Rhodes to Nowhere
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- VikingBlues
- Posts: 4466
- Joined: Sat Apr 03, 2010 7:44 pm
Rhodes to Nowhere
I don't know what the heck style this is?!!
But .... when your house has the word 'Rhodes' in it's name and you see a 'blues' BT called 'Dirt Rhodes' (Kevin McLeod - incompetech.com) and it's mostly in E which is your preferred open tuning for slide - well, you've got to have a go at it, especially when the weekend is almost over and you've hardly played guitar.
Dunno if I'll ever get the hang of playing two lead parts and gelling them together as if it's two different players bouncing lines of each other.
PRS SE panned right in open E with slide. 'Strat' panned left. In a departure from my normal sounds I've tried to give both guitars a bit of dirt in the sound to fit the BT name. Apologies for a bit of buzzing on the sound - too tired to wrestle with it!
Rhodes To Nowhere : http://soundclick.com/share.cfm?id=11039965
download/file.php?id=1309
But .... when your house has the word 'Rhodes' in it's name and you see a 'blues' BT called 'Dirt Rhodes' (Kevin McLeod - incompetech.com) and it's mostly in E which is your preferred open tuning for slide - well, you've got to have a go at it, especially when the weekend is almost over and you've hardly played guitar.
Dunno if I'll ever get the hang of playing two lead parts and gelling them together as if it's two different players bouncing lines of each other.
PRS SE panned right in open E with slide. 'Strat' panned left. In a departure from my normal sounds I've tried to give both guitars a bit of dirt in the sound to fit the BT name. Apologies for a bit of buzzing on the sound - too tired to wrestle with it!
Rhodes To Nowhere : http://soundclick.com/share.cfm?id=11039965
download/file.php?id=1309
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'Rhodes to Nowhere' improv
Rhodes to Nowhere.mp3 - (1.75 MiB)
Last edited by VikingBlues on Mon Sep 12, 2011 8:39 am, edited 1 time in total.
An improv a day keeps the demons at bay!
- Blackhorse
- Posts: 186
- Joined: Tue Apr 06, 2010 3:32 pm
Re: Rhodes to Nowhere
Great stuff VB!
The strat actually sounds like part of the BT - BT sounds great by the way. And the PRS really sounds cool with a bit of dirt, good job.
Very moody and atmospheric, I love it
The strat actually sounds like part of the BT - BT sounds great by the way. And the PRS really sounds cool with a bit of dirt, good job.
Very moody and atmospheric, I love it
Re: Rhodes to Nowhere
This is excellent! A hint of Chris Rea in the slide, beautiful fills on the Strat... I like your tone with both guitars. A hint of gain suits your playing nicely. I thought you melded the two guitars very well (not the easiest thing to do...). Really nice moody piece. One of my favorites that I have heard you do.
"Throw yo' big leg over me Mama, I might not feel this good again!"
Re: Rhodes to Nowhere
WOW.....VB, you are correct, not sure what style this is? I think it has a sort of modern, electric delta blues vibe going on. Very nice job with the dual guitar parts. Really liking your slide playing.
Tytlblues
"Notes are expensive... spend them wisely”
BB King
"Notes are expensive... spend them wisely”
BB King
- vancouverois
- Posts: 922
- Joined: Tue Apr 06, 2010 5:55 pm
Re: Rhodes to Nowhere
A nice one VB, I like the ambience/atmosphere you created with both guitars
Nice tone and playing
Nice tone and playing
Jan 15th 2007
Re: Rhodes to Nowhere
Funny, this was my first thought, too. Together with this Delta-ish sound this tone is supernatural... and the strat fits excellent.Blindboy wrote: A hint of Chris Rea in the slide...
You've been at the Crossrhodes at midnight??
- losaavedra
- Posts: 213
- Joined: Tue Mar 15, 2011 9:47 am
Re: Rhodes to Nowhere
I played this expecting something different but I've subsequently listened to it several more times. To me it comes across as a very good bit of playing that achieves something quite rare when busking to a BT ... not just a backing track with some guy tinkering away separately but a fully integrated tune where it's darn hard to see the joins ... and that's often pretty hard to do. Good balance, loads of soul, mystique, etc. ... pity its rather short. Looking forward to more of same approach!!!!!
Mike
"I feel more like I do now than when I first came on" (Ronnie Scott, Maidstone)
"I feel more like I do now than when I first came on" (Ronnie Scott, Maidstone)
- VikingBlues
- Posts: 4466
- Joined: Sat Apr 03, 2010 7:44 pm
Re: Rhodes to Nowhere
Gee whizz! Many thanks guys - I rather enjoyed putting this together but I didn't expect as strong a response. Y'all gladden my guitar loving heart.
...........................
I'm pleased to see quite a few comments about the integration of the lead parts with the BT - it's something I try to work at - I like to feel like I'm playing and interacting with musicians and not just using the BT as a backdrop to me trying to be a star (haaa - I wish)! But I love these really musical BTs that spark ideas and moods - they're hard to track down though.
As I'm unable to "imress" with speed and pyrotechnics I'm also very pleased that I've hit the right spot with some of you on the mood / ambience aspect. I'll admit I'm also especially glad on the positive reaction to my 'wee bit of dirt' effect - I've been fighting for years to get something reasonable going on that front, but it's a struggle - usually more gain=more pain for me.
...........................
Blindboy wrote:A hint of Chris Rea in the slide
..and that certainly gladdens me - I love the emotion and feel in Chris Rea's slide playing and if I can hint at that I'm ecstatic ... now if I could only just sing like him!!!!!12bar wrote:Funny, this was my first thought, too.
...........................
I'm pleased to see quite a few comments about the integration of the lead parts with the BT - it's something I try to work at - I like to feel like I'm playing and interacting with musicians and not just using the BT as a backdrop to me trying to be a star (haaa - I wish)! But I love these really musical BTs that spark ideas and moods - they're hard to track down though.
As I'm unable to "imress" with speed and pyrotechnics I'm also very pleased that I've hit the right spot with some of you on the mood / ambience aspect. I'll admit I'm also especially glad on the positive reaction to my 'wee bit of dirt' effect - I've been fighting for years to get something reasonable going on that front, but it's a struggle - usually more gain=more pain for me.
...........................
Leave them wanting more - that's the ticket.losaavedra wrote:pity its rather short
Nice one! ... and I wish I had.12bar wrote:You've been at the Crossrhodes at midnight??
An improv a day keeps the demons at bay!
- 2WheelsOfBlues
- Posts: 750
- Joined: Sun Nov 28, 2010 10:59 pm
Re: Rhodes to Nowhere
Yes i was thinking the same, road to hell fron Chris Rea, the intro....
sow the Rhodes to nowhere is going somewhere
Like it VB, very nice job
sow the Rhodes to nowhere is going somewhere
Like it VB, very nice job
play guitar like the wind, mysterious but definitely present....
- HalfBlindLefty
- Admin
- Posts: 2015
- Joined: Fri Mar 26, 2010 1:23 pm
Re: Rhodes to Nowhere
Amazing stuff VB
A long time ago, in the old forum : Registered: Mon, 27 Nov 2006. Wonder were the other old members all went....
- VikingBlues
- Posts: 4466
- Joined: Sat Apr 03, 2010 7:44 pm
Re: Rhodes to Nowhere
Thank you 2WOB, HBL - much appreciated.
Seriously, if I have a road to hell it's a road that the guitar has a big part in steering me away from. The guitar road is one of only a few of lifes roads where i feel I have any control over where I am going and one of only a few roads down which I feel it's worth travelling.
2WheelsOfBlues wrote:Yes i was thinking the same, road to hell fron Chris Rea, the intro....
sow the Rhodes to nowhere is going somewhere
Seriously, if I have a road to hell it's a road that the guitar has a big part in steering me away from. The guitar road is one of only a few of lifes roads where i feel I have any control over where I am going and one of only a few roads down which I feel it's worth travelling.
An improv a day keeps the demons at bay!
- 2WheelsOfBlues
- Posts: 750
- Joined: Sun Nov 28, 2010 10:59 pm
Re: Rhodes to Nowhere
Well it is worth a lot from what i hear, and it's going strait upVikingBlues wrote:The guitar road is one of only a few of lifes roads where i feel I have any control over where I am going and one of only a few roads down which I feel it's worth travelling.
play guitar like the wind, mysterious but definitely present....
- VikingBlues
- Posts: 4466
- Joined: Sat Apr 03, 2010 7:44 pm
Re: Rhodes to Nowhere
Thanks again 2WOB.
Here's a link to the BT page - I would really love to hear anyone elses interpretation on the Dirt Rhodes BT - I can't think of it now in any other way than what I've recorded.
http://incompetech.com/m/c/royalty-free ... enre=Blues
Interesting (well to me) point cropped up today.
I've had several failed attempts at slide. Open D was the usual that I had been using - sometimes open G. This time the teaching videos kicked off with Open E and it really clicked. That same series of lessons then went to open A - when I reached the last lesson in the series so far uploaded, I went back to open E because it just seems so much easier to find the notes I want to hear.
It turns out that my main slide influence (Chris Rea - in case anyones not noticed) uses Open E. In fact he uses Open E for ordinary lead guitar not just slide. I'm pretty sure it has a strong influnence on his note choices and sound (rather like 'Keef' and his open G rhythm playing). It maybe goes some way to explaining why it 'clicked' for me learning in Open E.
Here's a link to the BT page - I would really love to hear anyone elses interpretation on the Dirt Rhodes BT - I can't think of it now in any other way than what I've recorded.
http://incompetech.com/m/c/royalty-free ... enre=Blues
Interesting (well to me) point cropped up today.
I've had several failed attempts at slide. Open D was the usual that I had been using - sometimes open G. This time the teaching videos kicked off with Open E and it really clicked. That same series of lessons then went to open A - when I reached the last lesson in the series so far uploaded, I went back to open E because it just seems so much easier to find the notes I want to hear.
It turns out that my main slide influence (Chris Rea - in case anyones not noticed) uses Open E. In fact he uses Open E for ordinary lead guitar not just slide. I'm pretty sure it has a strong influnence on his note choices and sound (rather like 'Keef' and his open G rhythm playing). It maybe goes some way to explaining why it 'clicked' for me learning in Open E.
An improv a day keeps the demons at bay!