12-bar original
12-bar original
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0rm0a2OnNOk
Great instrumental...and for those of you who've wanted to hear it in full, here's your chance.
Guitars sounds like:
John - Fender Strat through Vox AC-30
George - Fender Strat with Vox Tone Bender and volume pedal through Vox AC-30
Paul - Ric 4001S with compressor through Fender Bassman
There are a couple of pick scrapes in this song, too. Could George/John have been listening to The Who?
Great instrumental...and for those of you who've wanted to hear it in full, here's your chance.
Guitars sounds like:
John - Fender Strat through Vox AC-30
George - Fender Strat with Vox Tone Bender and volume pedal through Vox AC-30
Paul - Ric 4001S with compressor through Fender Bassman
There are a couple of pick scrapes in this song, too. Could George/John have been listening to The Who?
- paologregorio
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Re: 12-bar original
Reminds me more of "Green Onions", or something with a bit of an early Yardbirds feel.
Thanks for posting this one Jake; it was the first time I'd heard it.
Thanks for posting this one Jake; it was the first time I'd heard it.
Re: 12-bar original
In all honesty???? .... that is a VERY weak blues jam.
- deaconblues
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Re: 12-bar original
+1...not up to their usual standard, to put it lightly.brammy wrote:In all honesty???? .... that is a VERY weak blues jam.
- tennis_nick
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Re: 12-bar original
Not exactly A+ material.
Terribly uninteresting outside of the fact that it's the Beatles and slightly rare.
Terribly uninteresting outside of the fact that it's the Beatles and slightly rare.
Re: 12-bar original
Had The Stones, The Yardbirds, The Kinks or even The Who had done their own version of this (in the late '65/'66 era), would it have been better?
- tennis_nick
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Re: 12-bar original
Well, the thing is, if I want to hear a 12 bar blues, I tend to look for actual Blues Bands.JakeK wrote:Had The Stones, The Yardbirds, The Kinks or even The Who had done their own version of this (in the late '65/'66 era), would it have been better?
OR maybe John Mayall and the Blues Breakers
The Beatles are great musicians for sure, but blues artists they were not.
Last edited by tennis_nick on Tue Apr 14, 2009 5:25 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- deaconblues
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Re: 12-bar original
I'm sure The Beatles could pull off a decent blues number - see Yer Blues for one example - blues music isn't rocket science.
However, they were probably blazed out of their minds when they recorded 12-bar.
However, they were probably blazed out of their minds when they recorded 12-bar.
- tennis_nick
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Re: 12-bar original
It's not rocket science, but Yer Blues doesn't exactly nail it either.
It's a pretty rocking number though.
It's a pretty rocking number though.
Re: 12-bar original
That it is. At the Stones' Rock and Roll Circus, Clapton did an amazing solo, better than George did:
The band:
John Lennon - with 1965 Epiphone Casino
Eric Clapton - with 1959 Gibson ES-335
Keith Richards - with 1962 Fender Precision bass (as used on "Sympathy for the Devil" and "Let's Spend the Night Together")
Mitch Mitchell (from Jimi Hendrix)
The band:
John Lennon - with 1965 Epiphone Casino
Eric Clapton - with 1959 Gibson ES-335
Keith Richards - with 1962 Fender Precision bass (as used on "Sympathy for the Devil" and "Let's Spend the Night Together")
Mitch Mitchell (from Jimi Hendrix)
Re: 12-bar original
The 335 that Clapton plays in the RRC vid is his '64 AKA "The Crossroads Guitar" as it was the guitar he recorded "Crossroads" with while with Cream. Same guitar used in Blind Faith and the same guitar he used briefly in The Yardbirds. As for the original posted track; meh.
Wherever you go, there you are
- tennis_nick
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Re: 12-bar original
peewee wrote:The 335 that Clapton plays in the RRC vid is his '64 AKA "The Crossroads Guitar" as it was the guitar he recorded "Crossroads" with while with Cream. Same guitar used in Blind Faith and the same guitar he used briefly in The Yardbirds. As for the original posted track; meh.
It's called the Crossroads guitar because of it's prominence in the Royal ALbert Hall footage, but the album version comes from a concert at Winterland, where old Slowhand was playing a Gibson SG (the fool). (The 335 wasn't in America at the time)
Re: 12-bar original
yup, I think that about sums it up.dpowell wrote:I'm sure The Beatles could pull off a decent blues number - see Yer Blues for one example - blues music isn't rocket science.
However, they were probably blazed out of their minds when they recorded 12-bar.
- paologregorio
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Re: 12-bar original
Their roots in classical, folk, and dance hall were at odds with their more recent exposure to American blues, and it was probably clashing in their heads as they were playing the "12 bar blues". 
Re: 12-bar original
As much as some musicians would have you believe that any old fool could play the blues it is actually a lot harder genre to master than you might think. Just my two cents.
I have been playing blues since I was 15 and I would not list my abilities as being on par with some of the greats.......even though I can play a few tasty licks myself.
The Beatles attempt is just that (an attempt) and they did not pull it off IMO.
I have been playing blues since I was 15 and I would not list my abilities as being on par with some of the greats.......even though I can play a few tasty licks myself.
The Beatles attempt is just that (an attempt) and they did not pull it off IMO.
“We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.” - Albert Einstein
"You do not really understand something unless you can explain it to your grandmother" - Albert Einstein
"You do not really understand something unless you can explain it to your grandmother" - Albert Einstein
