Excellent teacher. A rare gentleman with a forthright, unpretentious approach. Good verbal/communication skills and a wealth of historical knowledge to securely establish his place within the upper niche of modern guitar instructors.
can't thank you enough! your blog post about this song is awesome too. so much good information. i have never seen someone go to so much effort. i really appreciate it, and i'm sure everyone that watches will too.
Thank you so much for the lesson and the way you present the music. It's refreshing to hear someone talk about these blues song like they would any other song and not some mythical unicorn. These are great tunes and resonate with people as much today as they did when they were written. The song writers were trying to entertain folks which I think is lost sometime in modern interpretations. You presentation was fun and your style gets that across. Thanks again.
The song is actually in open D tuning. I see what you’re trying to do as little as simpler I guess, but not exact in that a lot of times it should be an F sharp against an A.
To the guy who asked for the tab... I found it by going to the link for the full blog posting (just below the 'Like' button) which will take you to this: truefire.com/tabs/statesboro-blues.pdf
Bingo, but this is constant with Jimmy Page. Having most of the imortant Blues recordings library in early age, he taught he could just record those songs riffs and sometimes even do a copy without the composer knowing.
Whole Lotta Love In 1987, Dixon reached an out-of-court settlement with the rock band Led Zeppelin after suing for plagiarism in the band's use of his music in "Bring It On Home" and lyrics from his composition "You Need Love" (1962) in the band's recording of "Whole Lotta Love".
Excellent teacher. A rare gentleman with a forthright, unpretentious approach. Good verbal/communication skills and a wealth of historical knowledge to securely establish his place within the upper niche of modern guitar instructors.
can't thank you enough! your blog post about this song is awesome too. so much good information. i have never seen someone go to so much effort. i really appreciate it, and i'm sure everyone that watches will too.
Clear and well thought out lesson and analysis. There's a lot here for discerning player.
David -you rock! Thanks for your generosity, education, and skillfull instructions. I'm your biggest fan.
Really like the way you broke this down. As someone who’s desperate to get the independent thumb thing going this was very helpful. Thanks.
Hi David, thanks love this have you done a lesson on ‘Another Cross to Bear”
Great bit of Blues history and information. I hear a bar or two of 'Old Dan's Records' in that old song as well.
4:30 McTell apparently used a 12 string, which is probably the sound you are hearing.
Thanks for the video, I'm a big fan of McTell's playing.
Thank you so much for the lesson and the way you present the music. It's refreshing to hear someone talk about these blues song like they would any other song and not some mythical unicorn. These are great tunes and resonate with people as much today as they did when they were written. The song writers were trying to entertain folks which I think is lost sometime in modern interpretations. You presentation was fun and your style gets that across. Thanks again.
Wow; thanks very much; good stuff ´n easy to follow - you explain and show it well 👍👌
Great song, would you send me the sheet music, according to the video I'll never learn it?
You are a great teacher and guitsr player. Thanks for explaining how to play this song.
I will try it later tonight.
sounds great. You are an exceptional teacher too.
Thank you so much your a good teacher.
The bar 9 characteristic bend is played in two positions and octaves,points to partial open chord in upper strings.Chris Young
Sir,did you compose a bluesy soundtrack for documentary Oldest man in America?
what kind of guitar is that man? sounds amazing
Excellent stuff 👍🍷
This is really nice to play. Check out Fred Sokolow’s lesson in open D which is also very interesting.
excellent
Thanks! Great explanation by a fine artist. Much appreciated.
This is SO HELPFUL!!!
Really nice man. Really nice. Thanks.
very enjoyable Dave
John Ditto good
The song is actually in open D tuning. I see what you’re trying to do as little as simpler I guess, but not exact in that a lot of times it should be an F sharp against an A.
I love this song, it can take you so many places. Well done! Any chance you would produce a video on David Bromberg's 'Lectric Chair?
Well done!
Great Teacher! Thanks David,!
One the best u tube instruction video
Wonderful Lesson - Thank You!
That should keep me busy for the rest of the winter :-)
how about a tab for this amazing piece ?
real teacher. thanks so much.
I'll learn this thanks. Would prefer it in open d but this'll do
You sound like you should be on NPR on blues night :) Good lesson
is that a classical guitar with steel strings?
To the guy who asked for the tab...
I found it by going to the link for the full blog posting (just below the 'Like' button) which will take you to this:
truefire.com/tabs/statesboro-blues.pdf
Thanks
So glad I found this! If you could teach me 'pal o mine' I would be forever in your debt
whats that guitar your playing
It's a kick ass instrument whatever it is. Good lesson as well.
If you turn the guitar to your left your fingering would be clearly visible, as is it is hard to figure out exactly what you are doing. Thanks.
just awsome ,,,its kinda tough and thanx to you .. .i can try to connect that right hand to the brain,,,lol ,,,peace
you are awesome!
St marks place
thank you, you teach well,
what tuning are u in?
D-A-D-G-B-E
Standard tuning with the lower E dropped to a D
cool lesson
cool name ;-)
COULD YOU PLEASE, PLEASE TAKE ON MISSISSIPPI JOHN HURT'S SONG, "COW HOOKING BLUES" - I CANNOT FIGURE IT OUT!!!
exellent
yehh... thanks!!
Your the second messiah.
lol this sounds like going to califonia
Bingo, but this is constant with Jimmy Page. Having most of the imortant Blues recordings library in early age, he taught he could just record those songs riffs and sometimes even do a copy without the composer knowing.
Whole Lotta Love
In 1987, Dixon reached an out-of-court settlement with the rock band Led Zeppelin after suing for plagiarism in the band's use of his music in "Bring It On Home" and lyrics from his composition "You Need Love" (1962) in the band's recording of "Whole Lotta Love".
Great video but it could’ve been 5 minutes long. Play a bar, Explain how you play it, go to next bar.