@@JmelBst I've listened to and seen Chuck perform live as far back as the early 90's. He had been a fixture or regular recording artist whose CDs were played regularly on underground and smooth jazz FM radio stations in big-city America as far back as 20-30 years ago. Had seen him twice in the Midwest, maybe 3 times. Just a consummate professional, no nonsense musician and really nice guy.
Il maîtrise tout de à à zéro trop formidable il a la pointure de tout jazz m'en c est pas un délaissé ni outsider mais favoris il a ça place dans le top génial ce mec bonne écoute a vous❤❤❤😂❤❤
Oh, there are maaaany fantastic guitarists out there. My personal gurus are Holdsworth, Govan, McLaughlin and DiMeola, but also guys like Gambale, Metheny and Thordendal. Ever heard of Barney Kessel, Attila Zoller, Tal Farlow, Herb Ellis? Brilliant musicians. But it does not have to be extremely technical or virtuoso. I also like Guys like Knopfler, Santana or Zappa (only talking about guitar playing). The list of superb guitarists is quite long...
+22fret I like your comment with the latter being guitar players only, I wish to be a musician composer theorist who happens to have a guitar in my hand occasionally. Unfortunately the availability of guitars to make a miriad of tones and sounds with little musical effort has spawned generations of guitar technicians who don't know what they are doing theoretically. Some like Joe Pass are perfect theory wise just by talent, others like Rosenwinkel seem to have acquired it through hard work and study, others like the Claptons Hendrix and Santanas are guys who found their sweet spots with the guitar but no point in studying them they play by ear. The Best guitarist is a guy in Chicago........his name is Steve Best.
You're not kidding....he's real good. Melvin Davis on bass is also muy excellente. Rayford reminds me a little of Sonny Emory...another session guy who Lee Ritenour had out on tour some years ago. Also an outstanding percussionist.
Messrs. Griffin and Davis were so damn good and hopefully still are that good. Have seen Mr. Davis backing Loeb, Lee Ritenour and others over the years. Believe he also was or is the musical conductor, bass player for Chakha Khan, if not mistaken. He is a beast on the extra-stringed bass guitar. He and drummer are just dyno-mite.
Yes, he be very good, but it's all lead 6 string sound and neck exercise.....pull offs, bends, etc. What ever happened to the walking bass style of patterned run notes.....I don't think it was Chuck's best move to have two lead players.....as I've said before.....permitting a bass guy to have and use a 5 or 6 string bass instrument is akin to abdicating sonic real estate, octave wise and tone wise, for the regular 6 string guitar guy, in this case, Chuck. Makes no sense, none whatsoever, other than to permit showing off, of which there is enough in musical digressions like this little number.
Have him stick to the bass guitar, not a 6 string monster bass permitting access to conventional guitar tones and noodling up the neck. Just overkill and a perversion of bass guitar and it's role at the bottom of the tonal range and as a percussion/tempo instrument.
Wow, what a supergroup. And what a guitar solo. It is not that easy, as I remember, to play really fast and on the same time sound clean with the octaver. Great stuff, thank you for loading
This was one of Chuck's signature numbers, a tribute to a guy he revered on the instrument.....but this live performance was very frustrating to guitar players and music fans in a technical context. Loeb's guitar solo might have been much better if it were a guitar solo and not some cheap impersonation of a synthesizer, keyboard or preamp loaded up with phase/delay/chorus and other distortion or signal distortion. What the hell is an octaver and why would that digital mutation even be necessary but for Melvin Davis playing his bass up in an octave range reserved for 6-string guitar? Davis had no reason to use a 6 string bass other than for ego to get into lead guitar soloing unnatural to that instrument. Loeb is a pristine sound player.....he ought to be laying this tune down on some kind of Gibson guitar with humbuckers, not a distortion infused Sadowsky. I mean this guitar tone that Loeb had to embrace just ruined his solo and tore down the entire performance to some garage band foray into the world of pedals, boxes, and psychedelia. God, do you even play guitar, sir?
It is ironic to this observer that in addition to all the RIPers and their smarmy sentiments, that Mr. Loeb perhaps enjoyed more musical acclaim from non-USAers, that is in foreign countries that he performed in ......here Indonesia. Look at the commentators.... they're mostly from that part of the world......just incredible....shows the reach of music ....yes, okay, that too....but embarrassingly, shows that a great musician had more of a cult following in his country/land of domicile....incredible.
Pete Wentz I sort of agree that Chuck flew well below the radar here in the US, he was probably one of the greatest guitarists ever, and I would say, the best contemporary jazz guitarist, Lee Ritenour and Larry Carlton were way behind Chuck as a composer, and with style. You can honestly tell that Chuck had played the guitar his entire life, and it came easy. I would say that Chuck’s legacy as a whole is cult like.
It may also be that in order to know about performers like Loeb, you have to be a listener of the genre that he occupied. Unfortunately, I know a few guitar players and friends who think they know music (lol) and they are all locked into The Beatles, British Invasion, and rock guitar players over the last 4 decades or so. Nothing wrong with that of course, but limited, yes. They never heard of Loeb, Ritenour, Carlton, Golub and others. I am fortunate to have had a bit bigger ear for music in general and have a wider listening range. Loeb was a unique talent and very disciplined/serious about his craft, in his own way every bit deserving of the acclaim reserved for guys like Clapton, Page, Beck, Hendrix, Blackmore, etc. Smooth jazz has always flown under the musical radar....and the performers just haven't received the kind of recognition their talent warrants....
Monster keyboard player! He looks and sounds like Joey DeFranceco ???? I just saw who it is in the one of the replies. Hans Zermuehlen ? Hans is new to my ears. Bad ass band...... Pat is I'm sure greatful for the tribute...
Both gone now. Two legends hopefully jamming in heaven forever. RIP Chuck and Pat.
Thank you Chuck for your music! RIP
The greatest guitar player of all time
Rest in paradise. You will be sadly missed
Indeed sorely. How long had you been a fan?
@@JmelBst I've listened to and seen Chuck perform live as far back as the early 90's. He had been a fixture or regular recording artist whose CDs were played regularly on underground and smooth jazz FM radio stations in big-city America as far back as 20-30 years ago. Had seen him twice in the Midwest, maybe 3 times. Just a consummate professional, no nonsense musician and really nice guy.
R.I.P Chuck, what a great guitarist
See on the other side Chuck. Thanks a lot for the beauty of your music, and for so much happyness We'll miss you
He Chuck Loeb was the real deal! Guitar Player Composer Extraordinaire.
..got several of his albums..not a clinker in the bunch..
Terrific phrasing in the solo...Well done, Chuck Loeb...:)
Pure genius !!!
Great sound Chuck Loeb !!!
Il maîtrise tout de à à zéro trop formidable il a la pointure de tout jazz m'en c est pas un délaissé ni outsider mais favoris il a ça place dans le top génial ce mec bonne écoute a vous❤❤❤😂❤❤
what a guitar beast!!! :'D
Riposa in pace, Chuck, ti porterò nel mio cuore per sempre. Firmato: SLIDER, smooth jazz guitarist, come te ma tu sei il migliore. Ciao Chuck!!!!
Absolutely KILLIN' ! Everyone was burning !
R.I.P. Maestro Chuck Loeb! 😭😢
Magnificent wasn't he?
Yes¡ maestro
Awesome, love it, thank you for sharing.
DAMN this is fire! I've been to a jazz club only once in my life and it was so damn good seeing jazz music live!
Chuck is the BEST guitarist I`ve ever known!!! It`s FANTASTIC, How he uses a blues scale!!!
lol
have you ever heard anything about John Mclaughlin or Pat metheny or John Scofield?
I even tried to play the blues by Scofield but i like how plays Chuck his improvisation just really beautiful.
Oh, there are maaaany fantastic guitarists out there. My personal gurus are Holdsworth, Govan, McLaughlin and DiMeola, but also guys like Gambale, Metheny and Thordendal. Ever heard of Barney Kessel, Attila Zoller, Tal Farlow, Herb Ellis? Brilliant musicians. But it does not have to be extremely technical or virtuoso. I also like Guys like Knopfler, Santana or Zappa (only talking about guitar playing). The list of superb guitarists is quite long...
That`s right, a lot of guitarists in the world, and each individual
+22fret I like your comment with the latter being guitar players only, I wish to be a musician composer theorist who happens to have a guitar in my hand occasionally. Unfortunately the availability of guitars to make a miriad of tones and sounds with little musical effort has spawned generations of guitar technicians who don't know what they are doing theoretically. Some like Joe Pass are perfect theory wise just by talent, others like Rosenwinkel seem to have acquired it through hard work and study, others like the Claptons Hendrix and Santanas are guys who found their sweet spots with the guitar but no point in studying them they play by ear. The Best guitarist is a guy in Chicago........his name is Steve Best.
That's Rayford Griffin on drums!! also played with Jean luc Ponty!!... nice player!
You're not kidding....he's real good. Melvin Davis on bass is also muy excellente. Rayford reminds me a little of Sonny Emory...another session guy who Lee Ritenour had out on tour some years ago. Also an outstanding percussionist.
Thank you.
The great Melvin Davis on bass
..saw Rayford in concert with JLP several times..an Indy guy that made it!
Your music and your guitar would be always on my CD's. Thank you
simply spectacular :)
Just greaT!!! R.I.P. Chuck, we gonna miss you and your sound.
Thanks Chuck for the music inside. R.I.P
RIP Chuck! In my heart…..
Music lives on , missing you 😢
Best guitarist at Java Jazz ... RIP
R.I.P. Maestro Chuck Loeb
That bass player is really groovin'!!...
What an awesome groove between drums and percussion..
This cooks non stop ..
Sublime! All of them.
Descanse em paz senhor Loeb!
Unfortunately the best people, the best musicians are dying. The trash is down the streets. Chuck Loeb one of the best guitar players. !
He's the best in town in this last years
Sensationnel.
Quand je vois ce qu'on nous passe à la radio et à la télévision françaises... il y a de quoi rester dubitatif....
Fantastic chuck, thank you
Awesome talent!
The dynamics on this is off the chain.......these cats were tight......
The great melvin davis on basses.A wonderfull player.
Mother God! LUV! LUV!
The Great Chuck Loeb! Yeah I watch him at that time
I'm your fan now. Virtuosity is your what defines you
Great concert, great band, congratulation, I enjoy too much
Ya me hicieron el sábado, está súper.
They suddenly made me forgot my life problems
❤
Messrs. Griffin and Davis were so damn good and hopefully still are that good. Have seen Mr. Davis backing Loeb, Lee Ritenour and others over the years. Believe he also was or is the musical conductor, bass player for Chakha Khan, if not mistaken. He is a beast on the extra-stringed bass guitar. He and drummer are just dyno-mite.
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
legendddd
example of when the guitar speak .....great Chuck great all group
The Bass Playe Wow. What a solo.
Melvin Lee Davis
A SEVEN string bass!!!
@@77JeffT Anthony Jackson
Maravilhoso!!
WOW AMAZING !
Holy Shit!!!!!!!!!!
Wow! Amazing!
SLAM!!!💥👍🏽🙏🏽💥👍🏽
repeat mode on
Excelente sonido de todos!!!! Muy limpio Chuck ..!!!
Wow.....clean......!!!!
Chuck is monstrous
amaizing...thanks for sharing
....And that's Melvin Davis on bass!!!!
I see that bass player with Lee Ritnoure also his skills are SERIOUS
Yes, he be very good, but it's all lead 6 string sound and neck exercise.....pull offs, bends, etc. What ever happened to the walking bass style of patterned run notes.....I don't think it was Chuck's best move to have two lead players.....as I've said before.....permitting a bass guy to have and use a 5 or 6 string bass instrument is akin to abdicating sonic real estate, octave wise and tone wise, for the regular 6 string guitar guy, in this case, Chuck. Makes no sense, none whatsoever, other than to permit showing off, of which there is enough in musical digressions like this little number.
Have him stick to the bass guitar, not a 6 string monster bass permitting access to conventional guitar tones and noodling up the neck. Just overkill and a perversion of bass guitar and it's role at the bottom of the tonal range and as a percussion/tempo instrument.
GREAT!!!
RIP Chuck Loeb
RIP Chuck Loeb...
My Guitar Hero🤟
Very, Very good!!!
Wow, what a supergroup. And what a guitar solo. It is not that easy, as I remember, to play really fast and on the same time sound clean with the octaver. Great stuff, thank you for loading
This was one of Chuck's signature numbers, a tribute to a guy he revered on the instrument.....but this live performance was very frustrating to guitar players and music fans in a technical context. Loeb's guitar solo might have been much better if it were a guitar solo and not some cheap impersonation of a synthesizer, keyboard or preamp loaded up with phase/delay/chorus and other distortion or signal distortion. What the hell is an octaver and why would that digital mutation even be necessary but for Melvin Davis playing his bass up in an octave range reserved for 6-string guitar? Davis had no reason to use a 6 string bass other than for ego to get into lead guitar soloing unnatural to that instrument. Loeb is a pristine sound player.....he ought to be laying this tune down on some kind of Gibson guitar with humbuckers, not a distortion infused Sadowsky. I mean this guitar tone that Loeb had to embrace just ruined his solo and tore down the entire performance to some garage band foray into the world of pedals, boxes, and psychedelia. God, do you even play guitar, sir?
that bass player just made me quit music _ chuck is unreal too everyone sounds so great WOW this is the pro level !
YESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS......
it's so high !!!!!!!!!
SMOKIN!!
Check out the studio version, He goes well beyond blues scales
👏 maestro. y todos
1:40 ce monsieur je crois qu'il est né avec une guitare dans les mains 🤲 tout mes❤ respect super magnifique
sprended !
wow.................wow !
Hey, just listen and watch...lol...Bad ass!
Why?
R.I.P. Chuck
Whaou !
I see. Melvin Davis -Bass, Lenny Castro- Percs, Rayford Griffin ( Drums), keys? and Chuck Loeb-Guitar (RIP)
Hans Zermuehlen, keys.
Why was Lenny Castro's name crossed out above?
ในใจตลอดไปครับ
Man can Chuck burn or what.....
i like
very well
Hans rocks!!
Chuck loeb is god.....
RIP
REST IN PEACE...
Rest In Peace
It is ironic to this observer that in addition to all the RIPers and their smarmy sentiments, that Mr. Loeb perhaps enjoyed more musical acclaim from non-USAers, that is in foreign countries that he performed in ......here Indonesia. Look at the commentators.... they're mostly from that part of the world......just incredible....shows the reach of music ....yes, okay, that too....but embarrassingly, shows that a great musician had more of a cult following in his country/land of domicile....incredible.
Pete Wentz I sort of agree that Chuck flew well below the radar here in the US, he was probably one of the greatest guitarists ever, and I would say, the best contemporary jazz guitarist, Lee Ritenour and Larry Carlton were way behind Chuck as a composer, and with style. You can honestly tell that Chuck had played the guitar his entire life, and it came easy. I would say that Chuck’s legacy as a whole is cult like.
It may also be that in order to know about performers like Loeb, you have to be a listener of the genre that he occupied. Unfortunately, I know a few guitar players and friends who think they know music (lol) and they are all locked into The Beatles, British Invasion, and rock guitar players over the last 4 decades or so. Nothing wrong with that of course, but limited, yes. They never heard of Loeb, Ritenour, Carlton, Golub and others. I am fortunate to have had a bit bigger ear for music in general and have a wider listening range. Loeb was a unique talent and very disciplined/serious about his craft, in his own way every bit deserving of the acclaim reserved for guys like Clapton, Page, Beck, Hendrix, Blackmore, etc. Smooth jazz has always flown under the musical radar....and the performers just haven't received the kind of recognition their talent warrants....
와 씨빨!!! 개좋아
Yesterday was the second anniversary of Chuck Loeb's death. All my thoughts for him and his family.
Where did he learn to play drums with that ferocity and power?
Wohaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
Amazing!!!!!
Melvin !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
걍 미친듯...ㄷㄷ
“That’s like a kelevin string bass.”
Kevin from The Office.
Monster keyboard player! He looks and sounds like Joey DeFranceco ???? I just saw who it is in the one of the replies. Hans Zermuehlen ? Hans is new to my ears. Bad ass band...... Pat is I'm sure greatful for the tribute...
❗❗❗