As someone that's played acoustic for 25yrs and just starting to learn lead.. this is so informative and rewarding at the same time. Brilliant for me in particular.. letting loose my inner BB King 😂 👌
This takes a look inside one's heart and soul! You go deep and find what the real you needs to say. Like so many of the other jammers are attesting to, it's a jam that could go on all night if you let it. It's a gentle can opener for the deepest voice inside. I absolutely love it! My inner child waits for a bridge of some sort as there are some passages waiting that need it to come tumbling out. The original song many say this is based on, probably didn't have a bridge so there's not one here, but if I had any suggestion at all, I'd ask you guys to incorporate some kind of bridge to break things up a little. Not sure what that would be but something from a Gospel blues songbook. This is not a critique in the least! Just a reflection of what I get emotionally from the progression. It truly is killer! Thanks!
You all prolly dont care but does someone know a way to log back into an Instagram account? I was stupid forgot my account password. I would appreciate any tips you can give me.
@Maximo Briggs Thanks so much for your reply. I found the site through google and im in the hacking process now. I see it takes a while so I will reply here later with my results.
Fantastic been trying to be Peter green for a long long time and this is perfect to try that slow weeping crying tone that pg perfected. God I miss that man
Paul Houghton I saw him in Glasgow 20year ago. The band called themselves the splinter group. Unfortunately Peter can’t play a lot of the amazing stuff he made up in the 60s . Luckily his pal can! Tickets were around £6 . Best £6 I ever spent! Someone shouted out a request of ‘need your love so bad’ Peter replied “thank u very much” ! . I hope he’s alright and still gigging but most of all I wish him good health.
Maybe it's been said already, but this tune originated with Little Willie John in the late 1950s (correct date I think). His is the best version ever. But he had a terribly tragic life, dying in prison. Also, this (great) progression is much like Please Come Home for Christmas by Charles Brown, later covered by the Eagles.
The Blues were born in Africa! Rock and Roll, Jazz and Swing in America. Many nations have had input - many ballads follow a pattern laid down in Germany in the late 1600's! The British input is also massive pro rata. A lil biddy island of Europe has had a contemporary domination of music style that began with of course, the Fab Four. They started with "British Blues" and "British every other genre" - Just my 4 penneth/cents worth!
Well you have your channel as one of the most innovative and creative guitarists to have ever played. Now the Blues aspect of it, they did copy alot of songs from American Blues artists, BUT songs like Stairway To Heaven etc were masterpieces. Other styles that came out of England were like that of Clapton's. John Mayall & the Bluesbreaks with EC (first album), look it up. Then came Taylor who did what Clapton did, but added some new licks, and the same when Green came in after Taylor.
Glad you liked moore's version man.His vocal and obviously, his playing held my attention that's for sure. I have been trying to top the tone and playability of my SG and I have finally realized I can't. Except the one in this vid. "SOLD gibson customshop historic '61 SG Standard Korina" This has be the sweetest SG I have ever heard. Tell me what you think. Hope your gig with your dad brings down the house with that song . Rock on!
To be fair to UK blues acts, Cream always (and literally) paid their dues, giving the correct songwriting credits and paying royalties - very poignantly, it was the royalties from Cream's cover of "I'm So Glad" that paid for Skip James' funeral.
That is a bold statement considering all music has changed/evolved in the past hundred years. Its what influenced those bands that made them play the way they did and it might have been an american influence but to say there was no innovation in england is just ignorance. The uk is the birthplace of heavy metal, i just refer to black sabbath for innovation, started as a heavy blues band and look where that went. Thats like saying no american band took any influence from british punk etc etc
That is very good point. To play it is to know it. Yes, I'll bet that musicmaster rocked. The V neck is awesome. My 91' strat plus has the c neck. It's so so. With the v neck you can wrap your thumb around it twice. LOL. Man, does that happen. I was at G ctr. spotted a 2012 american tele w/rosewood fretb. Dude,it played like butter. The C shape neck wasn't a issue with this one. Came back the next day and it was gone. It is rare to find a v neck guitar at G ctr on the rack.LOL.Rock on!!
@guitar2adam It is, yes! It's also the chord progression for Fleetwood Mac's 'Need Your Love So Bad' from the late 60s - John Mayer completely took the chords from that song. I think it's actually an old gospel-blues standard chord sequence. I've never found out if it's actually credited to one person.
thats not what he's claiming, this track is clearly similar to a lot of the british blues stuff that was happening in the 60's such as john mayall and the blues breakers and what not... he is not at all saying that the british had anything to do with the origins of blues. this is a song made in the style of the 60's blues revival that was popularized by british bands. americans started the blues, the brits made it contemporary and popularised it in the 60s. simple.
im not really a fan of john mayer or anything i dont know any of his music but i have heard him play guitar and to be honest hes probably better than most of you dickfarts that replied to this comment
hey gibbie, From you name I will bet your a loyal gibson fan. I too, dig gibsons, I love pauls, but I just couldn't get comfortable with them. I love my vintage modded Sg standard. It was my first and it is my go to axe. Man, I love the blues, blues rock and classic rock. Gotta keep it alive!! LOL! It's funny, the cat that made this vid states it's not Peter G. and I didn't notice he that till after I made the comment. LOL. It's a great song. Try checking out Gary Moore's verison. It's sick.
***** I too just alternate between major and minor blues scales, and get by, but chasing the chords can be even more rewarding. You can watch a video of me soloing to this track here..... ua-cam.com/video/H9qzEwR7MEg/v-deo.html
1971SuperLead If you are chasing the chords, don't chase the BM7 'cos that chord is wrong! You should play Bm7 or, Bm instead, and play their respective scales, arpeggios, or both over them... Try dorian, or B minor pentatonic over the Bm7...
1971SuperLead My mind would explode if I tried to apply a correlating scale for each chord! I just think of major/minor scales etc and focus on 'hearing', and then hopefully hitting, the right chord tones. It makes for much more musical results when I play, personally.
Nacho Sada Thank you, but what are you saying exactly? Is there a difference between a BM7 and a Bm7? It's my understanding that both are B Minor 7th chords. The B7 is the B Major 7. Were you thinking the BM7 meant B MAJOR 7th?
p.s. It is interesting, humorous or perhaps ironic that we have been referred to as "two nations separated by a common language"! I think its fair to say that the origins of music are as diverse as the origin of genetic strains. America have always been particularly good at unself-conscious musical delivery whereas we Brits took a while to catch up. - The likes of Peter Green and Jimmy Page and Clapton being also at the vanguard of the Brit Blues approach. - "and curse Sir Walter Raleigh......"!
I had the pleasure of seeing Peter Green here in Glasgow, Scotland in the 90s. He didn’t write the song but definitely made it his own.
still a very very enjoyable track to jam to, after all these years. Hats off
As someone that's played acoustic for 25yrs and just starting to learn lead.. this is so informative and rewarding at the same time. Brilliant for me in particular.. letting loose my inner BB King 😂 👌
best blue back track i swear this is it. man i got to tell you i play blue like i never did before,
Not only good for jamming but great for harmonica jam also . Thanks.
This takes a look inside one's heart and soul! You go deep and find what the real you needs to say. Like so many of the other jammers are attesting to, it's a jam that could go on all night if you let it. It's a gentle can opener for the deepest voice inside. I absolutely love it!
My inner child waits for a bridge of some sort as there are some passages waiting that need it to come tumbling out. The original song many say this is based on, probably didn't have a bridge so there's not one here, but if I had any suggestion at all, I'd ask you guys to incorporate some kind of bridge to break things up a little. Not sure what that would be but something from a Gospel blues songbook.
This is not a critique in the least! Just a reflection of what I get emotionally from the progression. It truly is killer! Thanks!
Need your love so bad, easily one of my fav blues numbers, cheers for this.
Feeling the Peter Green vibes
Outstanding 12 bar backing track, I could wear out my harps on this. Thanks a lot.
12 bars 🤣
Really digging the emotion of these Jams!
absolutley the finest backing track out there for melodic blues..
The British are coming! And they are bringing a revamped blues sound with them. The Blues is alive! The blues lives on!!
Ok fine, I'm 6 years late finding this but all I can say is . . . . . Another broken heart and I'm lovin' it.
Back in the sixties the British wanted to play the blues really bad. They did too.
I must agree, probably one of the best most inspiring backing tracks on youtube. Thankyou!
Very nice Procol Harum vibe you are giving off of this!
One of the absolute best blues backing tracks I have ever heard..
Thanks man:)
You all prolly dont care but does someone know a way to log back into an Instagram account?
I was stupid forgot my account password. I would appreciate any tips you can give me.
@Nelson Princeton instablaster :)
@Maximo Briggs Thanks so much for your reply. I found the site through google and im in the hacking process now.
I see it takes a while so I will reply here later with my results.
@Maximo Briggs It did the trick and I finally got access to my account again. Im so happy!
Thank you so much you saved my ass !
@Nelson Princeton happy to help xD
just found your channel absolutely love it ..right up my street
GREAT...SO PURE & PERFECT.......THANKS A LOT FOR SHARING........
Lordy lordy... this groove really makes you reach for it. Make you think and plan ahead... which is good for the soul.
Fantastic been trying to be Peter green for a long long time and this is perfect to try that slow weeping crying tone that pg perfected. God I miss that man
Paul Houghton I saw him in Glasgow 20year ago. The band called themselves the splinter group. Unfortunately Peter can’t play a lot of the amazing stuff he made up in the 60s . Luckily his pal can! Tickets were around £6 . Best £6 I ever spent! Someone shouted out a request of ‘need your love so bad’ Peter replied “thank u very much” ! . I hope he’s alright and still gigging but most of all I wish him good health.
Broke a string doing a face pucker bend on this one! Thanks for sharing it! :)
Super track! Sounded a lot like Peter Green to me.
Maybe it's been said already, but this tune originated with Little Willie John in the late 1950s (correct date I think). His is the best version ever. But he had a terribly tragic life, dying in prison. Also, this (great) progression is much like Please Come Home for Christmas by Charles Brown, later covered by the Eagles.
Thanks,man for this info!! 👍😀
whoa i put this in my practice folder forever ago and forgot about it until tonight. It has a great "drown in my own tears" vibe.
one of the best jam tracks of ever time on youtube ..... ;9)
Great track - thank you ! . God help us if we take so many gifts for granted .
This is Peter Green's "I need your love so bad"
Thanx a lot ! distributes to the dynamics of sensations...
Works really well with A minor over the D#dim and the last E, and then A major for everything else.
The Blues were born in Africa! Rock and Roll, Jazz and Swing in America. Many nations have had input - many ballads follow a pattern laid down in Germany in the late 1600's! The British input is also massive pro rata. A lil biddy island of Europe has had a contemporary domination of music style that began with of course, the Fab Four. They started with "British Blues" and "British every other genre" - Just my 4 penneth/cents worth!
this is a great track to write lyrics to thanks for posting
Nice backing track for major scales. Thanks ... also has an "Just Ain't My Cross to Bear" vibe
please come home for christmas kick ass song to start warming up for the season
Great backing track. I have had lots of fun with it. great one to practise to and try and improve
These are great, Thank You.
I Need Your Love So Bad - Fleetwood Mac.
Man I love this progression. It is so easy on the ears:)
this is a GREAT jam track.
Thanks for this awesomw Backin Tracks! I hope you enjoy my jam!
Very very nice backing track 1,000 thumbs up
Well you have your channel as one of the most innovative and creative guitarists to have ever played. Now the Blues aspect of it, they did copy alot of songs from American Blues artists, BUT songs like Stairway To Heaven etc were masterpieces. Other styles that came out of England were like that of Clapton's. John Mayall & the Bluesbreaks with EC (first album), look it up. Then came Taylor who did what Clapton did, but added some new licks, and the same when Green came in after Taylor.
Glad you liked moore's version man.His vocal and obviously, his playing held my attention that's for sure. I have been trying to top the tone and playability of my SG and I have finally realized I can't. Except the one in this vid. "SOLD gibson customshop historic '61 SG Standard Korina" This has be the sweetest SG I have ever heard. Tell me what you think. Hope your gig with your dad brings down the house with that song . Rock on!
This is beautiful! I could play over it all day. THANKS!
Because I neeeeeeed, your love so bad
Oh yeah
exactly what i told me :D
Gracias por compartir este acompañamiento!!!
Thanks very much for this.
Excellent track. Thank you very much. I LOVE THIS PROGRESSION
Just wonderful thank you ,
Awesome track
This one is great , you can go from pentatonic major/minor ,major/minor , harmonic minor , melodic minor , make the scales up as you go ! It works !
excellent quality, awesome tension, thanks!
Świetny nastrojowy jam track do którego coś dograłem.
It's a reference to the song this particular track was based around!
To be fair to UK blues acts, Cream always (and literally) paid their dues, giving the correct songwriting credits and paying royalties - very poignantly, it was the royalties from Cream's cover of "I'm So Glad" that paid for Skip James' funeral.
I loooove this track! thanks
Remember that old song "When a man loves a woman"? Sounds exactly like that, just add lyrics!
Yaa Mann... I agree ! Blues On.....
Jim Naples
"I need your love so bad" or has that the same chord structure?
sometimes, late at night, when everyone is asleep, I take off my pants, pick up my guitar and play along with this track. Oh, yeah... good times.
Amazing jam track not based on the Need Your Love So Bad. I will definitely not use this track for an improvisation 😬
I love it it's great the blues house
beautiful, i think i learned something today
Slow 60s blues jam used this as a backing track : )
Very good indeed, thanks man!
Awesome.. thank you.... I wish I had more to offer than appreciation ☮️✊🏼
That is a bold statement considering all music has changed/evolved in the past hundred years. Its what influenced those bands that made them play the way they did and it might have been an american influence but to say there was no innovation in england is just ignorance. The uk is the birthplace of heavy metal, i just refer to black sabbath for innovation, started as a heavy blues band and look where that went. Thats like saying no american band took any influence from british punk etc etc
That is very good point. To play it is to know it. Yes, I'll bet that musicmaster rocked. The V neck is awesome. My 91' strat plus has the c neck. It's so so. With the v neck you can wrap your thumb around it twice. LOL. Man, does that happen. I was at G ctr. spotted a 2012 american tele w/rosewood fretb. Dude,it played like butter. The C shape neck wasn't a issue with this one. Came back the next day and it was gone. It is rare to find a v neck guitar at G ctr on the rack.LOL.Rock on!!
That's very true Mr. Page. Rock on!
Great Track - Thank You!!!
Nice track on Blue Bossa.
@guitar2adam It is, yes! It's also the chord progression for Fleetwood Mac's 'Need Your Love So Bad' from the late 60s - John Mayer completely took the chords from that song. I think it's actually an old gospel-blues standard chord sequence. I've never found out if it's actually credited to one person.
thank you let your light come on me and save me
Hey, your right dude! You wouldn't be a Zeppelin fan, now would ya? Page's tone is in my top two. Rock on!
Makes me wanna hear all of my Peter Green rrecordings!
I love playing this mixing the Amin and Amaj (F#m) scales.
Great track thank you.
thats not what he's claiming, this track is clearly similar to a lot of the british blues stuff that was happening in the 60's such as john mayall and the blues breakers and what not... he is not at all saying that the british had anything to do with the origins of blues. this is a song made in the style of the 60's blues revival that was popularized by british bands. americans started the blues, the brits made it contemporary and popularised it in the 60s. simple.
1. Search for "Im Gonna Find Another You" from John Mayer
2. Get some solo ideias
3. Here again
4. Rock on
5. Say thank you to me
:)
also "someone really loves you" with bb king, john mayer, susan tedeshi, and derek trucks.
Wow...
Ignorance is strong in these ones..
Ignore 'em bro they are the ones who suck..
Thanks for the suggestion :)
Abel W You're fooling.
The guy can play. I know nothing of his personal life, all I care is that the guy can play.
im not really a fan of john mayer or anything i dont know any of his music but i have heard him play guitar and to be honest hes probably better than most of you dickfarts that replied to this comment
hey gibbie, From you name I will bet your a loyal gibson fan. I too, dig gibsons, I love pauls, but I just couldn't get comfortable with them. I love my vintage modded Sg standard. It was my first and it is my go to axe. Man, I love the blues, blues rock and classic rock. Gotta keep it alive!! LOL! It's funny, the cat that made this vid states it's not Peter G. and I didn't notice he that till after I made the comment. LOL. It's a great song. Try checking out Gary Moore's verison. It's sick.
Brilliant
Thanks very much. Good backing track.
peter green need your love thats all what i played over this track
they were born in the usa but raised in a lot of places round the world...they pulled up a few inches and got nice and mature in britain if you ask me
So no one is playing a correlating scale for each chord? Come on! It's a great challenge.
***** I too just alternate between major and minor blues scales, and get by, but chasing the chords can be even more rewarding. You can watch a video of me soloing to this track here.....
ua-cam.com/video/H9qzEwR7MEg/v-deo.html
***** The mixolydian sounds very good.
1971SuperLead If you are chasing the chords, don't chase the BM7 'cos that chord is wrong! You should play Bm7 or, Bm instead, and play their respective scales, arpeggios, or both over them... Try dorian, or B minor pentatonic over the Bm7...
1971SuperLead My mind would explode if I tried to apply a correlating scale for each chord! I just think of major/minor scales etc and focus on 'hearing', and then hopefully hitting, the right chord tones. It makes for much more musical results when I play, personally.
Nacho Sada Thank you, but what are you saying exactly? Is there a difference between a BM7 and a Bm7? It's my understanding that both are B Minor 7th chords. The B7 is the B Major 7. Were you thinking the BM7 meant B MAJOR 7th?
really cool; thanks so much
the best of the best
Very Cool... Thank you!!!
Great Ray Charles progression
Need your love so bad id say ,,, nice job
Thank you !
please come home for christmas
I heard that as well as Whiter Shade of Pale
Molto bello, grazie!
p.s. It is interesting, humorous or perhaps ironic that we have been referred to as "two nations separated by a common language"! I think its fair to say that the origins of music are as diverse as the origin of genetic strains. America have always been particularly good at unself-conscious musical delivery whereas we Brits took a while to catch up. - The likes of Peter Green and Jimmy Page and Clapton being also at the vanguard of the Brit Blues approach. - "and curse Sir Walter Raleigh......"!
PERFECT
Ok, But not Peter Green, ah, no, well, ah, maybe, ah, well, can I hear it again?
A bunch of nice playing in the responses. I was going to give it a shot...but I am a bit of a novice.
Fun to jam too
Drown in my own Tears...
Fleetwood Mac's Peter Green "I Need Your Love So Bad"
Someone to squeeze me tiiighht
nice job!
tremendous
Que preciosura !!!!