Jim Bruce Blues Guitar - My Baby's Gone - Brownie McGhee Cover

submitted by JimBruceGuitar on 04/19/17 1

Blues Guitar Lessons play-blues-guitar.eu/lessons Acoustic Blues Travellers , Ken Mayall (harmonica) and Jim Bruce (guitar)play 'My Baby's Gone'. Learning how to play blues finger picking guitar is a two pronged battle. First off, we need to train our motor skills to competently perform the music. Once we know where to put the fingers of both hands, its just a case of practicing for many hours a week. It is that a professional guitarist has approximately 10 000 hours of practice time under his belt. Tommy Emmanuel once guessed that he had played around one hundred thousand hours in his life, which adds up to about 5 hours each day, every single day! Guitar players often say that progress comes in levels - you seem to be stuck at one level of competence for a long time, and then it seems as though you jump up a notch. Of course, the improvement is because of regular practice. Most people have watched excellent guitarists perform and been completely bored after 5 mins, just because the music lacks feeling - it just doesn't mean anything. From time to time, technical ability and feeling will come together in a certain guitarist, and then we see some magic. Naturally, everything is relative, and guitar picking is no exception. Although Clapton is considered a genius, his acoustic finger picking technique appears quite basic when compared to Tommy Emmanuel, who can really play anything. Sometimes we feel totally stuck and need something to lift us over the 'wall'. Frequently, the blockage is strictly psychological. An old playing partner of mine left the district for a year or so, and we spoke by telephone from time to time. One time he told me he could now play 'Police Dog Blues' by Blind Blake, which is a formidable song to play properly. Up to that time, I could never play it. My old partner was always a lesser guitarist, and I was really competitive, and so I learned it inside one week. When he returned, I told him that I could also play Blake's 'Police Dog Blues' as well. He laughed and exclaimed, "I can't play it - too tough. I was just joking." There's a lesson there. McGhee didn't restrict his skills to show settings. The wheels lastly came off the collaboration of McGhee and Terry throughout the mid-'70s. Long's primary blues artist, Blind Boy Fuller, passed away in 1941, speeding up Okeh issuance of a few of McGhee's early efforts under the sobriquet of Blind Boy Fuller No. 2. McGhee cut a moving homage tune, "Death of Blind Boy Fuller," quickly later. McGhee's 3rd marathon session for OKeh in 1941 paired him for the very first time on shellac with whooping harpist Terry for "Workingman's Blues." Towards completion, they chose not to share a phase with one another (Terry would have fun with another guitar player, then McGhee would do a solo), not to mention interact. Among McGhee's last performance looks came at the 1995 Chicago Blues Festival; his voice was a little less robust than normal, however no less moving, and his abundant, full-bodied acoustic guitar work cut through the cool night air with alacrity. His like will not pass by doing this once again. Towards the end, they chose not to share a phase with one another (Terry would play with another guitar player, then McGhee would do a solo), let alone interact. The set transplanted in New York in 1942. They rapidly got gotten in touch with the city's blossoming folk music circuit, dealing with Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger, and Leadbelly. After completion of World War II, McGhee started to tape-record most prolifically, both with and without Terry, for a myriad of R&B labels: Savoy (where he cut "Robbie Doby Boogie" in 1948 and "New Baseball Boogie" the next year), Alert, London, Derby, Sittin' in With, and its Jax subsidiary in 1952, Jackson, Bobby Robinson's Red Robin logo design (1953), Dot, and Harlem, prior to crossing over to the folk audience throughout the late '50s with Terry at his side. jim bruce, jim bruce blues guitar, jim bruce cover, blues music my baby has gone, bruce guitar, blues guitar cover, джим брюс блюз blues for my baby acostic guutar browie mcghee cover blues music my baby was gone blues guitaris picking up moore muddy jesus jim bruce on stage the blue have a baby-brownie mc ghee my baby's gone guitar lesson jim bruce blues day my babys gone blues my baby's gone be my baby cover guitar Related Video Titles: Shaun Loughrey - My Baby's Gone Is this is the best GUITAR PLAYER in Nashville? Brownie McGhee - ( g, voc ( My Last Suit) Telephone Blues "Baby's Gone Blues", Performed By John Cruz With Patti Maxine www.play-blues-guitar.eu/blues-guitar-articles-vintage-v300.php

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