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Wolf Marshall >> British Blues Rock >> |
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Wolf Marshall
Wolf Marshall:
Hi everyone, today's lesson is on the post Hendrix legacy. Hendrix was part of British blues scene.
Here comes the first lick for tonight
Wolf Marshall:
That first lick is in C m Pentatonic and uses the wah
Ken:
In the first lick I see your playing D on the E string is that a blue note added to the C Minor Pentatonic scale?
Wolf Marshall:
Ken, that's the 9th note. The 9th , D in this case, is a great addition to pentatonic
AScriabin:
I must agree - that D really stands out in that lick.
Allen:
I just played the lick to the loop. Fun!
Wolf Marshall:
Allen, that's the funky Trower groove, In that last lick it was Blackmore, Trower and Gilmour combined FYI
Dan:
David Gilmour?
Wolf Marshall:
Dan, yes. Here's the second lick
Wolf Marshall:
Anyway, this next one is another example of the Jimi legacy--in the final era of British blues rock.
It's an expansion of Cm pent--note B and that weird slur F to E flat. It's based on a Trower/ Hendrix lick.
Can you hear the Wah and Univibe on that one? That was the beginning of British blues evolving into modern hard rock
Barry:
Did Trower use the Univibe on most his music?
Wolf Marshall:
Barry, he did quite a bit.
Tom:
What is a univibe?
Wolf Marshall:
Tom, it's a device like a phaser or flanger. It's a box with a pedal and simulates Leslie sounds but spacier
ginnym:
Okay, thank you. I have a phaser. Love that whoosh, Leslie sound.
Wolf Marshall:
Another cool point about this lick is the moving in and out of blues box position
Wolf Marshall:
Tom, it works well with timed hand vibrato
ginnym:
would you call it unconventional? The playing out of the box, i mean.
Wolf Marshall:
Gin, yes --especially for blues and basic rock. I think it's the beginning of hard rock and metal---post Hendrix players
Ken:
Is that a mode or just blue notes added to the C Minor Pent.
Wolf Marshall:
Ken, there's actually no blues note. What's unusual is the B natural.
Here comes the next lick!
Wolf Marshall:
These three licks are all played over that slow mean shuffle groove, I mean the groove is that Too Rolling Stoned thing.
That was a real interesting marriage of blues and hard rock--Too Rolling Stoned.
You hear some frantic blues doublestops on that one. It's a combo of Trower and Blackmore--I think of the Hendrix legacy with all of this.
Anyway, this lick has blues a la demented Killing Floor with metal run. This lick has more Univibe and wah set in different position.
All these licks have the famous stuck Wah
Dan:
what do you mean by stuck wah?
Wolf Marshall:
Dan, you leave the wah as a filter boost. it was used by Hendrix, Schenker, Rhoads----
Filter's out some frequencies, boosts others.
Allen:
I love the way lick 3 slides up to 15.
Wolf Marshall:
Allen, that's a blues touch
Allen:
It's the timin' of the whole thing. The placement of it.
Wolf Marshall:
Everyone has to know that one--even Van Halen used it --in Ice Cream Man, Allen, yeah the timing. Remember it's over a slow groove.
All these licks are played with Univibe in different settings
Barry: Wolf, you mentioned the use of B nat. on the Trower lick. Did he have some set notes outside the blues scale to make his sound different?
Wolf Marshall:
Barry, the B natural is used as a leading tone---that's unusual. He used the D note too--in a different way than Santana.
Remember those added notes must be used with MELODIC DISCRETION
Allen:
Because, it seems that the first part of lick 3 lends itself to the fingers.
Wolf Marshall:
Try it, Allen--you might be on to something new, You can't miss the Jimi in this one.
Allen:
It seems kinda staccato-ish.
Lick 3 I mean.
BluesMatt:
bluesy yet melodic and not too fast
Wolf Marshall:
Notice: the blues slurs, the F-to E flat, and chordal type of approach
Allen:
It makes me kinda think of Stevie.
Wolf Marshall:
Allen, Stevie used one--on Couldn't Stand Weather
BluesMatt:
sounds very Hendrix to me
Wolf Marshall:
That's what we've been looking at, BluesMatt, Here comes the next lick!
Wolf Marshall:
Yeah, the time has come to a close. It's been great being with you tonight
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