Thanks, Mark. It's a great song to learn, but you make it a great way to soak up theory as well. A tip to anyone who cares: learn the song, then come back a while later, once it's second nature, and watch the video again. You're no longer preoccupied with learning the song and now you can focus on the theory behind what it is you're actually doing. One video + time = two completely different lessons.
Thanks Mark for doing this great tune. Such a beautiful song & message. 1962 you say, I would have been all of 4 at the time. You have a wonderful teaching style, appreciate you sharing your knowledge.
Not only did you give an outstanding performance you gave us excellent tablature as well. What a great song played so very well by you. Greetings from Ireland thank you.
Hey Mark. Thank you again for your tutorial. I love all music, rock, blues, everything. R and B hits me in my soul though. Your my R and B go to teacher. Stay safe brother
Just discovered your channel and first of all I just want to say thank you; you are a brilliant and generous teacher. I'm halfway through learning this and I honestly don't think I've ever had so much fun playing guitar. I just realised this is the kind of music I want to play. It feels so good. Can you recommend any other songs like this? It's all I want to listen to. Thanks again. I'll be recommending your channel to everyone I know who plays guitar.
Thank you brother! I agree. Best music on Earth to play. Just makes you feel good inside. Few songs are as good as Custis' masterpiece, but here's a couple of playlists that I've done in the genre. Let me know what other songs I should add. R&B Guitar Lessons: ua-cam.com/play/PLSVfUQKkNUqZRGPLUQ4yCEfRnUkOE_bvq.html Easy R&B Tutorials: ua-cam.com/play/PLSVfUQKkNUqbd8q5HRxx-FcKtOmQBFJGR.html
I am sure I have heard Mr. Mayfield do this one... I will run it down... I have heard Rod Stewarts version, and it is an awesome gospel type tune... Thanks so much, Mark... Take care....
Thanks Mark! This song came out when I was ~15 so I heard it a lot then, but I really know the Chambers Brothers version a couple yrs later having owned the album, also Grand Funk had an early popular cover & then Kenny Rankin also did in the early '70s. In the believe it or not dept (all my stories are 100% true!), in 1972 I had three of the Impressions (but not Curtis) in my taxi going from LaGuardia airport to the Westbury Hotel in Manhattan, they even invited me to a party that evening but I had classes at CUNY.
Mark Zabel I also love these kind of chord progressions. It's so relaxing and calming playing stuff like this. I can do that for half an hour or longer just adding some here and there or hopping to another layer on the fret board. Btw. No guitar for me next few weeks, i fell down the stairway in my house 2 days ago and broke my tailbone and lots of bruises all over the arms and back. So i have to wait till i can check this wonderful progression.
He got pretty funky in the 1970s and he also got into the "message songs", which is okay with me. His guitar work isn't as prevalent in later years - at least what I've listened to.
rthat was awesome, and i really learned a lot from it. Gave me ideas on hoe to embellish my chords. Thanks a lot for sharing it with us. Plus i love the song too.
@@MarkZabel I keep on playing this video - partly to learn, and partly to hear you play, which you do beautifully, Mark. It is amazing how such a relatively simple chord sequence can be so perfect.
Cool stuff there Mark, I picked up that "slap" on the strings/pickup from the late great John Martyn, if you've never heard of him check him out, May You Never would be a good place to start. Cheers from the UK.
Lovely playing and a super lesson, thanks! I'm a big fan of Jeff Beck's version, and when he plays the G chord at the turn around, I think he plays the F shape and leaves the 5th (A) and 6th (E) strings open. I have no idea what that chord is called but it sounds nice to me!
You're very welcome and thank you for the kind comment! I like the Beck/Stewart version too. That's an Fmaj7 chord, although it's not usually played like that. Interesting way to do it. (F, A, C, E = 1, 3, 5, 7 ... but you've got an extra E and A on the bottom doubling the notes.)
@@MarkZabel When I said F shape I meant to make a G chord. So the notes (from bottom E string to top E) are E, A, G, B, D, G. The same notes in fact as playing all open strings, but that doesn't sound right.
Thanks! If you're logged in, the link is: mark-z-guitar-school.teachable.com/courses/mark-z-s-youtube-free/lectures/29605826 To log in, go to: mark-z-guitar-school.teachable.com/
The TAB link is fixed - no longer blank. It's in the description, but here for your convenience. Sorry about that! ua-cam.com/users/redirect?v=S2YvoW6nQHU&event=video_description&redir_token=RkQUJofVHq7pohYBvi_lQHAckf98MTU1MzQzOTc1MkAxNTUzMzUzMzUy&q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.dropbox.com%2Fs%2Fn08375ks9t2fwyg%2FCurtis%2520Mayfield%2520Style%2520%2528People%2520Get%2520Ready%2529.pdf%3Fdl%3D0
That looks like my 2016 ES-335 though mine is the blonde version, but same hardware, and neck/fingerboard. Your tone and style sound beautiful. Thank you for this.
Here you go. ua-cam.com/users/redirect?v=S2YvoW6nQHU&event=video_description&redir_token=RkQUJofVHq7pohYBvi_lQHAckf98MTU1MzQzOTc1MkAxNTUzMzUzMzUy&q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.dropbox.com%2Fs%2Fn08375ks9t2fwyg%2FCurtis%2520Mayfield%2520Style%2520%2528People%2520Get%2520Ready%2529.pdf%3Fdl%3D0
Lovely, thanks. I'm just starting to explore this style of music. If I'm being honest, it sounds like John Mayer ripped this, sped it up, and stamped waiting on the world to change on the title
Thank you! Curtis Mayfield does not get the credit he deserves as a writer or a guitarist. He was quite innovative and influential in both. There's truth in what you say about Mayer, and it's also true of many other musicians and other works of art and science - both good and not so good. We learn at largely through imitation - Newton's comment of "Standing n the shoulders of giants" and all of that. I'm a fan of John Mayer's play and I cut him some major slack generally. On "Waiting On The World To Change" the Curtis Mayfield influence is certainly there; on the chord progression, the playing style, and on in being a "message song" as well. (Now the message of waiting for everything (the world) else to change before taking action ... not so convinced that's the greatest message. But I still dig the song's groove!)
Thanks! I don't know the guitar used. What you suggest sounds reasonable. The only guitars I know he used were Teles and Strats, but that was later. Of course the main difference here is tuning. That's why I'm careful to say "Curtis Mayfield Style".
Anyone know who the F singer is on the duet? We need a few credits on here ... It's Sunday Night show, btw, which I think was the Sunday predecessor to Night Music .. ?
WOW that was some soulful playing! Dare I say even better than the original recording
Very kind!! Curtis' play is really sweet though for sure!
@@MarkZabel To match the original recording, tune down a half step.
@@MarkZabel To match the original recording, tune down a half step.
@@MarkZabel To match the original recording, tune down a half step.
@@MarkZabel To match the original recording, tune down a half step.
One of the most inspiring videos, i ever saw
Thanks! I'm working from a great song for sure.
Thanks, Mark. It's a great song to learn, but you make it a great way to soak up theory as well. A tip to anyone who cares: learn the song, then come back a while later, once it's second nature, and watch the video again. You're no longer preoccupied with learning the song and now you can focus on the theory behind what it is you're actually doing. One video + time = two completely different lessons.
You really get Curtis’s playing, lovely and you don’t overplay like so many UA-camrs.
Thank you so much!
This is the best version that it’s investing time working on. Thank you!
Wow, thanks!
Thank you... sweet chords that make all of my cells smile 🙃
My pleasure James. Thanks for watching!
Very nice touch! Awesome! I'm going to learn it! Thank you!
Thanks! Have fun!
Love that beautiful sound
Glad you like it!
Thank you Mark. This is an absolutely great lesson and I've been playing it all day. Much appreciated!
Thank you! I don't know how I missed this earlier, but I'm glad you liked it and enjoyed it. I know I did, so I was glad to share! See you later!
Thanks Mark for doing this great tune. Such a beautiful song & message. 1962 you say, I would have been all of 4 at the time. You have a wonderful teaching style, appreciate you sharing your knowledge.
Yes, it's an all-around great song. One of the best. Thanks so much for the kind words. Much appreciated!
Boy, Mark. I love the blues and jammin' rock, but sometimes you just need to play something just like this. Thanks!
Thanks so much! Sorry I missed this earlier. Really appreciate the support.
Hi Mark, I found this lesson and Curtis Mayfield is fantastic, Steve Cropper. These guys started this kind of playing. Let's get busy.
Thanks!
God bless you - got me singing within three bars
Thanks!!
Not only did you give an outstanding performance you gave us excellent tablature as well. What a great song played so very well by you. Greetings from Ireland thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it Kevin. Thanks for watching and for the kind comment too!
It's like I'm swimming inside ❤️👍
Thanks so much! This song really gets me in the right way too!
Many thanks for this gift of a lesson. You have a really calm, clear and well-paced teaching style which I'm finding easy to follow.
Thank you so much Alex!
Michael Chapdelaine has used that palm slap to keep the rhythm going for many years. It’s a great addition.
Hey Mark. Thank you again for your tutorial. I love all music, rock, blues, everything. R and B hits me in my soul though. Your my R and B go to teacher. Stay safe brother
Thanks man! I appreciate it!!
Thank you for sharing your gift - so beautiful.
Andrew, thanks for listening and also for the very kind comment.
These lessons are very helpful. You have a gift for breaking down what makes things sound good in a way that's easy to understand. Thanks again!
Hi Keith. Thank you so much for your kind note. Thanks for watching!
The tapping to keep time was first made very popular by the late and great British guitarist John Martyn. A great lesson , thank you.
Thanks Chris. I didn't know that about John Martyn. I need to check his playing out.
Love this style
*sees busy pinky work*
*saves to watch later and stern talking to, to my pinky*
LOL!
beautiful tone
I liked how it turned out for this also. Thanks.
First time I’ve stumbled onto your channel. I love your instructional approach & your playing!
Thanks!!
Just discovered your channel and first of all I just want to say thank you; you are a brilliant and generous teacher. I'm halfway through learning this and I honestly don't think I've ever had so much fun playing guitar. I just realised this is the kind of music I want to play. It feels so good. Can you recommend any other songs like this? It's all I want to listen to. Thanks again. I'll be recommending your channel to everyone I know who plays guitar.
Thank you brother! I agree. Best music on Earth to play. Just makes you feel good inside. Few songs are as good as Custis' masterpiece, but here's a couple of playlists that I've done in the genre. Let me know what other songs I should add.
R&B Guitar Lessons: ua-cam.com/play/PLSVfUQKkNUqZRGPLUQ4yCEfRnUkOE_bvq.html
Easy R&B Tutorials: ua-cam.com/play/PLSVfUQKkNUqbd8q5HRxx-FcKtOmQBFJGR.html
How did I miss this? Wow Mark...this is one of your very best!
Thank you!
Don't know why I'm just now subscribing. I've learned a lot from you. Thank you.
Never too late. Welcome, so glad you subbed! Please don't hesitate to let me know if you have some suggestions for me!
Great performance! Great lesson! You’re an awesome musician!!
Thanks so much Juan!
I cannot stop watching this, Mark. Love the way you play this. So much feeling.
Thanks so much Geert! This kind comment helped a really tough week!
@@MarkZabel That is great to know. Looking forward to the Live Stream.
Appreciate the lesson and props to the cameraman of course you
Thanks!
Great Stuff. Thank you ✌️
Glad you enjoyed it
You're right it was a big influence to Hendrix Bob Marley and Jeff back does incredible job
Simply superb work on this classic piece. Thanks for all the detail and tab on this Mark. Bravo.
My pleasure Tom. Thank you for watching and for the kind comment too!
I am sure I have heard Mr. Mayfield do this one... I will run it down... I have heard Rod Stewarts version, and it is an awesome gospel type tune... Thanks so much, Mark... Take care....
Rod Stewart's version is great and Beck's play on that is typical Beck ... that is, fantastic. But the original has real magic in it. A treasure.
Took me a while , but I now hear waiting on the world to change in CM's song.
Yep. It's kind of the other way around - PGR's chord progression used by John Mayer. It's all good.
Thanks Mark for the lesson, I like the embellishments , cool!
Glad you liked it!
Cool lesdon this is the direction ive been heading this helps
Glad it was helpful to you!
Beautiful- thank you.
You're welcome. Thanks for listening.
Excellent - thanks Mark!
Glad you enjoyed it
Beautiful, thank you so much Mark!
You're welcome Scott. Thanks for watching.
Great teacher 🙏🏼
Thank you so much!
thanks, great lesson...will try this
Have fun!
@@MarkZabel many thanks
Thanks Mark! This song came out when I was ~15 so I heard it a lot then, but I really know the Chambers Brothers version a couple yrs later having owned the album, also Grand Funk had an early popular cover & then Kenny Rankin also did in the early '70s. In the believe it or not dept (all my stories are 100% true!), in 1972 I had three of the Impressions (but not Curtis) in my taxi going from LaGuardia airport to the Westbury Hotel in Manhattan, they even invited me to a party that evening but I had classes at CUNY.
My pleasure. It's one of my favorite songs from that time.
Very nice as usual! Great tone!
Thanks!
nice in-depth lesson.
Thank you!!
Man you got some soul....you have a new subscriber
Thanks, I appreciate that!!
Great instruction
Thanks!
Nice, nicer, nicest !!!
Great one Mark. Thank you for sharing.
My pleasure. I really, really love playing this sort of music. Somehow it got into my blood early on. Thanks for watching!!
Mark Zabel
I also love these kind of chord progressions. It's so relaxing and calming playing stuff like this.
I can do that for half an hour or longer just adding some here and there or hopping to another layer on the fret board.
Btw. No guitar for me next few weeks, i fell down the stairway in my house 2 days ago and broke my tailbone and lots of bruises all over the arms and back. So i have to wait till i can check this wonderful progression.
Oh no! I hope you heal up quickly. Stairs are far more dangerous than we generally believe.
Can’t wait mark. Thanks great work Mark
Thank you Pete!!
Wonderful arrangement! Love it.
Thanks a lot!
Thank you Mark for a wonderful lesson.
You're very welcome Jean. Thank you for watching!
Gosh that is soooooo nice. Saw that little tap how fun
Thanks David. Yeah, I really enjoyed making this one!
Beautiful rendition!
Thanks so much Kevin!
Thanks a lot! Amazing lesson, man.
My pleasure! Thank you for watching!
Can't thank you enough for this!
You're very welcome!
I love stuff like this. Not real familiar with Curtis Mayfield I must admit. I'll have to check more into his music. Thanks for the lesson, Mark.
He got pretty funky in the 1970s and he also got into the "message songs", which is okay with me. His guitar work isn't as prevalent in later years - at least what I've listened to.
Fantastic lesson, easywatch and listen to! Would love to hear more r&b licks and tricks
Thanks for the feedback Lewis! I'll get back to doing more R&B. Do you have any suggestions for me?
Freaking beautiful!!!
Thanks!
rthat was awesome, and i really learned a lot from it. Gave me ideas on hoe to embellish my chords. Thanks a lot for sharing it with us. Plus i love the song too.
Thanks Edmund. Glad you liked it and found it helpful!
@@MarkZabel you are welcome Mark. Greetings from the Philippines! Am gonna share this to my facebook page. Hope you don't mind :)
@@edz20four Not at all my friend. On the contrary - I greatly appreciate it! Thank you for sharing!
smooth and mellow, thanks brother
Any time!
Excellent 🤙🤙
Thanks ✌️
Thanks for this, Mark. Great lesson. Love Curtis Mayfield.
You're very welcome Geert! Thanks for watching!
@@MarkZabel I keep on playing this video - partly to learn, and partly to hear you play, which you do beautifully, Mark. It is amazing how such a relatively simple chord sequence can be so perfect.
The Chambers Brothers had a great version of this song!
I'll check it out.
Thanks Mark!
Sure thing Adam. Thanks for watching!
Thanks a lot for this version!
My absolute pleasure Renaud. Thanks for watching!
Great lesson and very tasty playing Mark.
Thanks!
Beautiful stuff! Thanks.
Thanks so much Dan!
beautiful
Thank you!
This is so good. You are the best. Thank you for this lesson and tabs!
You're very welcome! Thanks for watching!
Great lesson, thanks
Glad you liked it!
Awesome and thank you! Love this style of playing! :-)
Thanks, me too!
great lesson, thanks bro
Thanks ... and thanks for watching!
Love that style thanks!!!
Yes, I love this style too. Could play/listen to it all day.
classic tune !! thanks .. :)
Wow, that was fast! Super-classic this one!
I am wired into the Web like a Borg .. :)
Love the Intro. Beautiful.
Thank you!
@@MarkZabel You're welcome, Mr. Zabel, you are a great teacher with an excellent taste in music. I learned a few things from you, so... thank you. 😀
Hi there! This is such a beautiful rendition! I made my own video singing to your version of this song! Thank you!
Thanks LaTonya! I'll check out your video!
Very nice.
@Charles Bottom Thank you and thanks for watching!
😎🎸 sweet licks Great finesse
Thanks so muck Rikki!
Smoove
Very nice!
Thanks Rick!
man you got it goin on great
Thanks man!
Cool stuff there Mark, I picked up that "slap" on the strings/pickup from the late great John Martyn, if you've never heard of him check him out, May You Never would be a good place to start. Cheers from the UK.
I'll check it out, thanks!
Lovely playing and a super lesson, thanks! I'm a big fan of Jeff Beck's version, and when he plays the G chord at the turn around, I think he plays the F shape and leaves the 5th (A) and 6th (E) strings open. I have no idea what that chord is called but it sounds nice to me!
You're very welcome and thank you for the kind comment! I like the Beck/Stewart version too. That's an Fmaj7 chord, although it's not usually played like that. Interesting way to do it. (F, A, C, E = 1, 3, 5, 7 ... but you've got an extra E and A on the bottom doubling the notes.)
@@MarkZabel When I said F shape I meant to make a G chord. So the notes (from bottom E string to top E) are E, A, G, B, D, G. The same notes in fact as playing all open strings, but that doesn't sound right.
Hey Gang! Live Stream tomorrow (Sunday, March 24th, 2019) See you there! ua-cam.com/video/jFPS1OJK3_0/v-deo.html&feature=share
I just subscribed to your guitar school, and would love to find your tablature of this tune. Thanks for the great lesson!🎸
Thanks! If you're logged in, the link is: mark-z-guitar-school.teachable.com/courses/mark-z-s-youtube-free/lectures/29605826
To log in, go to: mark-z-guitar-school.teachable.com/
Thanks so much can’t wait to study more of your videos!
The TAB link is fixed - no longer blank. It's in the description, but here for your convenience. Sorry about that!
ua-cam.com/users/redirect?v=S2YvoW6nQHU&event=video_description&redir_token=RkQUJofVHq7pohYBvi_lQHAckf98MTU1MzQzOTc1MkAxNTUzMzUzMzUy&q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.dropbox.com%2Fs%2Fn08375ks9t2fwyg%2FCurtis%2520Mayfield%2520Style%2520%2528People%2520Get%2520Ready%2529.pdf%3Fdl%3D0
335 😍
I know, right? :)
I belong to Active Melody and Brian made a lesson very similar on you tube. If your curious, put in active Melody Ep. 327.
What type of guitar is that...sounds like heaven to my ears
Thank you! It's a Gibson 335 from 1982.
Gibson Dot 335
Gibson Dot 335
@@MarkZabel I've always loved that guitar nothing else really sounds like it
That looks like my 2016 ES-335 though mine is the blonde version, but same hardware, and neck/fingerboard. Your tone and style sound beautiful. Thank you for this.
Thanks! Mine is a 1982. Appreciate the kind comment!
Its a timing thing "Slap timing" Its the way I learned to keep timing.....instead of toe tapping.
cool.
@@MarkZabel Gotta do something if it does not come natural.
Mark I love this progression . That 335 ?? Sounds great !
Thanks, me too. Glad you're digging the 335 on this!
Love the lesson, Mark. I don't get the tab when I pull it up. Thanks
Same here.
Here you go. ua-cam.com/users/redirect?v=S2YvoW6nQHU&event=video_description&redir_token=RkQUJofVHq7pohYBvi_lQHAckf98MTU1MzQzOTc1MkAxNTUzMzUzMzUy&q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.dropbox.com%2Fs%2Fn08375ks9t2fwyg%2FCurtis%2520Mayfield%2520Style%2520%2528People%2520Get%2520Ready%2529.pdf%3Fdl%3D0
Lovely, thanks. I'm just starting to explore this style of music. If I'm being honest, it sounds like John Mayer ripped this, sped it up, and stamped waiting on the world to change on the title
Thank you! Curtis Mayfield does not get the credit he deserves as a writer or a guitarist. He was quite innovative and influential in both.
There's truth in what you say about Mayer, and it's also true of many other musicians and other works of art and science - both good and not so good. We learn at largely through imitation - Newton's comment of "Standing n the shoulders of giants" and all of that. I'm a fan of John Mayer's play and I cut him some major slack generally. On "Waiting On The World To Change" the Curtis Mayfield influence is certainly there; on the chord progression, the playing style, and on in being a "message song" as well.
(Now the message of waiting for everything (the world) else to change before taking action ... not so convinced that's the greatest message. But I still dig the song's groove!)
Subscribed! Excellent teacher!...... You wouldn't happen to be in Chicago, would you?
Thanks so much! No, I live in Ithaca, NY. I used to get to Chicago quite often ... before the COVID-19 days. Love getting to Chicago!
Now I know where say it ain’t so comes from by weezer!
Very nice analysis and presentation. I wonder if on the original version Curtis is also playing a thin body (ES-175-T?) Gibson?
Thanks! I don't know the guitar used. What you suggest sounds reasonable. The only guitars I know he used were Teles and Strats, but that was later.
Of course the main difference here is tuning. That's why I'm careful to say "Curtis Mayfield Style".
Anyone know who the F singer is on the duet? We need a few credits on here ... It's Sunday Night show, btw, which I think was the Sunday predecessor to Night Music .. ?
Love your stuff. Do you recall if your tone was straight out of your amp or were you using a pedal?
Thanks Jim. Probably was straight out of the amp, with a touch of amp reverb on.