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Vintage Guitar
Magazine
Presents: FRETPRINTS
by Wolf Marshall
Subject: The Sultan of Jazz |
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Fig.3.
This
multifarious lick is
truly eclectic. The
phrase marries blues and
rock mannerisms to a
jazzy European Django-like
feel and a vaguely
Middle Eastern melody.
Mark has always sought
out the unusual in his
music, revealed in his
admiration for the eerie
film scores of Morricone,
and this is just such a
case. Haunting and
atmospheric, and in
sharp contrast to the
major tonalities of the
previous two examples,
this lick clearly sits
in the minor mode and
depicts the darker side
of Mark's melodic
persona. The opening bit
in bars one and two
contains clear allusions
to the blues with string
bends, a typical double
stop, and a
characteristic
pentatonic/blues scale
line in D minor. In bar
three a Django-inspired
flurry of 16th notes
switches to a D Harmonic
Minor scale for a gypsy
flavor and to reflect
the A7 chord's harmony.
It is preceded by a
raked arpeggio, a
familiar Knopfler
trademark.
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The
phrase closes with
another characteristic
figure in bar four. This
section exploits a
plucked dyad (two-note
chord) passage which
changes with the
background Bb
major-Em7b5 progression.
Turn up the gain on your
amp to a slightly
distorted overdrive
sound, switch to a
longer echo setting with
more repeats, and dig in
with your plucking
fingers for a harder,
biting feel.
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