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Showing posts with label GUITAR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GUITAR. Show all posts

February 1, 2011

Joe Pass Finger Mnemonics!

Joe Pass Finger Mnemonics! 

 'I tried to commit its subtle evanescence to finger mnemonics.'



THIS  IS jazz guitar genius Joe Pass's most difficult guitar scale instructional to 'teach' AND 'master'!


ONLY GUITAR AFICIONADOS--LYDIAN and Lynching--need bother comment this subtly masterful lesson in extempore! J. Pass's classes make it look easy!

 ...reflect on multi conceptual scalar ideas posited in insightful appraisal re. mixylodian vs. lydian's  40% personal taste 30% genetics;  truer words never spoken about simmering lustiness  blues scales difficult to do (immersed jazz-based microtones and avant-scales, abstain  imposing  passion  order his sacred primitive musical form.

Thank you for reminding me that there is still someone out there--strong, pristine integrity as honor career  jazz composer guitar.

 love to hear you blast again.

last time possessed by your 3/4 harmonics scale solo during the 12-break of your Kessel tribute.

When I returned to Berkley divorced me as I tried to commit its subtle evanescence to finger mnemonics.

 a true renaissance man

you have no idea.

* Wouldn't you, in fact, most naturally admit to having a "mixolydian" tonal mode (G - G), rather than a Lydian (F- F) mode, especially since the étude is later announced by the narrator. I find the blues scale much more fun to play, with sexier and more poetic possible chords. I just learned to play it, all of 12 or so years ago.  *Jay Alan Davis
Joe Pass Teaches AND HOW!

 jazz purists need comment on this masterpiece! thank you!

Baby grandiloquent jazz!
They try to teach you something
relevant   (if you're a member)
http://post.ly/1YCdw
Joe Pass Teaches AND HOW!


* forever indebted to brandonshred for producing this and three other masterpieces (that i know of) in the oeuvre.

 Encore!



http://post.ly/1YCdw

Joe Pass Teaches AND HOW!ONLY GUITAR AFICIONADOS WHO KNOW THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN LYDIAN and Lynching need bother commenting on this subtly masterful lesson in extempore!!!!

http://post.ly/1YCdw

only jazz purists (and tina) need comment on this masterpiece! thank you!


Baby grandiloquent jazz! They try to teach you something


In this video:
 


    • Gaejang Guk http://post.ly/1YCdw Joe Pass Teaches AND HOW!
      http://post.ly/1YCdw

      only jazz purists (and tina) need comment on this masterpiece! thank you!
      Baby grandiloquent jazz! They try to teach you something


    • Gaejang Guk
      http://post.ly/1YCdw Joe Pass Teaches AND HOW!
      ONLY GUITAR AFICIONADOS WHO KNOW THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN LYDIAN and Lynching need bother commenting on this subtly masterful lesson in extempore!!!!
      http://post.ly/1YCdw only jazz purists (and tin...a) need comment on this masterpiece! thank you!
      Baby grandiloquent jazz! They try to teach you something
       
      • Wouldn't you, in fact, most naturally admit to having a "mixolydian" tonal mode (G - G), rather than a Lydian (F- F) mode, especially since the étude is later announced by the narrator. I find the blues scale much more fun to play, with sexier and more poetic possible chords. I just learned to play it, all of 12 or so years ago.
    • Cam Paterson a true renaissance man you are Jay.

      • Mauryo Rourk
        you have no idea. i only just got back to the page after everyone else had let me down from the Phineas Newborn piece. Jay officially wins my best Facebook sport-playpal award for the early quarter of 2011. To find out more about what th...e fuck i'm talking about, see the relevant post in VIBookies (if you're a member).

        • I will have to reflect on some of the multi-conceptual scalar ideas posited in your insightful appraisal re. mixylodian vs. Lydian. As you know it is at least 40% personal taste and 30% genetics. However, no truer words were ever spoken about the simmering lustiness of the blues scale, and while it has been difficult for me to do (being immersed in jazz-based microtones and avant-scales, i have somehow managed to abstain from imposing my passion for order on this sacred primitive of all musical forms. Thank you for reminding me that there is still someone out there who feels as strongly about its pristine integrity as I've tried to honor throughout my career as a jazz composer for guitar.
           
          I would love to come out to San Francisco and hear you blast again. The last time I was possessed by your 3/4 harmonics scale solo during the 12-break of your Kessel tribute.

          When I returned to Berkley, my wife nearly divorced me as I tried to commit its subtle evanescence to finger mnemonics. 

    • Like

      preview

      Dog Meat
      Added on Saturday via Posterous · LikeUnlike · * * Alan Pritchard, Gaejang Guk and Bill Neubauer like this. * o Gaejang Guk http://post.ly/1YCdw Joe Pass Teaches AND HOW! http://post.ly/1YCdw only jazz purists (and tina) need comment on this masterpiece! thank you! Baby grandiloquent jazz! They try to teach you something Yesterday at 5:01pm · LikeUnlike o Gaejang Guk http://post.ly/1YCdw Joe Pass Teaches AND HOW! ONLY GUITAR AFICIONADOS WHO KNOW THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN LYDIAN and Lynching need bother commenting on this subtly masterful lesson in extempore!!!! http://post.ly/1YCdw only jazz purists (and tin...a) need comment on this masterpiece! thank you! Baby grandiloquent jazz! They try to teach you somethingSee More Yesterday at 5:03pm · LikeUnlike o Jay Alan Davis Wouldn't you, in fact, most naturally admit to having a "mixolydian" tonal mode (G - G), rather than a Lydian (F- F) mode, especially since the étude is later announced by the narrator. I find the blues scale much more fun to play, with sexier and more poetic possible chords. I just learned to play it, all of 12 or so years ago. 17 hours ago · LikeUnlike o Cam Paterson a true renaissance man you are Jay. 12 hours ago · LikeUnlike o Mauryo Rourk you have no idea. i only just got back to the page after everyone else had let me down from the Phineas Newborn piece. Jay officially wins my best Facebook sport-playpal award for the early quarter of 2011. To find out more about what th...e fuck i'm talking about, see the relevant post in VIBookies (if you're a member). I will have to reflect on some of the multi-conceptual scalar ideas posited in your insightful appraisal re. mixylodian vs. Lydian. As you know it is at least 40% personal taste and 30% genetics. However, no truer words were ever spoken about the simmering lustiness of the blues scale, and while it has been difficult for me to do (being immersed in jazz-based microtones and avant-scales, i have somehow managed to abstain from imposing my passion for order on this sacred primitive of all musical forms. Thank you for reminding me that there is still someone out there who feels as strongly about its pristine integrity as I've tried to honor throughout my career as a jazz composer for guitar. I would love to come out to San Francisco and hear you blast again. The last time I was possessed by your 3/4 harmonics scale solo during the 12-break of your Kessel tribute. When I returned to Berkley, my wife nearly divorced me as I tried to commit its subtle evanescence to finger mnemonics.
      Dogmeat Dr.
      Dogmeat, LA Dog-meat

      "Joe Pass"  jazz guitar genius Finger Mnemonics guitar scale method scales Lydian mixylodian tones harmonics style blues scale  jazz teach Jazz mrjyn dogmeat sobachemyaso yt:quality=high cynophagie weirdopedia brandonshred

Joe Pass Teaches AND HOW! Joe Pass finger mnemonics (jay alan davis via FB) by Gaejang Guk ( videos ) 2:10 http://post.ly/1YCdw Joe Pass Teaches AND HOW! ONLY GUITAR AFICIONADOS WHO KNOW THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN LYDIAN and Lynching need bother commenting on this subtly masterful lesson in extempore!!! ...... Read MORE » on Dogmeat

January 29, 2011

Baby grandiloquent jazz! They try to teach you something

Baby grandiloquent jazz! They try to teach you something Best of Jazz Greats Tutorial Videos  

These are four jazz videos that were favorites of the artists AND by no less than writers Stanley Booth, NYTimes Critic, Robert Palmer, and Memphis musician and friend, Tav Falco.  

 

In each I think you'll take away not only a piece of those who're playing, but of the writers, critics and musicians who hold these performances above all others in the vacuum created by each of their respective deaths.

 

I hope you will enjoy a short journey into this hemisphere, and take something away which you had not known before. 

 

I know that during the compilation of this extensively researched labor of love, I discovered not just something about the musicians represented not previously known, but the writers and musicians who I have been fortunate to call friends.

 

Thank you for taking the time to read (what for me is a very rare intrusion) this introduction.

 

GUK

(from the intro to Tav Falco's Video of Phineas Newborn below)

Imagine yourself a prodigy, a jazz virtuoso of the 1950s. You have played with everybody from Duke Ellington to Charlie Mingus. Then POW… you are lost for twenty years. Your achievements and talents put into chemical and canvas straitjackets. Living with your mother. Treated like a miscreant. Then you begin to rise to the top again. This is one of the man’s first public performances before a public eager and waiting so long for his return.

Baby grandiloquent!

Elvin Jones Trio

Download now or watch on posterous
Elvin_Jones_Trio_Shreds.mp4 (11277 KB)

Eric Johnson

Dynamics and Phrasing

Joe Pass

Phineas Newborn Jr.

Oleo

Download now or watch on posterous
Joe_Pass.mp4 (9697 KB)

FINE's, baby!


Phineas Newborn Jr., a leading jazz pianist, died at his home in Memphis, Tenn., Friday. He was 57 years old.
Phineas Newborn Jr., a leading jazz pianist, died at his home in Memphis, Tenn., Friday. He was 57 years old.
The cause of death has not been released.Irvin Salky, Mr. Newborn's agent and friend, said X-rays six weeks ago showed a growth on one of his lungs.

Phineas Newborn Oleo Parkay

 

His albums included ''A World of Piano,'' ''The Newborn Touch,'' ''The Great Piano of Phineas'' and ''Piano Artistry of Phineas Newborn.''

i couldn't top the master  brandonshred but i gave it a good tribute. 

 


May 28, 1989
Although Mr. Newborn was not a celebrity, he was highly regarded by jazz aficionados, especially in the 1950's and 60's. ''In his prime, he was one of the three greatest jazz pianists of all time, right up there with Bud Powell and Art Tatum,'' said Leonard Feather, a jazz critic for Downbeat magazine and The Los Angeles Times.


His father, Phineas Newborn Sr., led a big band that played on Memphis's celbrated Beale Street in the 30's and 40's. Mr. Newborn grew up playing saxophone, trumpet and vibraphone in the band, which included his brother Calvin, who played guitar.


Besides his brother, he is survived by his mother, daughters, a son and two grandchildren.


A racial attack took him out of the playing circuit in 1974. He was admitted to the Veteran’s Hospital with a cracked jawbone, broken nose and several broken fingers. The day Phineas was discharged from the hospital he went to Ardent recording studios and recorded a Grammy nominated album, ‘Solo Piano’.

The tracks included a version of ‘Out of The World’ which contained stunning left-hand virtuosity. Stanley Booth says that ‘hearing that performance while looking at the X-ray photos of Phineas’s broken hands is enough to make you think that Little Red (Phineas Newborn), like Jerry Lee Lewis is a little more than human.

Rhythm Oil: A Journey Through the Music


 Phineas Newborn Jr - Web Essay

 
By ROBERT PALMER
Published: July 11, 1986


Phineas Newborn Jr., Sweet Basil, 88 Seventh Avenue South, below West Fourth Street (242-1785).  

Born into a musical Memphis family and a pianist with his father's big band and on early

B. B. King recordings while still in his teens, Phineas Newborn Jr. was in every sense a prodigy.

By the time he made his classic Atlantic, RCA and Contemporary jazz albums, in the 1950's and early 60's, that prodigious abundance of technique was getting him compared with the virtuosic Art Tatum, and dismissed by some as all fingers, no heart. That was never true, and certainly isn't now. In his maturity, Mr. Newborn is one of the masters of jazz piano, with an immediately identifiable tone and touch, great harmonic originality, and, as a kind of signature, octave runs that seem to fairly whip along the keyboard.

Shows are around 10 and 11:30 P.M. and 1 A.M. through Sunday, with a $10 music charge and $6 minimum.  

 

tav falco PHINEAS NEWBORN, Jr. August 17, 1975 Memphis, Tennessee  

3-min. excerpt 1/2 »

Open Reel Video original, B&W

 

Imagine yourself a prodigy, a jazz virtuoso of the 1950s. You have played with everybody from Duke Ellington to Charlie Mingus. Then POW… you are lost for twenty years. Your achievements and talents put into chemical and canvas straitjackets. Living with your mother. Treated like a miscreant. Then you begin to rise to the top again. This is one of the man’s first public performances before a public eager and waiting so long for his return.

 

  • i don't think i told you last year, but when i had this up on facebook, phineas's son came by and kinda didn't think it was too funny, but he was the only one...well, besides the 20% of people who thought it was avant garde!  

  • this is the fag in the movie breakins daddy yo !

  • LOL

    great!

  • It's not Phineas Touch.

    Bull shit !!

    You're probably playing foot.

    Fake Phineas go to hell.

  • when the drums kicked in at about :50 i died

    im a jazzhead and i lol'ed...you should too. Obviously Phineas was a beast, someone posting a joke doesnt discredit that.

  • its a joke. if you can't take one in a sadistic time like ours, then go do society a favour and kill yourself.

  • Hilarious. One of the better ones I've seen.

  • It is not funny at all, it is disrespectful. Shame on you.

  • I just wasted 30 seconds of my life watching this. This is why the internet sucks. And whoever posted this has about 1/100000000000000 the talent as phineas.

  • I agree! And I am a jazz purist too and friends with P's son Phineas Newborns III, and I posted the two video responses above to show this trucking' jerk how to not be disrespectful. Because some things like REAL Jazz PLAYED BY REAL MUSICIANS SHOULD NOT BE FUCKED WITH! Thanks for caring about Jazz and trying to keep the sac-titty of its memory Olive. And this Brand-on Shred has not a shred of common delinquency in his Jazz hating sold and he should rot in the remiss hell where he was born.

  • sounds like bad plus

  • it is funny. it is disrespectful. it´s very funny.

  • あほや

  • phineas is one of my heroes...but c'mon these "shred"videos are parodies! they are meant to be funny!not disrespectful.. i would bet that phineas would laugh himself if he saw this as well as any other artists who have been "shredded" if they have any sense of humor at all. how could anyone view this and not realize it isn't real? lighten up

  • It"s a Fake!! To all concerned; I saw Phineas (fine-us) NewBorn Jr. play the piano in 1962. The man was a prodigy. This is disrespectful. Shame! Shame!

  • this fricken' kills me...the bass OMG!! LMAO!!!

  • I guess if you put a legend in jazz piano on your video and add some crap trio playing then MAYBE someone might listen.....come on man....don't put out this kind of stuff....this is garbage

  • scuse my ignorance, but what does ''shredding'' do to the music?

  • hahaha... didn't know anyone was doing this with jazz

  • i never knew that phineas played with denardo coleman...

  • this isn't even funny.... disrespectful

  • ottomatic, have you ever heard this man play 'Oleo' in real bop style? It's on YouTube. I bet you'll fall from your piano stool. He was the only jazz pianist Peterson admitted to be scared of.

  • What kills me is that people think this is the real audio track!

  • rofl

    •  
      • The bass is AMAZING.

        Best of Jazz Greats Tutorial Videos (brandonshred)

Baby grandiloquent jazz! They try to teach you something Best of Jazz Greats Tutorial Videos   These are four jazz videos that were favorites of the artists AND by no less than writers Stanley Booth , NYTimes Critic, Robert Palmer , and Memphis musician and friend, Tav Falco .     In each I think yo ...... Read MORE » on Dogmeat

Guitar Day~Speedy West Alvino Rey Nokie Edwards

Guitar Day~Speedy West Alvino Rey Nokie EdwardsDave Bunker Touch

Speedy West LoverAlvino ReyThe BaTVentures Nokie EdwardsCustom Classic Thong

http://images0.cafepress.com/merchandise/80_240x240_Front_Color-White.jpg?region=name:FrontCenter,id:38899909,w:1.54346,h:1.18,a:MiddleCenter

Speedy West Lover

Download now or watch on posterous
Speedy_West_Lover.mp4 (10095 KB)

Alvino ReyThe BaT

Download now or watch on posterous
The_BaAlvino_Rey.mp4 (4174 KB)

 


 

Ventures Nokie Edwards

Download now or watch on posterous
Ventures_Nokie_Edwards.mp4 (10472 KB)


Dave Bunker Touch 

Download now or watch on posterous
Dave_Bunker_Touch_.mp4 (7417 KB)

ANYBODY GOT A TALKINGGUITARPUPPET

http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2725/4404389273_76cc4a391e.jpg

photo

St. Louis Blues- with Stringy the talking steel guitar! 13-48 - GAZOTUBE.com

i like 'I like' ecstasy YOU AND taquila tequila tequilla like this facebook mo-rourk getsmehotIT CANCELS YA AND IS HIGH mrjyn 'zimmerman retro-faced with black nonattendance eyes hollowed and loamy like a squanto out-stargazed martyr with enemy eyebrows saying 'me loco like coons on diet bubblegum and Meyer's rum' with Gatsby's neon-strutted heart
franck flasheri like 'I like' ecstasy YOU AND taquila tequila tequilla like this facebook mo-rourk getsmehot

Arthur "Skeets" Herfurt
 http://visualguidanceltd.blogspot.co...

Alvino Rey's 'Talking Steel Guitar' could actually talk, giving Rey's orchestra its distinctive sound (some of Rey's critics called it a 'gimmick'). Rey played with virtuosic skill, demonstrating his guitar's 'singing' quality by manipulating the tone and volume controls. 'Stringy' (the guitar's nickname) was able to sound as if 'HE' were saying words. Of course 'Stringy' wasn't, but Luise King, Rey's wife was. In something that describes like a sexual fetish, Luise stood backstage with a small plastic tube connected between her mouth and Rey's amplifier, forming words with her lips and throat muscles. Rey would make her make 'IT' say his name as he glided the steel bar along the strings of his steel guitar, all while playing, perfectly dressed in a perfect tuxedo.

With the device, Rey and Luise were able to create eerie vocal sounds in four- or five-part harmony, which seemed to mysteriously emanate from the steel guitar.

http://lh4.ggpht.com/_LnSjXubbogs/Sr_5jmCqBYI/AAAAAAAAA0M/miaHaFsnl9U/f0913fc8c8d7c9ec81d27c63d906435c.jpg**INVENTION**http://d.yimg.com/kq/groups/2622430/homepage/name/homepage.jpg?type=sn

Alvin McBurney (ALVINO REY) was born in 1908, and grew up in Cleveland. His first instrument was a banjo, which he tinkered with, attaching electrical wiring to amplify its twang through a radio loudspeaker. In the Spring of 1935 Rey was hired by the Gibson Guitar Corporation to produce a prototype pickup with engineers at the Lyon & Healy company in Chicago, based on the one he had developed for his own banjo. The result was incorporated into Gibson's first electric guitar.

*SKEETS HERFURT*

Arthur 'Skeets' Herfurt, (clarinetist) moved to California to work with Alvino Rey in the early 1940s. Following his stint with Rey, he worked as a studio musician in Hollywood, in addition to work with Benny Goodman in 1946-47. His studio credits into the '60s, include: Louis Armstrong, Jack Teagarden, and Stan Kenton. He worked with Goodman again in 1961 and 1964. Herfurt appeared in two of Rey's films, 'JAVA JIVE' and 'CIELITO LINDO,'he also appeared as a saxophonist in the 1958 film 'The Nightmare,'playing clarinet on the soundtrack. He was a member of Lawrence Welk's orchestra and weekly television show from 1979 to 1982.

THE PETE DRAKE /ALVINO REY CONNECTION

*Pete Drake's two most famous talking steel songs were 'Forever' and 'Lock, Stock and Teardrops'.

INTERVIEWER: How did your "Talking Guitar" come about?

PETE DRAKE: Well, everybody wanted this style of mine, but I sort of got tired of it. I'd say, "Hey, let me try and come up with something new," and they'd say, "I want you to do what you did on So-and-so's record." Now, I'd been trying to make something for people who couldn't talk, who'd lost their voice. I had some neighbors who were deaf and dumb, and I thought it would be nice if they could talk. So I saw this old Kay Kayser movie, and Alvino Rey was playing the 'talking guitar'--I thought, "Man, if he can make a guitar talk, surely I can make people talk." So I worked on it for about five years, and it was so simple that I went all around it, you know, like we usually do.

Alvino Rey died in Salt Lake City.
He was 95.

**ALVINO REY TRIVIA**

*He changed his name to Alvino Rey in 1929 to help fit in with a Latin music craze* The first electric guitar(Gibson Guitar's ES-150) prototype is kept in the Experience Music Project museum in Seattle* Alvino Rey claims to have been playing electric guitar before jazz guitar pioneer, Charlie Christian* One of the King girls married Rick Nelson* Rey became a Mormon on his marriage to Luise King in 1937* Rey recorded with crazed exotica bandleader Esquivel on RCA Victor* Rey was one of two ukulele players on the March, 1961 recording sessions for the Paramount movie "Blue Hawaii," backing Elvis Presley* Walt Disney eventually bought the rights to Sonovox and used in it cartoons for five years* Alvino used the unit for his band's opening theme, voicing the mantra, "Listen, Listen, Listen"* Sonovox dynamic throat units pre-dated plastic-tube, 'talking instrument' devices, still in use today* In the 1970's, Peter Frampton popularized the talkbox (Heil) on 'Frampton Comes Alive,' voicing a decidedly different sentiment*

**QUESTION FOR YOUTUBERS**

IS THIS CLIP FROM 'JAVA JIVE' OR 'CIELITO LINDO'?
WHAT'S THE NAME OF THE CREEPY UKULELE-PUPPET?

**THANKS TO YOUTUBERS, BOING BOING, WIKI, AND THE ORIGINAL POSTER FOR ALL RESOURCE MATERIAL.

NICHOPOULOOZA

 

the ER folks have been talking about Paul James lately after his interview on a Toronto website

http://www.expectingrain.com/discussions/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=55671&start=0

http://www.smalltowntoronto.com/Interview_Paul_James.html

happy 60th Paul!


last Saturday with laughing guitar


  1. Alvino Rey Talking Steel Guitar (Yeah, you could say I love Stringy)

    Jul 24, 2010 ... Alvino Rey Talking Steel Guitar (Yeah, you could say I love Stringy) .... Talking Steel Guitar Puppet Stringy Mash (totally . ...
    whatgetsmehot.blogspot.com/.../alvino-rey-talking-steel-guitar-yeah.html - Cached
  2. Talking Steel Guitar Puppet Stringy Mash (totally genius)

    Jul 24, 2010 ... Talking Steel Guitar Puppet Stringy Mash (totally genius) .... Alvino Rey Talking Steel Guitar (Yeah, you could s. ...
    whatgetsmehot.blogspot.com/.../talking-steel-guitar-puppet-stringy.html - Cached
  3. Alvino Rey: Stringy Guitar Puppet Ready For Closeup

    Feb 8, 2010... depeche mode wristwatches · Talking Steel Guitar Puppet Fever .... Alvino Rey: Stringy Guitar Puppet Ready For Closeup ...
    whatgetsmehot.blogspot.com/.../alvino-rey-stringy-guitar-puppet-ready.html - Cached
Guitar Day~Speedy West Alvino Rey Nokie Edwards Dave Bunker Touch Speedy West LoverAlvino ReyThe BaTVentures Nokie EdwardsCustom Classic Thong Speedy West Lover Download now or watch on posterous Speedy_West_Lover.mp4 (10095 KB) Alvino Rey The BaT Download now or watch on posterous The_BaAlvino_Rey. ...... Read MORE » on Dogmeat

Alvino Rey and Stringy the Talking Steel Guitar Puppet is BACK for GOOD!

Alvino Rey

and

Stringy

the

MISSING! ONE TALKING STEEL GUITAR PUPPET
You Like this Video. I Have a Fetish For This Video!

Talking Steel Guitar

Puppet

burn down St. Louis Blues!

 

 

 

 

Welcome Home, Boy!

 


TALKING+STEEL+GUITAR

lijit search mrjyn TALKING%20STEEL%20GUITAR Blog

Download now or watch on posterous
Alvino_ReyStringy_.mp4 (18690 KB)

 

<br /><b>Alvino Rey Talking Steel Guitar Puppet</b><br /><i>Uploaded by mrjyn. - See the latest featured music videos.</i>

 

 

Alvino Rey and Stringy the MISSING! ONE TALKING STEEL GUITAR PUPPET You Like this Video. I Have a Fetish For This Video! Talking Steel Guitar Puppet burn down St. Louis Blues!         Welcome Home, Boy!   TALKING+STEEL+GUITAR lijit search mrjyn TALKING%20STEEL%20GUITAR Blog Download now or watch on ...... Read MORE » on Dogmeat

January 19, 2011

Pete Drake Forever

Pete Drake Forever

Pete Drake Forever

Pete Drake Forever

Pete Drake Forever

Pete Drake Forever

Pete Drake Forever

Download now or watch on posterous
Pete_forever_Drake.mp4 (5820 KB)

Pete Drake Forever

 

Pete Drake Forever

Pete Drake Forever

Pete Drake Forever Pete Drake Forever Pete Drake Forever Pete Drake Forever Pete Drake Forever Pete Drake Forever Download now or watch on posterous Pete_forever_Drake.mp4 (5820 KB) Pete Drake Forever   Pete Drake Forever Pete Drake Forever ...... Read MORE » on Dogmeat

January 10, 2011

JEANIE C RILEY PETE DRAKE...And Göran Rydh???

JEANIE C. RILEY + Göran Rydh Jöggin

200810071716.jpg

PETE DRAKE JEANIE C. RILEY

200810071716.jpg200810071716.jpg200810071716.jpg200810071716.jpg200810071716.jpg200810071716.jpg200810071716.jpg

Visit to Pete Drake's gravesite in Nashville
Pete was a genius and patriarch of Modern Pedal Steel.
Haunting sound behind Dylan's Lay Lady Lay and a zillion other songs.
200810071716.jpg

As I continually slimmed down my record collection over the years, the works of certain artists who I knew would never, ever come out on CD tended to be the ones that I kept. Translation: I have a weirdly lopsided record collection that veers sharply -- there is no "in between" to speak of, to be clear here -- from several dozen live PiL bootlegs to the collected works of one Jeannie C. Riley. Doesn't ring a bell? Remember "Harper Valley PTA"? Of course you do. Jeannie C. Riley was HOT, a late 60s/early 70s mini-skirted corn pone minx of the Nancy Sinatra variety, but Nashville style. Jeannie C. Riley was a staple on shows like Hee Haw and The Porter Wagner Show and things like that when I was a kid. I thought she was mega-sexy and over the years I collected each and every one of her long playingThe Rib

Keep On Jöggin´*

*

*A monumental hit and probably one of the best performances ever by the fantastic singer Göran Rydh*
*PETE DRAKE THE MAVERICKS* *Joggin' * Mama's Talking Guitar* *Funky*Weird *Gear *45 * PETE DRAKE * *Joggin'*
OUR+FAVORITE+BAND  
OUR FAVORITE BAND: PRAXIS RECORDS 001, 1981: PINK CADILLAC [4 SONG EP] BIG TIME RECORDS/NEW ROSE [FR] 1987:
SATURDAY NIGHTS AND SUNDAY MORNINGS [LP]
iLike OUR FAVORITE BAND

http://whatgetsmehot.posterous.com/jeanie-c-riley-pete-drakeand-goran-rydh JEANIE C. RILEY + Göran Rydh Jöggin PETE DRAKE JEANIE C. RILEY Visit to Pete Drake's gravesite in Nashville Pete was a genius and patriarch of Modern Pedal Steel. Haunting sound behind Dylan's Lay Lady Lay and a zillion other songs. As I continually slimme ... Dogmeat

January 8, 2011

November 5, 2010

Who're Dating Jimi Hendrix? The Untold Story of Brigitte Bardot and Jayne Mansfield

Name


Strike a pose: A new exhibition in London celebrates the life of Brigitte Bardot

Jimi Hendrix


Jimi Hendrix
  • Who're Dating
  • Jimi Hendrix?
  • Brigitte Bardot
  • Jimi Hendrix
  • And
  • Jayne Mansfield
  • (and don't forget

  • Uschi Obermaier)

 

 

 

  • The Untold Story


  • Discorama

  • feature on
  • Jimi Hendrix
  • including
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  • Jimi Hendrix Biography Jimi Hendrix
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Other Name(s) Johnny Allen Hendrix
Jimmy James
Height 5' 11" (180 cm)
Build Athletic
Eye Color Hazel
Hair Color Black
Date of Birth November 27, 1942
Birthplace Seattle, Washington, USA
Star Sign Sagittarius
Died September 18, 1970 (Aged 28)
Location of Death Samarkand Hotel, 22 Lansdowne Crescent, London, England
Cause of Death Disguised Execution (barbiturate overdose)
Nationality American
Ethnicity Black
Religion Deist
Occupation Musician
Celebrity Index
Claim to Fame
Greatest guitarist of all time
hendrix POTENTIAL youtube
(424)

 

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Brigitte_Bardot.mp4 (3837 KB)

Report devoted to the tribute to Jimi Hendrix at the Cité de la Musique

  • The exhibition tells the story of a short career and flamboyant and tries to explain how the young musician has changed music populaire.Le comment on images of the exhibition alternates interviews with Johnny Hallyday, singer, Jean Louis Rancurel photographer and Mitch Mitchell, drummer "Jimi Hendrix Experience".

  • Reportage consacré à l'hommage rendu à Jimi HENDRIX à la Cité de la Musique. L'exposition raconte l'histoire d'une carrière courte et flamboyante et tente d'expliquer comment le jeune musicien a changé la musique populaire.Le commentaire sur des images de l'exposition alterne avec les interviews de Johnny HALLYDAY, chanteur, de Jean Louis RANCUREL, photographe et de Mitch MITCHELL, batteur "Jimi Hendrix Experience".

 



The Untold Story of

Jimi Hendrix

and

Jayne Mansfield

http://whatgetsmehot.posterous.com/jimi-hendrix-and-jayne-mansfield

http://post.ly/Pdem

San Francisco, CA -- When Jimi Hendrix sang "Foxy Lady," he may have been singing about 1960s sex symbol Jayne Mansfield.

Believe it or not, Hendrix actually played bass and lead guitar for Mansfield back in 1965 on two songs: A ballad called "As The Clouds Drift By," and a bump-and-grind number called "Suey."

According to Hendrix historian Steven Roby, author of a new book, "Black Gold: The Lost Archives Of Jimi Hendrix" (Billboard Books), the Jayne-Jimi summit took place because they had the same manager.

The songs were never actually released but Roby says "Suey" features some great Hendrix bass-playing and lyrics like "It makes my liver quiver."

Roby doesn't know if Mansfield and Hendrix collaborated on anything else but the blonde bombshell did attend one of his concerts a few years later. However, she chose to leave with Englebert Humperdinck, not Hendrix.



Why Brigitte Bardot is

vogue

and

Dating Jimi Hendrix

Strike a pose:

A new exhibition in London celebrates:

Who're Dating Jimi Hendrix?


 

Chic, unique

As she approaches her 75th birthday, the original sex kitten is back in fashion

Strike a pose: A new exhibition in London celebrates the life of Brigitte Bardot

 

Strike a pose: A new exhibition in London celebrates the life of Brigitte Bardot

 

 

 

Everybody fancied BB. Every man deliquesced into a lather of sweat at just the thought of being in the same room as her. Every woman dreamed of having BB teach her to cha-cha-cha. Little girls (in the movies anyway) loved being picked up and swung about by this perfect older sister. Every dog, cat, rabbit or horse that she ever kissed in her films (a popular device for showing off her pout without any inconvenient male lips in the way) grew wild with excitement at the honour the human race was bestowing on it. Waiters fawned, musicians swooned and gendarmes blushed as Brigitte Bardot drove through the capital in her little sports car in Une Parisienne.

In real life, she was globally adored, the first Continental actress to achieve Hollywood-size fame. From the mid-1950s, her face, her generous mouth, her long slender legs and her fabulous shape became a fixture on magazine covers, newspaper diary columns and the new phenomenon of television sets in Europe and the USA. "She is the princess of pout, the countess of come-hither," breathed Time magazine. "Brigitte Bardot exuded a carefree, naïve sexuality that brought a whole new audience to French films." It wasn't just her screen image. On a visit to London in the Fifties, she appeared on BBC TV, where she explained the trouble her little dog was causing: "E make, uh, pee-pee wherev' 'e go," she said, with a little moue of concern that she'd gone too far. Viewers, especially men, were enchanted.

 

She was so clearly a face from the future, just as Ursula Andress and Twiggy would be in 1962 and 1966. Bardot was curvaceous in the approved Hollywood style (though her 18-inch waist was freakish) but what set her apart was the combination of eyes, pout and attitude. You could tie her hair in a chignon or in Pollyanna pigtails, squeeze her into Capri slacks or a ruched ballgown but you could do nothing to lessen the impact of her cool, sidelong glance, or the sublime wiggle with which she ambled down the street. By 1960 she and Marilyn Monroe (that other great wiggler) were the most celebrated pin-ups of their day. Whereas Monroe looked grown-up but acted like a little girl, Bardot looked young but acted like a girl who knew far too much already. She was beautiful, sassy, impatient with Fifties pomposity and ever-so-slightly melancholy. At least, men everywhere hoped she was, so they might "look after her".

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Discorama.mp4 (4568 KB)

Musicians and singers felt a special affinity with her. She made several hit records in the 1960s with Serge Gainsbourg, who became a lover. His famous No 1 collaboration with Jane Birkin, "Je t'aime ... moi non plus", was originally recorded with Bardot doing all the orgasmic groaning, but she persuaded him not to release it. She had affairs with the French singers Gilbert Becaud and Sasha Distel.

Her love of harmony and melody wasn't confined to France. Bob Dylan claimed that he dedicated the first song he ever wrote to Bardot, though, frustratingly, he never mentioned its name. A rumour has long persisted that she and Jimi Hendrix had sex at Heathrow Airport shortly after their first meeting. George Harrison reportedly married Patti Boyd because he liked her resemblance to Brigitte, and the rest of the Beatles were equally smitten. John Lennon had the band's press agent arrange a face-to-face meeting with her at the Mayfair Hotel in 1968, when he was 29 and she was 34. Lennon was so nervous about meeting the goddess that he dropped LSD beforehand, to give him some Dutch courage. The encounter wasn't a great success. "I was on acid," he recalled ungallantly in Skywriting by Word of Mouth, "and she was on her way out."

It's true that her movie career of 50 or so films ran out of steam in the early 1970s, and her singing hardly survived the Sixties, but Brigitte Bardot never disappeared from the world stage. She announced her retirement from bombshell duties in 1973 and turned instead to (highly visible) political activism. But her fans' and her nation's adoration of the original Sex Kitten means that her less appealing beliefs and pronouncements will be temporarily forgotten next month, when she celebrates her 75th birthday on 28 September. Photographic exhibitions from her pouty heyday will be launched on both sides of the Channel. A special birthday tribute is mooted for London Fashion Week, and even Jean-Paul Gaultier's new collection is inspired by her look (see panel, right). It's no surprise that the hottest model of the moment, Lara Stone, is a wanna-BB. So many women have been over the last half-century.

She was born in Paris in 1934 into a comfortable, Catholic, middle-class milieu. Her father Louis ran the family engineering business. Her mother Anne-Marie encouraged Brigitte and her younger sister Mijanou to take up dancing. The former discovered she had a natural talent and seemed headed for a ballet career, enrolling at the National Superior Conservatory of Paris for Music and Dance in 1947, when she was 13: one of her classmates was Leslie Caron, later to star in Gigi. Two years later, Brigitte made her modelling debut in a fashion magazine, and made the cover of Elle in 1950. The cover shot came to the wolfish gaze of her svengali, Roger Vadim, an indifferent film director with an eye for a pretty girl. He showed Elle to a friend called Marc Allégret, who asked her to audition for his new film, Les Lauriers Sont Coupés. She got the part, though the film project was cancelled. But a seed had been sown, Brigitte gave up dance for acting and Vadim became determined to get his new protegée (whom he married when she was 18) on celluloid.

Her debut wasn't brilliant. It was Le Trou Normand, a feeble comedy vehicle for a Gallic Norman Wisdom called Bourvil. In her scene, Bardot is discovered standing before a mirror buttoning a dress, a 17-year-old ingénue of luminous beauty (and some vestigial puppy-fat). Seeing her, poor young Nadine Basile, the teenage heroine, sobs to her father, "Papa, am I ugly?" Other films – she made 17 in the first four years – were cutie-pie fluff: in Doctor at Sea, she was the love interest for Dr Simon Sparrow, played by Dirk Bogarde, whose screen attitude was that of a sexless young uncle. Vadim was unhappy with the way her career was going. So in 1956, when she was 22, he directed her himself, for maximum sexualité, in Et Dieu ... Créa La Femme (And God Created Woman).

Though it launched her career, it's hard today to see what all the fuss was about. There is nudity, but it's almost entirely off-screen, shot from behind, hidden by props or occluded by gauze. The plot is sliver-thin. Juliette (Bardot) is a young, restless teenage orphan living in St Tropez, working, after a bolshy, je-m'en-fou fashion, in the local bookshop. Among her hobbies are topless sunbathing and flirting with chaps: with rich, yacht-owning Curd Jurgens, with poor, boatyard-owning Christian Marquand and with his brothers, one of whom she marries, apparently on a whim – Jean-Louis Trintignant, who was to star in several movies of the French nouvelle vague, and who lived with BB for two years.

Juliette leads them a merry dance, alternately petulant and passionate, sulking and snogging (she's an impressively enthusiastic screen kisser), posing in a series of vivid outfits, including a tight-fitting top with bare shoulders which became her signature garment. Fights break out when she's around, guns are discharged, families break apart and the town is scandalised by her behaviour: on her wedding-day, she retires to bed with the recently bashed-up groom, while the reception lunch proceeds without them – until she does come down in a peignoir to fill a couple of plates with chicken, grab some wine, and take them back upstairs. Friendless and torn between two lovers, she seeks solace in brandy and mambo jazz – to which she dances on a table with whorish abandon, until brought to her senses by some husbandly slaps across the face.

After Et Dieu, nothing was the same. It previewed at Cannes, where Bardot, predictably, caused a sensation on the beach: she seemed to popularise the bikini all by herself. She became an international star, and the embodiment of French minxiness for a generation. It was said that Sam Levin's postcard photograph of BB, shot from the rear wearing a white corset, outsold postcards of the Eiffel Tower in 1960. She made a few good movies – Le Mépris (Contempt) with Jean-Luc Godard and Vie Privée (A Very Private Affair) with Louis Malle, in whose later film Viva Maria! she and Jeanne Moreau co-starred as two chorus girls who start a South American revolution and, almost by accident, invent striptease. But although she embraced ambitious films with talented directors, Bardot found herself stuck in a typecast life: she was the timeless sex kitten, the chronic horizontale, the bed-hopping chanteuse, the much-married lapsed Catholic with the pout that brought men to destruction.

In a striking act of defiance, she announced her retirement from the movies in 1973, just shy of her 40th birthday – which she celebrated with a naked photo-shoot in Playboy – and, still living in St Tropez, became a strident supporter of animal rights. She campaigned against the serving of horsemeat in French restaurants. She established the Brigitte Bardot Foundation for the Welfare and Protection of Animals, and funded it to the tune of three million francs by selling off her jewellery at auction.

In the last decade, she has shown alarming signs of racial intolerance, and the expression of her views has landed her in l'eau chaud many times. Her fourth husband, Bernard d'Ormale, is an ex-adviser to Jean-Marie Le Pen's National Front, and Bardot has spoken out intemperately against France's 5m Muslim immigrants. She's been fined and convicted of "inciting racial hatred" – especially the part in her 2003 book, A Scream in the Silence, when she talks about previous generations of French people who've "given their lives to push out the invaders". Last June, a judge said she was sick of charging Bardot with racial offences. Much of France is sick of hearing the same sentiments from her famous lips.

It's sad to think that the woman who, from 1970 to 1980, was the face of Marianne de France – the evolving female sculpture which represents France's dedication to liberty and republicanism – has come to despise modern France and to symbolise race hatred and bigoted suspicion. But for a while, at the end of next month, all the focus will be on the time when Brigitte Bardot – that hair, that mouth, that bosom, those Kohl-rimmed eyes – represented something quite different: the insolence of youth, the siren call of freedom, the triumph of sexiness sans frontières.

An exhibition, Bardot & the Original Paparazzi, opens at the James Hyman Gallery, London W1, on 3 September

... and why Bardot is back in vogue

Those eyes, that gap between the front teeth and, of course, those sunbleached tresses. Anyone glancing at the cover of August's 'W' magazine would be forgiven for confusing the model with Brigitte Bardot. In fact it's face-of-the-moment Lara Stone, whose pillowy pout and décolletage make her a dead ringer for BB.

Jean Paul Gaultier capitalised on the resemblance when he opened his autumn/winter 2009 couture show with Stone sporting a Bardot-esque beehive and black belted mac. He named the look 'Le Mépris' after the Jean-Luc Godard film starring the Frenchwoman.

Stone's soaring popularity is just one example of the Bardot revival, however. The Breton-top frenzy that swept the nation this summer (and is still as hot as Antibes in August) recalls her early days on La Croisette. In fact, the default wardrobe of almost every girl about town this summer consists of pedal-pushers or cropped jeans, a stripy top and ballet pumps – just like the ones Bardot sported in 'And God Created Woman'.

And what about this season's thigh-high kinky boots, as seen at Gucci, Stella McCartney and Hussein Chalayan? Bardot spent much of 1968 in over-the-knee black boots, teamed with lacy blouse, A-line skirt and floppy hat, or leather trench and cap.

Bardot's wardrobe was only half of her sex-kitten style, however. Her seductive flicked eyeliner and messy beehive are still inspiring contemporary looks too. The artfully dishevelled blonde up-dos at the Louis Vuitton show recalled Bardot's own hair – which always looked as if a rakish French film director had run his hands through it.

 



(1) 4717.00 voodoo


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Jimi Hendrix


  • Jimi Hendrix
  • Jimi Hendrix



Jimi Hendrix Relationships


Who is Jimi Hendrix dating?


Snapshot


Name Jimi Hendrix
(James Marshall Hendrix)
Other Name(s) Johnny Allen Hendrix
Jimmy James
Height 5' 11" (180 cm)
Build Athletic
Eye Color Hazel
Hair Color Black
Date of Birth November 27, 1942
Birthplace Seattle, Washington, USA
Star Sign Sagittarius
Died September 18, 1970 (Aged 28)
Location of Death Samarkand Hotel, 22 Lansdowne Crescent, London, England
Cause of Death Disguised Execution (barbiturate overdose)
Nationality American
Ethnicity Black
Religion Deist
Occupation Musician
Celebrity Index
Claim to Fame Greatest guitarist of all time



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