 14 лет назад

    Love, Devotion, Surrender...

  • @danielwillis8768
    @danielwillis8768 8 лет назад +1

    Priceless! Thanks for sharing!

  • @glasgowdmon
    @glasgowdmon 4 года назад +1

    So, so good.

  • @ericcongdon
    @ericcongdon 13 лет назад

    He's just so into it, its cool to see.

  • @Raven101able
    @Raven101able 9 лет назад +2

    Kottke, Fahey and Lang was a great album

  • @robwarren4425
    @robwarren4425 Год назад

    Fantastic tune.

  • @skinnydoggyz
    @skinnydoggyz 14 лет назад

    i gave both comments a thumbs up

  • @toddolinger38
    @toddolinger38 8 лет назад +2

    LOVE IT

  • @bobgure
    @bobgure 16 лет назад

    I mean isn't RUclips the best? John Fahey, Gary Davis then over to Wes and Barney, B.B and Bonfa!
    Thanks for posting!!

  • @samfrombelgium
    @samfrombelgium 12 лет назад

    one of my favorites :)

  • @cuerpoeperra
    @cuerpoeperra 15 лет назад

    Su armonia me recuerda la del maestro cubano Leo Brouwer........Maravilloso!

  • @iandv1
    @iandv1 15 лет назад

    He was a genious!

  • @charlieleger1
    @charlieleger1 10 лет назад

    john lennon was the best at doing what did, john fahey is the best at doing what he did.

  • @slubberde
    @slubberde 12 лет назад

    Thanks for the response shatchett0. I can remember seeing Suni play 40 years ago
    in Dayton, Oh. I didn't realize until much later that he was a world class artist with 3 Adelphi records to his credit. Fahey referred to his guitar as: " a place he goes to",
    not a thing or an ax etc. I think Suni also found that "place".

  • @OCTOSHED
    @OCTOSHED 10 лет назад +5

    Unbelievable.

    • @OCTOSHED
      @OCTOSHED 10 лет назад

      Every time I see the thumbnail for this I think that it's Donald Sutherland..

    • @alcoholya
      @alcoholya 9 лет назад

      Steven Roberts don't look now.

  • @fabittyfab
    @fabittyfab 15 лет назад

    agree completely.

  • @ethereal-11.11
    @ethereal-11.11 9 лет назад +18

    ....the real deal. How effing Clapton has so many other guitarist's creaming in their jeans is beyond me......

  • @glasgowdmon
    @glasgowdmon 11 лет назад

    Fantastic

  • @cicadagodking
    @cicadagodking 13 лет назад

    @freak49
    That's not the first time I've heard that story about John Fahey - kinda sad, but it's a package deal. Talent and troubles often go hand in hand.

  • @majorhoop
    @majorhoop 15 лет назад

    im guessing most of the commenters here are musicians......when musicians get together and talk about music a lot of goofy stuff gets said.....
    amongst artists in every field, and especially writers, poets are always held in very, very high esteem......for reasons that should be obvious.....

  • @zau6ucb
    @zau6ucb 4 года назад +2

    I have a feeling that perhaps Uelmen's Tristram Theme was inspired by this masterpiece.

    • @done4us
      @done4us 2 года назад

      Not familiar with Uelmen, but this sounds like something that might have influenced Joni Mitchell. Very similar chords and structure

  • @jelnet
    @jelnet 15 лет назад

    Great thanks for all your help on this - will check that album out :-)

  • @crotonrivernet
    @crotonrivernet 12 лет назад

    (...continued) For those commenting that one artist was "better" than another -- John Fahey had an inimitable style, earthy and visceral, which he himself called "American Primitive Guitar". Kottke picked up where Fahey left off, adding a more etherial sound, with what some would argue was a more sophisticated style. Hedges went off-planet completely for a style that was impossible to classify at all. (to be continued...)

  • @slubberde
    @slubberde 12 лет назад

    Yes, but there was a contemporary who picked up where Kottke and Fahey left off; namely, Suni McGrath; whose music I refer to as the" Andres Segovia of the steel string guitar".
    If you are curious about this statement then plz investigate his music and I think that you will agree. Happy listening!

  • @rudineilopesdesouza1899
    @rudineilopesdesouza1899 5 лет назад

    In my country we have a acoustic guittar called Yamandu Costa search in RUclips thanks for share.

  • @guscairns1
    @guscairns1 7 лет назад +2

    I like the way you can't really tell when it starts.

  • @nnnnnie
    @nnnnnie 13 лет назад +2

    I have many of his recordings from the early 70's and this rendition seems very rushed. Much hastier than the earlier version that I listened to for hours on end...
    I miss you, John.

  • @NuG919
    @NuG919 15 лет назад

    volume 6...days have gone by..search for impressions of susan, great tune

  • @deBierce01
    @deBierce01 14 лет назад

    @yanki87 Sorry if I come off as a jerk but it's touchy when we write about dead people.... John Fahey was one of my heroes.

  • @steeping
    @steeping 9 лет назад +11

    fahey claims he wrote this at the age of 14. i wonder if this is revised /improved upon as he progressed as a player. at least i hope it is, otherwise im doomed

    • @jwardbass4452
      @jwardbass4452 5 лет назад +3

      I know your comment is three years old but this song has definitely been revised. Even in 1965 on Transfiguration of Blind Joe Death the song was quite a bit slower and written differently, so imagine what 12 years of prior revision could have done to the arrangement, since Fahey was around 26 when Blind Joe Death was released

    • @sculpt3218
      @sculpt3218 4 года назад

      The version he plays in this video is available in tab-form on ultimateguitar.com. The other, earlier renditions of the song are more difficult.

  • @JesseMathews
    @JesseMathews 15 лет назад

    Simply Epic ! :D

  • @yosukeDVJ
    @yosukeDVJ 15 лет назад

    jack rose from philadelphia pa.