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@DogtagnanАй бұрын
Steve Cropper once said that he often played only the top three strings and left the bass notes to the bass player in the band -- Donald "Duck" Dunn.
@MrXyzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzАй бұрын
If you a guitarist with Duck Dunn in the band the your three bass strings are just there for emotional support.
@captainkangaroo4301Ай бұрын
Sounds like jazz
@GeorgiaBoy196128 күн бұрын
@@captainkangaroo4301 - You're not wrong. When famed Atlantic Records producer/A&R man Jerry Wexler heard Booker T. and the MGs play together for the first time, he later described them as down home and funky, but with the precision and empathy of a jazz quartet. I'm paraphrasing, but not by much. Unlike NY City pros, who usually wrote out charts, the studio musicians at Stax relied heavily on 'head arrangements' between Booker, Steve, Duck and Al Jackson, Jr. They knew eachother's moves so well that they just fit together like hand in glove. If you listen to Booker T. and the MGs, they did relatively simple instrumental numbers early in their career as solo artists, but by the time the early 1970s rolled around, they were much more advanced - exploring the outer limits of R&B, soul, blues, jazz and gospel in tunes which stretched out way past the confines of the old 1:30-2:00 numbers they'd done earlier.
@dougsmith843013 күн бұрын
Steve Copper was amazing! It took me years to realize that I need to give space for the bass player and the keyboard player and not step on the singer… Playing the top three strings is perfect for Accompaniment!
@joekeiser6221Ай бұрын
Really solid lesson for those stuck on bar chords. You'll be amazed how much better you'll sound. Thanks Mark.
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
Thanks!
@mairenared19 күн бұрын
Great advice Mark. I'm a firm believer in "less is more". Love that B&G Little Sister. Steady Rollin' Bob Margolin plays one too.
@MarkZabel15 күн бұрын
Rock on!
@iknowthetruthaboutitАй бұрын
Your lessons are clear, concise and relaxed. One of the best instructors here. Thank you Mark ✌️
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
Glad you like them! Thanks for the kind comment!
@davidp7833Ай бұрын
A great song to learn partial chord shapes is living in the past by Jethro tull. I love to play that song. Soul man is another good one. Mark, that was good. Thanks guy!
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
My pleasure. Yes, those are 2 great ones for partial chords.
@Gell196712 күн бұрын
Steve Cropper was a great all round musician, when Lewis Steinberg quit Booker T & The M.G's Steve covered bass duties as well, and Duck Dunn has said Steve taught him a great deal on the bass when he joined the group. Steve also co-wrote many great songs Green Onions, Dock Of The Bay just to name two. Peter Green's first professional guitar engagement was in Peter B's Looners who were formed in the Booker T style, Peter said I basically had to become Steve Cropper. Hendrix visited Stax Studios to meet Steve and asked him to show him certain licks from records Jimi was a huge fan of. I'm glad to see a video highlighting the importance of rhythm guitar, a sadly neglected part of guitar playing. Playing bass also I can say from experience full barre chords really inhibit the space the bass has to move in. Thanks for the video 👍
@MarkZabel11 күн бұрын
My pleasure. Joe (Messina) was my hero for a while after getting to play with him. Those were jazz sessions (and he played harmonica in them!), but playing less was always emphasized. Steve Cropper was clearly cut from the same cloth. Great, and a super all-around musician, I agree. Thanks for the informative post!
@CorbCorbin22 күн бұрын
I started out taking notes out of a barre chord, or any chord, when I played with even one other person. It gets really tricky, with two vocalists, with extremely different ranges, keys and one or two or three other guitars in a band mix, bass included. Learning The Wind Cries Mary, very early on, helped shape how I approached rhythm playing to this day. The lead did as well, with the rhythm progression changing, then returning to the main progression, while the lead parts all are in the chords being played. Even the blues lick, is in the key of the chord he plays.
@dougsmith843013 күн бұрын
Mark, this is a great lesson… Straight to the point, but so much we can use right away… Everything lies right under our fingers, if we just break out of the Barr chord trappings! Thank you for this great lesson!
@MarkZabel13 күн бұрын
You're very welcome my friend.
@AnthonyTardugno-c4sАй бұрын
Great job brother. Thank you 😊
@BobL56Ай бұрын
Great video Mark. I’m a “strictly rhythm” player for far longer than I care to tell. Yes, sometimes less is more. I never realized I’ve been doing the things you described without thinking about it but never knew they were actually a technique. Thanks for enlightening me!
@johnperiard959419 күн бұрын
Great lesson, Mark1
@MarkZabel15 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@urbanlegendsandtrivia2023Ай бұрын
Johnny Cash said Elvis was one of the best rhythm guitarists he ever heard. As a point of fact, Elvis, Scotty, and Bill did not even have a drummer, but Elvis would actually play the beat with his guitar instead.
@GeorgiaBoy196128 күн бұрын
That's a pretty good description of a rhythm guitar player's job ~ to blend in and play like a drummer. Obviously, it varies a great deal by song, artist, and situation, but in a nutshell, that's it.
@myvalium1Ай бұрын
Awesome lesson. Thank you !
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@VanirTraditionalistАй бұрын
I sometimes hammer on chords as a cheat for fast changes. Thanks Mark, I feel validated! 😂
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
Sure thing. It generally adds interest and clears up the sound. Why does it clear it up? At most, you've got 3 notes in the hammer on. (I guess you can hammer on a barre, but that's a relatively rare move.) Any time you can clear things up as a sideman, it's probably a good thing.
@Steve-yk7iuАй бұрын
Really good lesson. Thank you. I’ve been working on triads and I see them from a different perspective now.
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@aminahmed2220Ай бұрын
What a fantastic video have a great weekend Mark ❤😊 also Steve Cropper is a legendary guitarist
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
Thanks! You too!
@searing754922 күн бұрын
That would be Bob Weir.
@rikelswit126314 күн бұрын
I'm not so sure. Al McKay, Nile Rogers, Cory Wong and Jimmy Nolan would like a word. Bobby's playing supported Garcia harmonically, and developed a style of his own, but it was Mickey, Bill, and Phil who actually made the band move. The gentlemen I just mentioned can make the band move even if the drummer and bass player drop out. Cory Wong is just astounding.
@StandingStones1776-vb6znАй бұрын
A true Pro, I remember him saying its not WHAT YOU PLAY its What you DONT PLAY ! he leaves space
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
Is that Cornell Dupree you're talking about? Man, that guy left a TON of space. The king of doing that. The other guys ... Steve, Joe Messina, Robert White and Eddie Willis were great at it too.
@walther9161Ай бұрын
Awesome lesson thank you for posting!!
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
My pleasure!
@aceagrauel726721 күн бұрын
Asia. Heat of the moment
@grandmacaesarАй бұрын
Fwiw, Heat of the Moment is by Asia.
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
LOL, yes. Fwiw indeed.
@johnclark1925Ай бұрын
FWIW… Heat of the Moment contains the worst solo known to mankind. 🤮
@stephenhenion830423 күн бұрын
Rhythm guitar is essential to any band.
@markstiggs4471Ай бұрын
Just an addition that I hope you will find helpful, Steve is also a really friendly and incredibly intelligent guy. It was the honor of my life to meet him a few years ago, as a musician for 45 years
@BradYaeger23 күн бұрын
This is pretty much my entire style , but I tend to stick with open chords in first position . My running joke is I know 4 chords and 3 tricks. But it's been enough for me to write over a hundred songs and play countless shows . I found that being able to fill up all the frequencies when playing solo is more important than being able to pull off hot licks all the time . Like Keith says "The stories are in the right hand , man ..." What worked for me was to learn to sing with the guitar , not along with it , but with it . Close your eyes and think the lyrics as you play and by simply using dynamics and a few techniques tell the story with just the guitar .
@MarkZabel23 күн бұрын
Cool. Thanks for sharing that.
@MattyBEightyThreeАй бұрын
Great stuff Mark!
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
Thanks!
@geoff-l3vАй бұрын
Great work always
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
Thank you!
@Seven-DettaАй бұрын
Thanks Mark❤💪🏽
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
Any time!
@chillmurray7529Ай бұрын
Thanks as always Mark!
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
You bet!
@Guto-df3hqАй бұрын
Parabéns pelo trabalho! Muito bom....vai ajudar muito meu vocabulário. Valeu demais Man 😎
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
You're welcome!
@rockabillyrevolutionАй бұрын
Fair play to you getting a professional gig playing bar chords 👍
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
Thanks ... but that's not what happened. I got the gig by avoiding playing barre chords. The story is how I learned through "tough love" I wasn't going to make it past the audition if I didn't stop playing barre chords.
@rockabillyrevolutionАй бұрын
@@MarkZabel ah OK 👍
@allenhonaker410715 күн бұрын
Asia's Heat of the Moment. A very memorable opening riff
@avielp13 күн бұрын
The trusty A arpeggio keeps taking me to "Wake up Alone" by Amy WInehouse
@will457Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
You bet ... and thank you too! I appreciate it!
@TheProfessorsMusicLessonsАй бұрын
Steve cropper , Cornell Dupree , funk brothers
@lesvogiatzakis3313Ай бұрын
Great stuff Mark. My bar chord wall of sound is evolving… okay, just some double stops 🤣
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
Sounds great!
@johnm1644Ай бұрын
Cool guitar What make n model ?
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
B&G Little Sister.
@ColeTaylor-eo6puАй бұрын
simple, yet affective
@GodsStoryteller15 күн бұрын
You are awesome! My eyes popped at a different way to play my A Barre chord. But I have a question (as I'm a bit confused): How do I fit this into a time signature, if I were to have just 4 strums/ beats in a bar, seeing that picking the INDIVIDUAL notes in the Barre chord, would require I strum 6 times or more? I'm lost. Help me grab your teaching in a FUNCTIONAL way. God bless you. I subscribed.
@MarkZabel13 күн бұрын
Thanks! IMHO you're overthinking it. There are many, many ways to play rhythm. Instead of thinking about math, think about which beat you want to accent. Let's keep it simple. Suppose you want to accent beat 1 of a measure on a chord change. Then play that chord, or a chord fragment as discussed in the video, on that beat. All other things you do need to fit before that - however you want them to. If you want to fit 6 "things" into the space between the previous chord and the chord you hit on beat 1. The point is that you can choose - evenly play all 6 notes (that would be triplet quarter notes), play 4 quarter notes and 2 half notes, play 2 half notes then 4 quarter notes, etc. The best ways to become better at the "rhythm side of rhythm" are IMHO. 1. Ditch strumming patterns. 2. Put on a mix of songs you love and dance. 3. Drum your fingers on a table - pretend you're a drummer. 4. Block every string of your guitar and just play rhythm in time. If you can dance or drum your fingers to the beat, then you can play rhythms you want - whether you strum, play arpeggios, hammer-ons, or whatever. Hope that helps.
@GodsStoryteller13 күн бұрын
@MarkZabel haha. "Ditch drumming patterns ..." got me. I've always had a desire not to be tied to rigid patterns, as most of my songs, riffs, etc come from pure inspiration. Over time, I've been looking out to find out if anyone recognise them as MULTI RHYTHMS in one piece. At last, I got to hear of polyrhythms on KZbin and began a fresh chase for some people's take on using a mix of rhythms ( a mix of quarter notes, eight and sixteenth notes. I've found some pretty good teachers, on KZbin, on such. Makes a lot more sense to me, as I fit the thought into the way the flow (inspiration) came my way. I'd be back to watch this and rearrange my understanding. I KNOW deep down, that it will be useful to my way of playing, as I find this video, blending with the creative side of me. I appreciate your guides in the reply. God bless you.
@jarhead3038Ай бұрын
great advice.
@justinjex119 күн бұрын
Sweet ! Very good!
@MarkZabel19 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@fredaltensee363Ай бұрын
Excellent.
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
Thanks!
@vonzoomtunes9847Ай бұрын
Asia…great album cover art
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
Yep. 40 years later ... that's my takeaway too!
@opalrhudy252621 күн бұрын
"Bar" chords are for just that. Bars. In an orchestrated effort we gotta play the WHOLE CHORD. All the Tyme. No exceptions
@Matteo-qn8yu17 күн бұрын
Beautifull guitar. What the name?
@MarkZabel16 күн бұрын
It's a B&G Little Sister
@Matteo-qn8yu16 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@jakarnowskiАй бұрын
Asiia: Heat of the Moment!
@brianmclaughlin441924 күн бұрын
The Jimi Hendrix/Pink Panther combo is just goofy !!
@MarkZabel24 күн бұрын
Pink Panther? Did you mean to comment on a different video?
@mackvismusic862227 күн бұрын
Jeff Beck, blow by blow!
@richarddavis323923 күн бұрын
The best rythym guitar player ever was Malcolm Young of AC/DC. It’s not even up for discussion.
@MarkZabel23 күн бұрын
He was excellent in his genre for sure.
@PatNetherlander20 күн бұрын
Ohhh but yes it is: James Hetfield outranks him by easily.
@gordyhydro577419 күн бұрын
None of them came near Rick Parfitt from the mighty Status Quo!!
@peterbland7227Ай бұрын
And don’t forget the bass player is playing the root. Thus you can often just play triads.
@chrisburzenski2317Ай бұрын
Nice B&G
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
Thanks!
@Rich-ng3yy23 күн бұрын
I don't see barre chords as being stuck. Using strings selectively or full barre chords are nit different levels they're different effects.
@thomassawicki206527 күн бұрын
That guitar is nice , but it looks like a minature size . I think you would get the tone, and have room to move, if you played a Les Paul Standard .
@MarkZabel25 күн бұрын
Okay.
@56davidwrightАй бұрын
One way to leave more space is to leave
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
Later.
@Jjj5321418 күн бұрын
Why did you omit power chords? Too much bass?
@MarkZabel15 күн бұрын
It's a good question. There are a couple of power chords I cover here. (You may not see them as power chords, but they are - only roots and 5ths.) In the context of the video, a reasonable short answer is "too much bass" ... that works well enough.
@Jjj5321415 күн бұрын
@ What do you think about roots and fifths combined with a surrounding open string?
@savaii4menow16 күн бұрын
thats how I play most song. lol
@Riskmangler15 күн бұрын
I detect an Asian influence in this video.
@MarkZabel15 күн бұрын
LOL! Good one!
@jerryclark8636Ай бұрын
Noice!
@MarkZabelАй бұрын
Thanks!
@opalrhudy252621 күн бұрын
Bar chords are BORING. Yeah there I said it. Play the Whole Chords, wholly All the Tyme. Come on yall