Jambalaya solo Tony Peluso / by Dadula
Uploader Comments (xenoncitydottk)
All Comments (10)
-
perfect! nou coment! zaustavlja dah!
-
I can still remember hearing Goodbye to Love for the first time around 1974. Somebody told me the Carpenters were good. Peluso starts playing his first solo - just playing along with the vocal line - pretty mediocre I thought. Then suddenly Peluso takes off and my jaw hit the floor.
A truly inspirational guitar solo. Fuzz on a ballard? Unheard of then! Made the song.
Had the priviledge of seing him live in Birmingham, complete with his foot in plaster.
-
Svaka čast! Kratko ali slatko!
-
I am really astonished after hearing such a good solo,,,sounds like original itself, even clearer sound (for my taste) . Congratulations for the guitarist, you should post more music on Youtube and , who knows, make a CD with your own music. Well done !!! And many thanks for submiting Jambalaya Backing Track, now I can practice as well :)
-
thanks , Philip from Dublin, always good to hear a great player like yourself, I had something like this pedal in the late 70's, I am going to get a new one, your English is very good ( don't wish to sound like a smart ass saying this )
-
thats fantastic playing, really enjoyed it , have you any idea what distortion Tony used on Goodbye to Love which is also a brilliant solo, regards from Dublin
-
super !
Thank`s Howard. Tony Peluso for the solo on The Carpenters' Goodbye to Love, used by V1 Big Muff.
This is the first well known use of the Big Muff on a recording, and probably the first use of a fuzz guitar solo on a love song ballad. It is also one of the earliest examples of what became known as a power ballad. A Gibson guitar and the Big Muff were recorded directly into the recording board with no amplifier.
Best regards from Srbija
xenoncitydottk 10 months ago
Thank you
xenoncitydottk 11 months ago