Video není dostupné.
Omlouváme se.

3 Al Di Meola Licks From 1976

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 14. 08. 2024
  • Here's the next Three-For-All episode with 3 Al Di Meola Licks From 1976.
    Al is yet another pioneering guitar legend as his solo material, various collaborations, and early work with Chick Corea's fusion supergroup Return To Forever quickly made him a musical force to be reckoned with and highly-respected player at the same time.
    The musical respect surrounding Al and his music is the stuff of legends, as he directly inspired countless famous guitarists, including a young Edward Van Halen many years before Van Halen hit the scene.
    This lesson takes a look at a number of aggressive phrasing and playing from Al's glory days with Return To Forever, and takes a peek at some ideas from a live television appearance from 1976, which captured Return To Forever in its legendary form, with Al on guitar, Stanley Clarke on bass, Lenny White on drums, and Chick Corea behind the keys.
    The performance itself is unreal and literally documents the shining musical star that Return To Forever was during the 1970s, and the ideas captured in this lesson will surely challenge your technique with some unusual phrases, rapid-fire licks and runs, with plenty of other things to notice and grab.
    Give this episode a view, leave some comments and feedback, and please subscribe to Late Night Lessons - THANK YOU!
    Become a Patreon supporter of Late Night Lessons for only $5 (or more) each month and gain access to PDF notation/tab files of these lessons. Thank you!
    www.patreon.com/latenightlessons

Komentáře • 159

  • @valve84
    @valve84 Před 4 lety +34

    I'm still crazy about his Casino album. Those melodies have stuck with my kids and I for over thirty years.

    • @jfo3000
      @jfo3000 Před 4 lety +4

      Casino was great. As a young lad I took a bus many miles to buy Elegant Gypsy. That's my Huckleberry. Race with Devil on Spanish Highway...Yngwie (probably) said "Thanks Al, I'll build an entire career off that one!"
      Romantic Warrior, all the RTF stuff was groundbreaking and showcased the young genius Al D.

    • @searchdivision
      @searchdivision Před 4 lety +3

      Check out Tour de Force - Live. So good.

  • @jameszeiger8533
    @jameszeiger8533 Před 3 měsíci

    I saw RTF about 2 or 3 days before they laid down Romantic Warrior at what was Caribou studios I think in early 76. I was maybe 17 and in High School and playing fusion with friends so we were big fans. At the time of the show, down in a little club in downtown Denver’s Brooks Tour at a place they called Ebbet’s Field, they had been rehearsing up at Caribou studios about 2 weeks. The 1st week was just Al, Stanley and Chick working on Romantic Warrior, then Lenny showed up for only 2 or 3 days to master his parts. They went over it as a full group, then had their equipment loaded up and sent down to the club for a one-off show, before going back up to Caibou to lay down this epic masterpiece. Absolutely awesome, face ripping show. At that time you had Mahavishnu with their pioneering work, but RTF took it to a whole new level. Nobody, absolutely nobody could play as cleanly or as fast on Guitar as Al. His tone on that 71 LP, hooked into a turned up 50W Plexi with no pedals in the signal chain was absolutely powerful and his sustain was amazing. I Will never forget that experience as a young kid.

  • @pickboy7
    @pickboy7 Před 4 lety +22

    Great licks! Al was the original master of shred! Thanks Dave!

    • @jonp3890
      @jonp3890 Před 4 lety +12

      John McLaughlin would like a word...lol.

    • @pickboy7
      @pickboy7 Před 4 lety +2

      jps64 Lol! Right,I forgot about him.That is blasphemous of me!! He is also incredible and underrated.

  • @donharrold1375
    @donharrold1375 Před 3 lety +6

    I first listened to Al in the early 80s. What I heard was mind blowing. You just couldn’t believe someone could actually do that. It seemed superhuman. I think he was a major influence on guys like Malmsteen and Paul Gilbert.

  • @GMHG777
    @GMHG777 Před 4 lety +6

    I finally got to see Al D in 2016 after missing him TOO MANY times in the past, he and his band were stellar. His alternate speed picking is ridiculous !

  • @cyclistman6358
    @cyclistman6358 Před 4 lety +5

    Elegant Gypsy “Flight Over Rio” will always
    be one of my favorite DiMeola tunes!!

  • @edadcock2863
    @edadcock2863 Před 4 lety +12

    Long time admirer of Al Di Meola! Also loved him on Friday Night In San Francisco with Paco de Lucia John McLaughlin. Thank you for breaking down those licks. You have now added to YOUR mystique. 😎 👍 🎸

  • @obiem9319
    @obiem9319 Před 4 lety +23

    I met Al Di Meola and Yngwie Malmsteem in the same after party at NAMM

    • @aylbdrmadison1051
      @aylbdrmadison1051 Před 4 lety +1

      Lucky!

    • @uncleremus5046
      @uncleremus5046 Před 4 lety +5

      Would’ve loved to heard that conversation between Yngwie & Al!

    • @chestrockwell66
      @chestrockwell66 Před 4 lety +3

      Their neighbors in Florida

    • @obiem9319
      @obiem9319 Před 4 lety +2

      @@uncleremus5046 I have pictures of them. Yngwie was actually nice and got him and his wife a drink. I took the picure with Al Di Meola first then with Yngwie.

    • @obiem9319
      @obiem9319 Před 4 lety +1

      @@aylbdrmadison1051 This is a recording of Yngwie Malmsteem and Al Di Meola together collaborating with Billy Sheehan (bass)and Derek Sherinian (Keys) czcams.com/video/jQl6xuz92Vo/video.html

  • @MercutioUK2006
    @MercutioUK2006 Před 4 lety +3

    No combover required!
    ;-)
    He's a stellar player, absolutely insane......great lesson.

  • @evertvanderhik5774
    @evertvanderhik5774 Před 7 dny

    Romantic Warrior, I can play that whole album in my mind

  • @jfo3000
    @jfo3000 Před 4 lety +6

    Did you mention that Al palm muted a lot of his quick runs? It was very unique at the time. Other guys did it once in a while, Al was all about doing it all the time. It was part of his style and sound.

  • @chrississon5954
    @chrississon5954 Před 6 měsíci

    Saw Al last year. All acoustic but still awesome. He seems like such a G

  • @mattyoxide3650
    @mattyoxide3650 Před 4 lety +6

    That last one with the occasional double ups reminds of what Paul Gilbert does with his sequences. Keeps it interesting.

  • @lanceross3633
    @lanceross3633 Před 4 lety +1

    As a teenager I was playing rock...Nugent,Boston, Aerosmith. My guitar teacher gave me a lesson for Race with the Devil on a Spanish Highway... WOW!!! I had to learn it and it improved my playing immensely. Needless to say, I bought some of his albums and saw him playing live. Thanks for the lesson David.

  • @jean-louiscousineau754

    WOW ! ...Love that Les Paul !!!!!... Lucky you!!!!!!

  • @TLMuse
    @TLMuse Před 2 lety

    Well done! Al Di was my first "guitar god," after buying *Elegant Gypsy* when it first came out in 1977. I first saw him live a year or two later, in NY city; I still remember that show well! I moved to upstate NY in 1990, and hadn't seen him in concert since then, until last month (Sep 2021), when he performed in a nearby venue. It was my first live, in-person concert experience since the pandemic started (and Al's first tour since the pandemic start). An acoustic trio with two percussionists. What a show! More of his music goes over my head harmonically and melodically now than back in the 1970s, but I still love it. The man just never stops learning, evolving, and pushing the envelope of technique and compositional complexity-even when he's doing Beatles covers! -Tom

  • @edwincrain986
    @edwincrain986 Před 4 lety +8

    I never got into Al ...but I gotta say. I'm gonna recheck him now!

    • @uncleremus5046
      @uncleremus5046 Před 4 lety

      Land of the midnight sun, Casino, Elegant Gypsy, Splendido Hotel, KISS My Axe, & Rtf Romantic Warrior are his best works imo.

  • @uncleremus5046
    @uncleremus5046 Před 4 lety +5

    🍺’ski thanks for this. Al was my main influence to attain better technique. His muted picked runs just blew my mind back in the day! I was hoping seeing Romantic Warrior in the background previously this was coming.
    Just wanna add also check out when Frank Gambale later joined Return to Forever it’s just unbelievable!

  • @stratman006
    @stratman006 Před 4 lety

    Al D. Awesome. And nice job.

  • @ajaykumargoel9398
    @ajaykumargoel9398 Před 4 lety +3

    Thanks for covering so many fusion guys David! I love your lessons :)

    • @aylbdrmadison1051
      @aylbdrmadison1051 Před 4 lety +2

      What I love about David most, his influences and tastes are so widely varied, and I am also a huge fusion fan.

  • @joe800096
    @joe800096 Před 4 měsíci

    Thanks for doing this
    Al is one awesome player
    I grew up on Return to Forever just an amazing time in music

  • @MG-hx3ym
    @MG-hx3ym Před 2 lety +1

    Al Di Meola is the one current guy I really want to start doing more interviews on his history and experiences and guitar/gear/licks . The man is a historical, professional figure and I would love for some of his mind to be preserved in something formal. All we have now are a few really good productions like Rick Beato’s interview of him and the old REH instructional video. We have good performance videos. But other than a small handful of real professional interviews and footage they’re just random clips of something larger or we just can’t find it. I really want Al’s playing, technique, songs and biography to be preserved.

  • @MVos-md3rp
    @MVos-md3rp Před 4 lety

    No drugs were needed. The music was mind blowing because everything was outside the box. It took musicians 20 years to catch up. Having been there, I feel fortunate to be able to appreciate your take, very well done!

  • @caryverhalen
    @caryverhalen Před 4 lety +3

    Love the crazy Clarke phrase, very sick!

  • @pathaden
    @pathaden Před 4 lety +3

    Saw him last year here in San Francisco. He still has it all. Great Lakes today! Thank you for the inspiration and insight

  • @maxvoloshin_nefariousaquarius

    Awesome!

  • @brokenbread678
    @brokenbread678 Před rokem +2

    It’s crazy how many people don’t know the amount of influence Al Di Meola had on Zakk Wylde.

  • @mickfretless
    @mickfretless Před 11 měsíci

    good job, well done ! Nice to see insight into the Legend's' playing style/technique.

  • @tat2dlukydevl
    @tat2dlukydevl Před 4 lety +2

    Great video.. Al is awesome!! Thanks for sharing. peAce

  • @bmoraski
    @bmoraski Před 4 lety +2

    Sweet. Thanks

  • @Boomsterblak
    @Boomsterblak Před rokem

    love Al huge influence for me and many others

  • @BrentJJ
    @BrentJJ Před 4 lety +2

    You are speaking my language. Thx for sharing ☮

  • @AndalusianIrish
    @AndalusianIrish Před 4 lety

    It was cool to see that Return To Forever were on The Old Grey Whistle Test. It was an awesome music programme on the BBC. I know Zakk Wylde is a big fan of Al. I love Race With The Devil On Spanish Highway.

  • @guitarkis4969
    @guitarkis4969 Před rokem

    Every video, he plays these incredible licks (how does he learn to play them so well and quickly?) and then says "something like that." That is what I would say after practicing these for a year, but not David, please. Such great playing as always, LOVE your channel!

  • @joe800096
    @joe800096 Před 7 měsíci

    More Al DiMeola please. I probably wore the grooves off of the early Return to Forever albums in the 70's
    Thanks for your great reproductions of our guitar masters!

  • @yutumedia
    @yutumedia Před 3 lety +4

    Dude, you totally nailed his tone.

  • @voronOsphere
    @voronOsphere Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks for tackling this legend, David. I love the album "Romantic Warrior" by Return to Forever!

  • @leafamania1
    @leafamania1 Před 4 lety

    1983 Return to Forever reunion tour at Convocation Hall Toronto ... one of the most memorable shows I've ever seen

  • @zls9890
    @zls9890 Před 4 lety

    I remember having a brief jazz-fusion phase last year, and checking out Return to Forever. Changed my musical mind around a bit.

  • @emmittwine4159
    @emmittwine4159 Před 3 lety

    This was awesome ... thanks for sharing 🎸🎶✌🏽

  • @davidmcauliffe8692
    @davidmcauliffe8692 Před 4 lety

    I saw Al in the mid/late 80s. I had an Al Dimeola song/technique book that I asked him to sign. He seemed flattered to sign something like that. A very warm and generous person.

  • @guitarfan84
    @guitarfan84 Před 4 lety +1

    DiMeola is the grandaddy of modern shredders. Would love to see more lessons in future

  • @rodsdaytona
    @rodsdaytona Před 4 lety

    I'm fortunate to have met Al, and Zakk in Monterey, CA. in 18' @ Vai Academy. Had a blast listening to them both speak about this very thing. Zakk is absolutely kind and very generous to Al's influence.

  • @alberthilt
    @alberthilt Před 4 lety

    ROMANTIC WARRIOR!!!!
    What an album!
    Great stuff...Great musicians!
    I had a vinyl copy back in 76... just out of high school... ahhh... the 70's :)

  • @fusionfan6883
    @fusionfan6883 Před 4 lety

    Got the love the Al pastiche by Warren Cuccurrulo on Tinsel Town Rebellion 🎸😀 And what people often overlook about Al is that he was and is an incredible composer too, creating his own brand of highly melodic Latin influenced rock fusion. Al has often said that he is primarily a composer, and people will note that, unlike many shredders from the 80s, all his solos and shredding is integral to the melody and the composition. Despite the high regard he is held in, I honestly believe he has not received the full respect he deserves because of his gunslinger reputation in the 70s. He is equally groundbreaking, if not more so, on the acoustic guitar. And for those who don’t know his side man work, check out Stomu Yamashta’s Go Live in Paris album where Al plays some beautifully crafted and succinct solos. A true genius for sure!

  • @BluesInSeattle
    @BluesInSeattle Před 4 lety

    You are right. Al is a legend. People don't know a lot about him for some reason, but he's like a demi-god to me. Such an amazing technique and ability with music theory that it bless my mind.

  • @Cigarsnguitars
    @Cigarsnguitars Před 3 lety

    Al DiMeola was a player I listened to when learning to play. What a monster. His solo work was tremendous. I truly loved the work he did as a trio with John McLaughlin and Paco de Lucía. "Friday Night in San Francisco" is one of the greatest acoustic performance anywhere. All 3 brought their "A game" for that one. As usual David, you’ve brought some great insight and focus on one of my favorite guitarists growing up. I really enjoy your site. Thanks! 😎🤘

  • @joedellepiane
    @joedellepiane Před rokem

    great video

  • @cricri8022
    @cricri8022 Před 4 lety +1

    Well..I meet him after a concert in France in late 90's... He gave me his pick too... And I lost it... 😕.

  • @godbyone
    @godbyone Před měsícem

    My friend. S family owns a huge music store in70s 80s venemam in Maryland. And he asked who would I like to play with I said Al de meola. He actually hired to play the store. And I got to sit in with him it was crazy great. I bought throw away camera s. Gave them to my girlfriend to take pic. She took 2 pic. I still have it had video. But lost over the years

  • @keithraaum9559
    @keithraaum9559 Před 4 lety +1

    Another great one! Al Di Meola is a serious favorite of mine. Would love to see another 3 For All with licks from Casino or Electric Rendezvous.

  • @TheLochs
    @TheLochs Před 4 lety +6

    The "cheat" method sounds just as good.

  • @MarkAnderson-iv1zt
    @MarkAnderson-iv1zt Před 4 lety

    Your videos remind me of sitting with a friend playing and talking about our favorite players.

  • @timpenfield5
    @timpenfield5 Před 4 lety

    Awesome, Great way to start my Saturday. Learned about the ,,, mutola

  • @ericfurst6091
    @ericfurst6091 Před 3 lety

    Golden dawn suite is my favourite song of his.

  • @rorylisbon4723
    @rorylisbon4723 Před 4 lety

    Keep Rockin David. Your enthusiasm, appreciation and songs from your playlist are the best. Nice one on Al tonight, "Friday Night (not) in San Francisco" tonight. Love your channel.

  • @blaskode
    @blaskode Před 11 měsíci

    I love Big Al.

  • @dadduorp
    @dadduorp Před 3 lety

    Your channel somehow slipped into my feed and I have to tell you HOW MUCH I ENJOYED IT! Even though I'm a keyboardist and lean toward jazz/jazz fusion, your explanations and the subjects you cover are super cool. And that's not to mention your killer chops!

  • @ScotchGambino
    @ScotchGambino Před 8 měsíci

    Great lesson. Would love to see a lesson on some of his insane fast runs from Friday Night in SF. Those figure 8 like runs where the notes spin around and then descend.

  • @innocentoctave
    @innocentoctave Před 4 lety +1

    Di Meola was a very technically advanced player in the mid-70s. His habit of picking every note, and - as he insisted - alternate-picking everything, even at very high tempos, was intimidating to other players as well as impressive to audiences. Nonetheless, I've always found him rather sterile as a musician: very fast and accurate, certainly, but not much soul - like a very fast typist. Of the people who were around in the fusion and jazz-rock scenes at the time, I find almost everyone else more listenable and imaginative: McLaughlin, Metheny and Holdsworth in particular.
    Di Meola deserves full credit for being one of the players who raised the bar for all electric guitar players by demonstrating that it was possible to play as rapidly and precisely as a horn player or pianist. I think it was left to others to show more than just speed. The shredders, who think that speed and technical difficulty are the entire point of playing the guitar, are also part of Di Meola's legacy.

    • @jfo3000
      @jfo3000 Před 4 lety

      I have to respectfully disagree. Al had sublime vibrato, in-tune Santana-like bends with no vibrato, and beautiful fat tone with beautiful distortion. Those bends just burned with that distortion.
      I, and others have agreed with me, that Al was like Carlos, but with loads of technique and jazz/theory knowledge too.
      Listen to the first minute of "Romantic Warrior" (the song), on good speakers or headphones.
      A teenage master.

  • @han36solo
    @han36solo Před 4 lety

    Wow, sweet licks David! Thanks great lesson.

  • @kevmet84
    @kevmet84 Před 4 lety

    😎 tri-lick episode.
    Al Di Meola definitely would be one guitarist that is so often overlooked for his influence on the musical ideas, e.g., 'shredding.' Even if not direct, he influenced a lot more guitarists more than many of them realize. I enjoy hearing what he has to say about new gear that he's tried, as he has a different from the typical 'rocker' or 'metal' guitarists' perspective as to how he may or may not use said gear. And, I still enjoy his guitar work nonetheless as well.

  • @sbrave
    @sbrave Před 3 lety

    Romantic Warrior is still ridiculous playing in 2021!!

  • @Music_Beyond
    @Music_Beyond Před 3 lety

    The first 4 albums of Al di Meola are insane.

  • @VictorJust
    @VictorJust Před 4 lety

    awesome work as always, huge thanks!

  • @caseyjazz7256
    @caseyjazz7256 Před 4 lety

    Love Al man been a fan since I was a teenager. There is a performance with Csaba Toth Bagi Balkan Union thats is sooooo good, it really shows Al's smooth improv ability. Great stuff.

  • @guitarguy382
    @guitarguy382 Před rokem

    I saw Al on July 7th, 1978, at the Dr. Pepper Music Festival in Central Park NY.
    Opening act: UK.
    Their guitarist was some guy we'd never heard of: Allan Holdsworth.
    Ticket price: $4.50.
    45 years ago..........*sigh*..........

  • @chrisb2535
    @chrisb2535 Před 2 měsíci

    That Pentatonic Speed Run sounds a lot like the final run in the No More Tears solo (and of course, you mentioned Zakk Wylde).

  • @mkraif
    @mkraif Před 2 lety +1

    Very interesting even if the master would advise to pick all the notes in the sixes (just like MAB in speed kills) rather than using a pull-out which he considers as "cheating".
    Thanks for your useful course.

  • @jesqueleto
    @jesqueleto Před 4 lety +7

    How about some chord play of spastic ink

  • @raybbaby
    @raybbaby Před rokem

    Wow, my like flipped it from 999 to 1k. That was super cool! 🤘🤘

  • @leechild4655
    @leechild4655 Před 4 lety +7

    electric rendevous is a killer album

    • @leechild4655
      @leechild4655 Před 4 lety +1

      i remember saw him in a club (cardies) in houston in `81. he came out wearing a cowboy hat and said `....shhhit,...this is texas, yall say `shit` alot huh........shhhit. we all laughed.

    • @leechild4655
      @leechild4655 Před 4 lety +1

      also remember him hitting this one particularly fast articulated run and i almost fell down while saying WHOA pretty loud. i may have become an attraction from my reaction if only for a couple seconds.

    • @michaelthompson9070
      @michaelthompson9070 Před 4 lety

      That was my intro to Al....completely blew my mind!

    • @leechild4655
      @leechild4655 Před 4 lety

      @@michaelthompson9070 i can hear the first 5 notes, and the 5 note flourish, then the rhythmn starts churning. hell ya

  • @ttswan
    @ttswan Před 4 lety +7

    OK, I never really cared for Di Meola, saw him once in early 80's, thought his playing was over-mentalized and lacked Soul - still do, tho see his deep technical chops. I come from the Hendrix, early Clapton, Trower, Dupree etc Urban Delta Blues school so it's not hard to understand. But David somehow, somehow, you made him interesting and even a little intriguing - I forgive you for this.

    • @aylbdrmadison1051
      @aylbdrmadison1051 Před 4 lety +3

      It's all just different tools to build whatever you like. I come from the school of thought that they are all useful and I have no inclination to gimp what I am able to create by sticking myself into a certain category, because that only would limit what I am capable of emoting. That's why I love Hendrix, Gilmour, Di Meola and Holdsworth etc. Not saying anything is wrong with your approach, I'm a huge fan of both simple and complex music, but for me music is more colorful, more dynamic, and more expressive when neither is the focus and instead the music itself is the focus.

  • @lovemusiceveryday
    @lovemusiceveryday Před 3 lety

    Watch the concert here on you tube and let me know what you think, great sound quality for 85 as well

  • @guitarmemoir
    @guitarmemoir Před 4 lety

    Good call. Romantic Warrior is still a fave.

  • @pavellopatin6898
    @pavellopatin6898 Před 3 lety

    Al Di Meola !!!!....

  • @mkilner
    @mkilner Před 4 lety

    Race with the Devil.....still looking for my jaw!! 😄👏🏻🎼🎸

  • @tommartling2473
    @tommartling2473 Před 4 lety

    Thanks as always. More Do Meola. Maybe some Spanish shred stuff on his solo albums. I know you will do more an Al. Cheers

  • @dwill1970
    @dwill1970 Před 4 lety

    Dimeola Luv luvs

  • @owenmcgee8496
    @owenmcgee8496 Před 4 lety

    cool series of videos by the way. how about Dickey Betts? (Melissa, Jessica, Liz Reed etc.) - the most tuneful of the old southern rockers, perhaps

  • @claymor8241
    @claymor8241 Před 3 měsíci

    That thing you do on the triplets of picking the first two notes and not the last is a very Malmsteen way of doing it.

  • @Yngsatchvai
    @Yngsatchvai Před 4 lety

    I love when he puts that Ovation in his hands. Can you work on some acoustic licks sometime. Rik Emmett, Al Di Meola, Tommy Emmanuel?

  • @rickgrebenik9250
    @rickgrebenik9250 Před 2 lety

    He's human, nothing that can't be done,

  • @owenmcgee8496
    @owenmcgee8496 Před 4 lety

    To me, Al's Columbia studio albums are maybe the most convincing instrumental rock albums I've heard. If one doesn't allow oneself to be put off by the goofy/funk sounds on Romantic Warrior and listen to it quite a bit, it really works well as an album, like a six tune suite by four different composers that nevertheless works as a single thematic piece. And yet it has also got the jazz spontaneity factor in spades, which is missing from most of Al's solo work. Tis the closest Chick Corea came to making a rock record.

  • @meteor09
    @meteor09 Před 4 lety

    I'm somewhat new to Al Di Meola as well as lead playing. I'm definitely going to learn these lick. Any recommendations of where to go from here learning from Al Di Meola?

  • @christopherhickman3579

    You should make a video on songs to learn that might give players something to glean from like maybe songs you recommend learning or that can teach you things fundamentally that you think are important examples of things we learn from the lessons on the channel applied in a song ... I know learning some Alice in chains songs gave me some good light bulb moments for being weary of time signatures and no more tears kinda taught me some hand synchronization in the solo section !

  • @Ety95
    @Ety95 Před 3 lety +1

    Great lesson as usual! What pickups that lp has?

  • @simonwarner3601
    @simonwarner3601 Před 3 lety

    Just found your channel. Love the content. I am a huge fan of Al's work with Paco. Just curious, is that the amp you are using in the background. If so, what is it?

  • @soulpatrolhawaii5409
    @soulpatrolhawaii5409 Před 4 lety +1

    EVH influenced by DiMeola? Never heard that before. Know EVH loves Holdsworth and emulated some of his legato hammer/pull style, never heard he liked DiMeola with the staccato fast picking style

    • @SeanRosati
      @SeanRosati Před 4 lety

      He’s mentioned it before. I’d guess it influence eddies fast tremolo picking runs.

  • @mlasch1478
    @mlasch1478 Před 2 lety

    Hey there, Dave. I had almost that same guitar that I got around '82 '83. I really really like your teachings and videos. Somehow I got unsubscribed but am back. Tell me the details on your Black LP. Any clue the year of it? OH yeah, and MAN if I could ever get my fingers to move as effortlessly as yours. Thanks for giving me inspiration to learn all my favorite players like AL.

  • @scatdaddy3790
    @scatdaddy3790 Před rokem

    Great video. What guitar and pick ups are you using?

  • @user-qq2it8yw4v
    @user-qq2it8yw4v Před 3 lety

    👍

  • @SGED392
    @SGED392 Před 2 měsíci

    Didn’t know EVH was influenced by AL ..I know he love Jeff Beck and Holdworth

  • @ARodgers777
    @ARodgers777 Před 4 lety

    I picked up the guitar because of him and Steve Vai , Could make more lessons based on Al ?? Thanks a ton man

  • @glennackerman6171
    @glennackerman6171 Před rokem

    How about another 3 licks from Elegant Gypsy?

  • @patrickkish6662
    @patrickkish6662 Před 4 lety +2

    🍎

  • @robertmitchell89
    @robertmitchell89 Před 4 lety

    Request for Phil Keaggy. Have you ever listened to him.? He is an amazing player.

  • @egancho0503
    @egancho0503 Před rokem

    Aldimeola says in the instructional video that he dislikes pulling off and hammering on and doesn't use them. "This explanation is ridiculous."

  • @cyrilstut
    @cyrilstut Před 4 lety

    Dave do you know Patrick Rondat (french guitarist)?
    He was influenced by Al.
    Perhaps one day you cloud do a vidéo about is licks 😍

  • @aylbdrmadison1051
    @aylbdrmadison1051 Před 4 lety +2

    Awesome, more Di Meola!
    Also, a request: *Stimpy Lockjaw.* czcams.com/video/sfvtVmucdz8/video.html
    I realize they are not famous, but they really should be. The guitarist is from the band Ever Forthright though, and they are popular. But his work in Stimpy far outclasses that imo. They're one of my favorite modern bands and brutally underrated (and the term "underrated" is being used correctly for once, lols).
    Anyway, thanks for what you do. Along with _MusicTheoryForGuitar,_ you both have all the bases covered and are easily my two favorite channels.

    • @LateNightLessons
      @LateNightLessons  Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you so much!
      And I totally know Ever Forthright and have a few of their songs on iTunes, so I'll totally check out this link and Stimpy Lockjaw!
      Thanks and rock on!
      : )

    • @aylbdrmadison1051
      @aylbdrmadison1051 Před 4 lety

      @@LateNightLessons Yays, that makes me so happy. You love pretty much all of the players I love too, so I'm fairly certain you won't be disappointed.
      Thanks again for all the amazing uploads too!