This drummer knows the song. It's almost like it's Tom Brechtelin, oh wait, it is! Best band IMO the Blue Line trio. Jimmy Earl is obv a master but the tapping vibe of Roscoe Beck was just awesome.
Daniel Kent, you’re right, it is a wrong note (unless he’s doing his eric dolphy thang!). You meant at 3:09 where he hits an “A” [be aware I’m playing this in Ab as I’m tuned down a tad] on the V chord (Eb7) which makes it a b5/#11 = a “wrong” note. Yes, even the greats are fallible.
Oh, nobody is perfect and I heard Robben grabbing next to it a few times. And as I met Robben being a humble guy he would never claim for ALWAYS being perfect - but it pretty annoys him:-). Yet, in this case there was no wrong note - all notes Robben plays are played intentionally, no mistake. The turnaround starts at 3:07 and ends at around 3:12. The progression is: Eb Gb Ab Gb sliding from A into A# Ab Gb Eb Db B Bb Ab Bb Ab F Eb light bent up B Ab Eb Db B C Ab in detail: Eb Gb Ab Gb Eb-minor blues scale sliding from A into A# slide in from A to A# - A being flattened 5th in Eb-minor Blues Scale Ab Gb Eb Db B Eb-minor Blues scale Bb creating tension with - Eb-minor Blues scale Ab Bb Ab Eb-minor Bluese Scale F Eb light bent up B Ab-major Blues Scale Ab Eb Db Ab-minor Blues Scale B C Ab resolving with - Ab-major Blues scale (explicitely talking about Blues Scale and not pentatonic) @U pu0208 - all blues, not even Jazz
This drummer knows the song. It's almost like it's Tom Brechtelin, oh wait, it is! Best band IMO the Blue Line trio. Jimmy Earl is obv a master but the tapping vibe of Roscoe Beck was just awesome.
Getting tired of talking is okay, because Robben Ford lets the guitar do the talking.
I was there
Wow I've never heard him hit a wrong note before (3:06). Makes him human I guess.
Sounded wrong but still cool!
@@trygveknudsen3809 All musicians know that grin that says 'Oops!'
Sorry, no wrong note here. He is playing the nineth - in Blues and Jazz a well known way to create tension. Not wrong, at all.
Daniel Kent, you’re right, it is a wrong note (unless he’s doing his eric dolphy thang!). You meant at 3:09 where he hits an “A” [be aware I’m playing this in Ab as I’m tuned down a tad] on the V chord (Eb7) which makes it a b5/#11 = a “wrong” note. Yes, even the greats are fallible.
Oh, nobody is perfect and I heard Robben grabbing next to it a few times. And as I met Robben being a humble guy he would never claim for ALWAYS being perfect - but it pretty annoys him:-).
Yet, in this case there was no wrong note - all notes Robben plays are played intentionally, no mistake.
The turnaround starts at 3:07 and ends at around 3:12. The progression is:
Eb Gb Ab Gb sliding from A into A# Ab Gb Eb Db B Bb
Ab Bb Ab F Eb light bent up B Ab Eb Db B C Ab
in detail:
Eb Gb Ab Gb Eb-minor blues scale
sliding from A into A# slide in from A to A# - A being flattened 5th in Eb-minor Blues Scale
Ab Gb Eb Db B Eb-minor Blues scale
Bb creating tension with - Eb-minor Blues scale
Ab Bb Ab Eb-minor Bluese Scale
F Eb light bent up B Ab-major Blues Scale
Ab Eb Db Ab-minor Blues Scale
B C Ab resolving with - Ab-major Blues scale
(explicitely talking about Blues Scale and not pentatonic)
@U pu0208 - all blues, not even Jazz
Organ player is Neil Larsen?