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Black Orpheus- played by Jesse Boyd

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Uploaded by on May 4, 2007

Jesse 's CD is now available on CDBABY
http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/boydjesse

Jesse Boyd, bass. Steve Blailock, guitar. Devon Scott, drums. 29 April 2007 @ 528 Jazz Club, Harrahs Hotel.
New Orleans, LA
Leave comments in the guestbook at:
http://www.jesseboydmusic.com
http://www.myspace.com/jesseboydmusic

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  • likes, 15 dislikes

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  • he's ashamed of being a guitarist

  • its not electric there is a mic connected to the bass

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  • a little messy. doesn't sound too cohesive as a unit...

  • @potatoXmosher

    after advancing in your time on the guitar, you will stop this rigid differentiation between chord forms that use a barre and those that use open strings... instead of banging on those booming 6 string barre chords start playing multiple 3 and 4 string chord forms per measure, connected by voice leading... also, use chords that employ a barre AND open strings... all triads can be played on just three strings: DGB or GBE - allowing the E & A strings to sound the bass line...

  • This is an good example of a head nodding rhythm. Though they jazz, they bounce. -- It sounds pleasant and finger snappy. You other guys (critics) just throw the theory out the window and just play Jazz , that's what it is, JAZZ. Good Job Boys.

  • @ericoschmitt

    You could have said that you got it three posts ago. If you take the B pattern from fifth string second fret and move it to a different fret, it's a barred chord. If you take the B pattern from sixth string seventh fret, it's a barred chord too. Anything other than a folk chord is a barred chord.

  • @potatoXmosher yes.. you made me understand what a barred chord is like.. 3 posts ago. but whats your point?.. guitar is still not as uniform as it seems, since most chords have at least 3 ways to be played, depending on the string you start it.

    i think the hole discussion was over instruments with uniform fingering independent of the key the music is, and where you are at the instrument, or the octave you are playing, would be easier to play. at least i think they are

  • @ericoschmitt

    Okay, I'll try explaining it differently. I'm not trying to trivialize your knowledge, but bear with me. An open chord is when you are playing one or more open strings with the fretted strings. would be like G with the root on sixth string third fret, or C on fifth string third fret. A barred chord is any other chord you can imagine. B major, fifth string second fret, is barred. D major, fourth string open fret, is not.

  • @potatoXmosher i know that man.. i have played guitar for 6 years and stoped. yet the pattern on one string is not the same in the others. barred chords exist too in any kind of tuning, but unless the interval between strings is always the same, the fingering will change depending on the string you start it. thats why i tuned it in fourths when i played it

  • @flavio2727 i have, many times, one for each i have posted a response... at least we are not discussing religion or making justin bieber related jokes... :D

  • @ericoschmitt

    But if you take the pattern for B major on 5 string and second fret and move it up to the third fret, you get C major. Move it up to the fifth and it's D major. That's a barred chord.

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