Playing to a clicktrack kills the emotion and rawness of playing. I hate this new trend in Churches where they all use a clicktrack. Just find a good drummer and its not needed.
Playing with a clicktrack is standard in most bands these days, if you don’t like it, don’t use it. We use multitracks and do tight transitions which require a click so that the band is locked it with the track.
Your argument is invalid. If a drummer doesn't change tempo, that would mean you can't play with emotion according to you. You can still follow a drummer's emotion and play to a click. A click is just another instrument. Think of it as a drum that doesn't change tempo. You can have tons of emotion and rawness. If you have a drummer that doesn't change tempo, it's the same thing.
@noahmckenzie527 No, i mean a good drummer can keep the tempo or change it when needed, if you use a click track then you cant ever speed up or slow down a song or improvise.
@@guitarandotherthings6090 yes you can change the click and tempo on the fly if setup properly. A lot of times bands will kill the click during those moments too, and then pick it back up when they want to lock into a groove again.
REALLY NICE tone! What a nice smooth playing!
very nice electric guitar
this is fire!
Awesome playing and tone! Wish I could play like that. How do you get such a huge thick sound? Is it the guitar?
Pro
good job brother! Do you stack overdrives?
Thank you, I don’t, I use a boost if i want more on my stage 1 or 2 but I don’t like to stack them
@@David.Bulzan thx for the quick response. god bless. i like your playing
Id need more vocal than that...
Playing to a clicktrack kills the emotion and rawness of playing. I hate this new trend in Churches where they all use a clicktrack. Just find a good drummer and its not needed.
Playing with a clicktrack is standard in most bands these days, if you don’t like it, don’t use it. We use multitracks and do tight transitions which require a click so that the band is locked it with the track.
@David.Bulzan I said that bc I cant find a church that doesn't use that. I still dont see why a great drummer wouldnt solve any tempo issues.
Your argument is invalid. If a drummer doesn't change tempo, that would mean you can't play with emotion according to you. You can still follow a drummer's emotion and play to a click. A click is just another instrument. Think of it as a drum that doesn't change tempo. You can have tons of emotion and rawness. If you have a drummer that doesn't change tempo, it's the same thing.
@noahmckenzie527 No, i mean a good drummer can keep the tempo or change it when needed, if you use a click track then you cant ever speed up or slow down a song or improvise.
@@guitarandotherthings6090 yes you can change the click and tempo on the fly if setup properly. A lot of times bands will kill the click during those moments too, and then pick it back up when they want to lock into a groove again.