Unfortunately no one listened..
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- Опубліковано 5 бер 2023
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Gary Moore is best known for that note at the end of Parisienne Walkways. But behind the note, there is a lesson to learn on how to play a memorable tune.
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I met him at a house-party. Someone invited my girlfriend and I round for drinks in Brighton, UK, and "a neighbour will be playing guitar and singing" while we had a BBQ etc. Well the guitarist friend was Gary Moore. He died a few years later and I am not too surprised, he wasn't healthy and liked a drink. But he's the most under-rated guitarist ever, imo. And a really nice, humble guy.
Not underrated at all
Nice story! I was lucky enough to meet Gary in 1981 - he was a really nice guy when I met him too and a supremely talented guitarist. A terribly sad loss but what a great legacy of work - he was definitely underrated as a songwriter, imho.
He's not underrated here in Northern Ireland he is revered as an all time Great and we are proud of our link to him.
Rock in peace Gary,🙏🎸
@@freespeech-advocate Rightly so - and highly rated the world over by his many fans 🎸👍
@@freespeech-advocate Good! But he isn't in the conversation as much as he should be when people talk about Hendrix, Jeff Beck, etc, internationally. He IS an all-time great, that's for sure.
He played jazzrock and or fusion at one time. He's a lot more versatile than people think
Andrew Lloyd Webber thought so.Hired him for variations.A modernised version of Paganinis caprices.Beat yngwie to Paganini
Gary is my favorite player…he’s why I play guitar. I didn’t really take up guitar until my 40s. I was attending a week-long guitar workshop and one of the classes was on scales. All I knew was a couple of minor pentatonic positions but the instructor had me play them over a chord progression. When I finished, he said “You play like Gary Moore.” I had never heard of him and Still Got The Blues had just come out. So I got the CD and the next day told the instructor there was no way I played like Gary Moore…he was incredible. What he meant was my use of bending and vibrato were already a part of my style and it was similar to Gary. I regret that I never saw him live.
Gary Moores G Force should be in every electric guitar fans collection...
His live version of The Messiah will come is one of the greatest guitar performances ever .
Gary's got absolute control on the emotional aspects of his playing...its like he can build from a trickle to a flood tastefully....
You know, you do look a lot like Gary Moore! When I am asked who my favorite guitar player is, I say Gary Moore. I have been playing guitar for 50 years now, and he has been a huge influence on me. I like this video and your video style.
You kind of look like Gary Moore, its actually cracking me up. Keep on keepin on dude
I was so fortunate to see Gary Moore play live three times. You always went home with a big complex, thinking "I cannot play guitar, if he look at Gary" ;-D
You got guts for trying man. I would not attempt such a feat. Gary Moore was astonishing. RIP
All that power comes from his heart! That’s why it’s impossible to replicate it, because Gary wasn’t exactly a sophisticated player that aims to hit the right note according to music theory, but a soulful player that express everything he has in his own heart, no matter what music theory says. Thanks for another great video!
Spot on !!!!!!
🤠🎸🎶🤙
Gary Moore, man had the feels in his fingers !!!!!!!!
I like shredding and technique and admire all the great players out there but Gary Moore was one of the few who caused to give me goosebumps or even tears in my eyes. His tone and playing was magic. And not to forget his vocals. (Empty Rooms 1987 live in Stockholm).
You took the words right out of my mouth.
Yeah, his vocals were so on point in that one...and to top it off...the outro solo he played is probably the most emotionally charged guitar solo ever...towards the end, he literally makes the guitar cry. Love love love Gary...gone too soon...RIP to a true phenom.
empty rooms stockholm also makes me emotional. its the perfect solo.
Yep he was the ultimate guitarist
Yep, have to agree, empty rooms 1987 solo is the most emotional solo ever!
The older I get the more I love him. The last few years when he went back to the blues is some of the most incredible, emotional guitar playing I've ever heard.
As an aside, I knew someone (session player) who was drinking buddies with him. Thanks to his alcohol consumption they're together again in a bar somewhere. He loved Gary. Lovely bloke apparently.
Gary Moore was always a hero of mine and always will be. The loudest wildest guitarist I've ever seen...and great singer too
There is no one better to emulate and learn from than Gary. He was one of the all time great players.
Gary helped to demonstrate that very fast, fiery playing (the stuff that the 'less is more' plodders start mumbling and complaining about, whenever someone dares play even a few 16th notes) can have feeling, power, impact and emotion, equal to any other expressive playing technique, and more so in some cases, like here. RIP Gary.
It must have been amazing growing up in the south of France. What a beautiful country with the greatest food and wine.
Seen him live shortly after he left Thin Lizzy. Simply put, incredible.
Gary listened a lot to the "Beano" album from the Bluesbreakers featuring Eric Clapton. It sounds like he took those fast repeating patterns from Eric and played them faster and all over the pentatonic/blues-scale patterns.
TBH Clapton and Gary Moore are totally different kind of guitar players, although both are rooted in Blues they got nothing in common.
@@bumpyroad3251 : I remember Gary playing Eric's solo from "Little Girl" from the Beano-album - nearly note by note. Gary was influenced by many blues-players. It's a good sign that you cannot hear the influence. This shows how to develop individual unique style.
@@bumpyroad3251 oh dear. I take it you're a drummer?
I swear Gary Moore had a different type of muscle tissue. His hammer on and pull offs were the fastest I have ever heard. But I agree with the idea of contrast. The solo for Out In the Fields is a classic. Slow melodic start. Then all hell breaks loose. Perfect!!
The span Gary could achieve between his first & second finger was unbelievably wide.
I might be wrong, but I think Gary was a natural lefty playing with his right hand, like many others (Mark Knopfler, Steve Morse etc there's a list somewhere). I play the same way and I can confirm that for all the sloppiness of strumming with the "wrong" hand, you balance it with natural agility and feel of your fretting hand. So naturally you are more at home playing legato and semi-legato than picking every note.
Gary was the best of all time, full stop !
He played most of his unbelievably fast stuff with two fingers only...the index and the middle one. He was just incredible.
The first time i saw Gary Moore was in 1989 and if i don't recall wrong the last song he played was Parisienne Walkways. It felt like he held that famous note for forever!! It was and still is a memory for life. Gary always played with a lot of improvisation live.
Such a melodic player. Parisian Walkways blew my mind the first time I heard it. It didn't matter what genre he turned his hand to, he always had a melodic base that was lyrical, sweet, powerful... And he knew how to build tension in his solo statements which many shredders seem incapable of doing. I recently heard Joe Bonamassa talk of his greatness in a very flattering and reverent manner, rightly so!
Gary was a superb player.noone ever bent notes like he did .and noone will ever do .no mistakes no out of tune .amazing touch .very few players if there is has that.sorry guys but thats the truth.👍👍🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🙏🙏🌷🌷🌷🌷rip my hero.
i saw him live when i was a kid, i thought it was a very good show at the time, only now i understand i’ve witnessed greatness
dang
I saw Gary Moore in the early 80s at the Texxas Jam at the old Astrodome. He was such a great player and one of the top 10 in my books. RIP Garry and thanks for the music and memories.
Gary understood the concept of tension and release,
Polyvalent, expressif, il donnait une âme à sa guitare. Mon guitariste préféré...
It's Blue Bossa..Check it out same melody
Gary never really received the notoriety he deserved here in the US. For me, Gary’s searing tone, melodic phrasing, endless sustain, and beautiful vibrato are unparalleled. So sad he passed so young, RIP! There are only a handful of players who, at this stage of my life, that can move me with their playing. Gary could move me with one note!!
I don't think 'Notoriety' is the right word.
Notoriety means being known for doing the wrong or bad thing. I think you meant he never received the respect he deserved.
@@fus149hammer5 fine, however I believe you know my intent……
@@edge1289 totally agree 👍
I was fortunate enough to see Gary twice.... Victims of the Future tour & Wild Frontiers. Both times he blew me away with is raw ability. I was right on the stage for Victims tour, LOUD to say the least. Marshalls. The stage always had an X on it, where he could stand and hold that note forever. Gary would use his middle finger more than usual, especially during the riffs you spoke of. Gary was one of the most underrated guitarists on the planet, but you could easily learn something from him. RIP Gary.
The magic is in that light and shade Gary produced. I've always appreciated players who used both shredding and melodic phrases in their songs to heighten the drama. Thanks for sharing your story and discovery process.
I became a huge fan of Gary when the "London Collector" by Thin Lizzy came out. That was the early 70s. He would later pop up solo, plus in a band called Colosseum II. Then in 78 (?), he popped up with Thin Lizzy again for the Black Rose lp. After that, he was back to solo career "Back on the Streets", "Corridors of Power", "Dirty Fingers", "Victims of the Future", all metal themed albums, before he started to branch out and widen his musical spectrum.
I cant help but laugh at people who think Gary "came out" in the 90's, when he was already on albums in the early 70s. His entry into *hardcore* blues (in the early 90s) was in what I consider to be the twilight of his career !
Guitar Makes the man the man just plays & makes it talk fast smooth and easy cool. 🤣😂😅🎸 Thank you for sharing.
No one , but Garye🙏🏻🙌
His range of styles was incredible. I remember seeing him live and was about 5 feet away from him in the front row. We were all opened mouthed at his playing. I noticed he used the Django technique for playing really fast (used his third finger instead of his fourth).
Has been listening to Gary while he was with Colloseum.... Great guitarist. Miss his guitar playing. RIP...
Nice video. You have a skill as a great communicator. Gary is the best of the best, no one matched his tone. No one. And his melody. Your shout out on contrast here is spot on. He played melt your face off fast. but he also played slow. Slow that a beginner guitarist could play, witness the solo in Empty Rooms, arguably the greatest guitar solo ever. I don't say that lightly. Anyone can play the notes. No one has his his emotion. To see him live was an enchanted, transitory moment. I also have to add I met Gary a few times. He was the friendliest, most giving "hero" you could imagine. Funny too, if he didn't play guitar he would have found fortune as a stand-up comedian.
Gary Moore and Parisienne Walkways is the reason I picked up the guitar. I miss hearing his music.
You can still hear it
I'm 71 years old. When I heard Gary for the first time (I was many years younger) he was a rocker, bouncing around band to band, and then went on his own. He did an album called CORRIDORS OF POWER, and I was hooked. However, his career waned. Stevie Ray passed away, and out of nowhere I hear Gary playing blues on the radio. The rest is history.
He had a couple of fine albums after Corridors. Run for Cover was a fine rock/ metal album and Wild Frontier was a brilliant rock/traditional Irish record. I think he lost his way and lost his mojo after Wild Frontier but certainly rediscovered it when he turned to his inner Bluesman. What a lovely player, so versatile and melodic as well as fast as lightning when he wanted to be. Much missed.
greatest Guitar player ever.many great talents like Blackmore George lynch, Iommi, but nobody had his feeling.
I saw Gary over a dozen times. First with Lizzy. They played Parisienne Walkways before Still in love with you, which has almost the same chord progression. I was at the gig in Sheffield where he's playing the sustained note. The most astonishing guitar playing I've ever seen was an extended intro to Midnight Blues on the 1992 Still Got the Blues tour in Bradford. As good as the video of the Messiah will.come again. Gary could play any style but his phrasing, vibrato and control of dynamics was his trademark. Always using the volume and tone controls and pick up selector to add light and shade. He put emotion and fire into all his playing. The fact that both Cream and the Hendrix Experience chose him to play with them in BBM and the Experience concerts says a lot.
Ozzy wanted him but Gary. Didn't want it but tried to help find him a guitarist. That's a solid guy right there
The greatest guitarist of all time (in my opinion) and the reason I ever picked up a guitar! Thank you Gary :)
Great video, love hearing how you break this down and manage to get those licks into auto pilot! Your tone is awesome by the way dude :)
My hero. GOAT without a doubt
@@seanmcgoldrick4870 no doubt about it! My hero too :)
Gary Moore went through phases. Blues rocker. Fusion guy. Shred widdler. Back to blues. His 1979 solo album Back On Yhe Streets ranged from almost punk to soft rock ballads to proggy Beck-type instrumentals. I think he was always a bit over-keen to show how much he could do, which was a lot.
Probably one guitarist on pair with Jimmy Hendrix.Gary Moore is pure class.
Come on, Tony - you don’t know it’s Jimi? 🙄
I always remember Gary for "After the war". He was supposed to be the first gig I ever went to when I was 15, but I skipped school and was banned from going. I had to wait until Donington 92 for my first gig and what a gig !
Donington 92, legendary, bottles of pish flying through the air, 7" promo vinyl scything the rain clouds, the almighty introduction pete friesen and addiction, losing my glasses in the mosh pit to 'dead skin mask', thunder were average that day but the skids were awesome, too knackered to really enjoy and appreciate maiden, found my muddied glasses though 🤘🤘
@@rossmudie9298 That summed it all up perfectly. Those Raw Power promos got around. I threw one towards a security guard and it flew on stage and hit Bruce. That was my first Slayer mosh pit too. Not the last. My friend lost his shoe in the mid in that pit and everyone spread out, made a circle, he got his shoe, then the pit formed in again. The strangest thing was there was this biker granny in the slayer pit. Full dockers and leather with a flowery dress. She was knocking the crap out of people it was hilarious. Skid Row was amazing too. Seb threw his towel down to the crowd, I managed to get my fingertips on it before it was absolutely shredded to pieces in seconds. The next time I visited Donington was in '95 where I managed to get into the Snakepit for Metallica. I think that was the best thing I could have happen at a rock concert except the time I saw The Cult supporting Guns n Roses and they started to play "Rain" and when the chorus hit, it started raining. It was the most perfect timing. Thanks for bringing back the memories :)
@@tehf00n still got the tie dye festival shirt, never worn it. i didn't include wasp, ehm.. blackies white boots 😂😂🤘🤘
@@rossmudie9298 I was looking up my old concerts on youtube and found a photo of myself watching WASP towards the front row. It was surreal seeing myself so young. WASP did the job that day. Awesome.
@@tehf00n thats impressive, i was like to the left of the sound tower and over a bit lol, just a dot in the crowd. I got a bit fed up with wasp on the crimson idol, i bought it again on cd though recently because it had the whole donington show on it. Me and my mates parked up in a pub car park overnight before the show and one of the blokes there managed to get a bonfire lit, seemed higher than the roof of the pub, probably wasn't in reality 😂, stuff of legend see, story for the grandkids🤘🤘
The best is when im driving with Parisienne Walkways cranked. When he hits that note, half the people enjoy it, and the other half cover their ears. Anyways, nice breakdown!
One of the best Irish guitarists ever🇮🇪
One of the absolute best, regardless of heritage, but (with respect to the late, great Rory Gallagher), the very best Irish guitarist of all.
I started listening to Gary Moore in the late seventies when he joined Thin Lizzy. Best quitar player 👍
Great episode on Gary's expressive technique. Loved Gary
Thanks for recognizing and promoting this total genius. Check out his solo on We Want Moore on the track Shapes of Things. A total masterclass in rock soloing.
So Far Away/ Empty Rooms and Don’t Take Me For A Loser are incredible, too from that live album!!
Honest guy giving good points to playing. Contrast is everything, and contrast is also not playing/ silence/pauses in between playing. As for Gary I always liked his Peter Green tribute record the most.
He was a powerful & tasty guitar player. More than great licks, chops, technique I love his feeling and expression.
If you watch the Montreux concerts closely it is interesting to note how many times he changes the pick-up switch in a song. I've never seen anyone else do that...and I know my stuff, believe me
Good video. Love to listen to Gary. His playing was incredible. The Blues scale is one of the hardest. Lot of twists and turns. I think it comes from inside. It can't be harnessed or even. Taught. Natural. 😎👍👌💯🎸🎸 I dig listening and watching Samantha Fish. Plus she's a doll ❤️🥰🔥💯👍👌
Good stuff, Doc!
Far from wanting to compare myself to Gary Moore, I find the logic of the finger movement very crucial. When I'm working on a song, either with tabs or by listening to it, I pay a lot of attention to that. When I find the logic of the finger movements, I usually know that I'm playing correctly.
That note -Yeah!! Steve Hackett has a note in Firth of Fifth which has exactly the same effect on me.
I'm feeling this video, but from a different instrument. I played keys and keys bass in a Doors tribute band for 12 years. At first I transcribed Light My Fire off the album note for note but then as I watched the Doors live videos I noticed Ray Manzarek never seemed to play the same song the same way twice. Instead he had a collection of Ray "licks" that he used in almost every song. After I absorbed the bucket of Ray "licks" if I wanted to stretch solos or make our version of When the Music's Over last nearly a whole set I just got into the Ray zone and didn't have to think about it, which is what Ray did every night. He was just being himself, in the zone. The contrast? Man, they would take it down in a song to a whisper then build ever so slowly until you got slapped awake in a total headrush. It was theater. Cabaret style rock.
Dang David that’s great video editing and production! I’m blown away!
@@TELE-GRAM__DavidWallimann I won? I don’t remember what this is?
People don’t always know that Gary was left-handed; which accounted for the greater strength in his fretting hand.
Amazing fact I didn't know it explains a lot 🎸👍
Im lefthanded too, and I play righthanded. Its true that the fretting hand gets easier, but we struggle with the picking hand.
so Derek, why don't right handed people prefer left-handed guitars? This moronic crap comes up all the time
Gary had a great tone. I love grabbing a guitar and playing along with his material.
I wish I could!
Great video mate. Very interesting,observant and honest. I’m actually at that place right now as where you were haha
The live extended intro to Separate Ways is one of the greatest guitar solos ever
From the Live Blues VHS/DVD, right? Absolutely mind-blowing!! I recorded that onto a cassette and played it for years until putting it onto CD in the 90s.
blues alive is an incredible album.
Rip Gary and Phil
Saw him in the Manchester Apollo and in Liverpool with BB king and the Liverpool royal court.
I really like the Cream material he played with Jack and Ginger as BBM.
Gary had jazz scale knowledge from his days with collesium II
Gary was the best🙂always will.Special guitarist.
I have listened to Gary Moore for many years as he is a unique guitarist and not many sounds like him, I like many of his tunes like Dunluce parts 1-2, Blood of emerald, led clones etc his style is just different, also he got the Irish sound within his music like Dunluce... Myself likes the guitars and also like Satriani, Vai, Yngwie and the unique John 5 as his music is very different and there are many more out there.
In my top 5 all time great axemen, along with Hank, Angus, Albert, Keef.
David! If you've never heard it you need to listen to Gary Moore's songs on the Cozy Powell album Tilt. Check out the killer ballad "Sunset" and the barn burner "The Blister".
This is stuff I like to read/hear.....I have all Gary's albums....be looking out for this one!
@@PainInTheS Oh my word if you've never heard these two Moore tunes stop everything you are doing and go give them a listen!
Great tunes.....album on the list! 👍
What never ceases to amaze me is how the bass sounds on these old albums....you can perfectly hear what the bass player is doing.....lots of times on new(er) albums you don't.
Gary was from my home town so it was nearly impossible for players my age not to be influenced by him.
Watch him play "Red house". I think it was Fenders 50th anniversary or something.
Just watched Gary Moore talk about how great he is for 5 mins
My main man, the greatest guitarist to walk to earth 🤘🏼🤘🏼🤘🏼
I love his "Blues for Greeny" album where he plays the old Fleetwood Mac Peter Green songs.
He catches the soul of that guitar.
Gary, while an original but everybody has got their influences, is a mix of Peter Green/Roy Buchanan/Rory Gallagher.
I used to learn solos by playing 45rpm records at 33rpm to slow them down. It was a drag. Fortunately, tabs and the Internet came later and were incredible game-changers.
Mate what kind of guitar are you playing? I love that body routing on the base.
Gary blew me away with his playing and singing on the Corridors and Victim's albums.His blues venture/departure was ok,but I like his rock stuff better.He was a MASTER of that Whammy bar(vibrato).
Even if the tabs aren't accurate, like how the wrong version of the Smoke on the Water are still played, if you even give the wrong version your best performance it will still sound great. Me and a friend played Always with me always with yoy, by Satriani in two different versions, me by tabs and he by ear, it sounded the exact same, essentially it didn't matter.
I am sure to Elitist it does, but to me, if the notes and the sound is spot on, that is all that matters.
You just vocalized why it’s so important to learn solos that speak to you note for note, and in time.
Could you teach more about Gary’s style please?
You not just replicated his playing, you replicated his look too
Apart from the beer bottle scars you are spot on!😁
working with pausing and silence can also create kontrasts - ist like working with whitespace in graphic design 😀
When you get to the point when you’re absorbing what another player is doing, and you’re able to replicate the style without copying note for note, you’ve moved to another level.
Top five guitarist for me .👍
Aptly watching this today on St Patricks Day.
Oh Man, you look like Gary Moore! 😀
I did the same thing with AC/ DC solos , Aerosmith, Kiss! I would get the main parts but loose them in the fast moments.
Dynamics. It’s all about dynamics.
Watch him play with jack bruse and ginger baker at jacks 50 party gig god the playing and jack loving it I think bands Called BBM
❤️ Contrast moments
This chap looks like Gary moore
fuckin' soul of the blues
Such a mind fuck seeing David Wallimann & Gary Moore's face next to each other. #doppelganger
.....I've been listening to Gary since 1974.......Nobody paid much attention to him then.......I never figured it out.....I remember about 2000, I introduced John Nichols to him......John liked him too.............
Nobody paid much attention to him? The dude was selling out large gigs. He was also talked about a fair amount amongst guitar players.
@@blahdelablah He really never toured over here and if he did it wasn't in support of any big that I can think of.......I don't think he ever made it to the west coast.......
@@paulricketts1089 Oh, you're American?
@@blahdelablah ....yes. SoCal.......
@@paulricketts1089 I see. I wonder if your views about who has been paying attention to him are a reflection of where you live. As an example, on the UA-cam video "Gary Moore Empty Rooms Live 1987 His Best Guitar Solo", this was at a large gig, indicating he did have a large following. I believe this gig was in Stockholm in Sweden, but as far as I'm aware he was well known across Europe.