Yes ... ❤ we can never forget Rocco or his priceless contribution to the art of Bass Playing . He was so innovative & unique !! Such a rare bird who came along at & in the perfect noch of time in History . Am so appreciative of *how he helped shape the direction , impact & definition of Rhythmic Soul Music & you might also say Modern Music Elements* too !! I Thank God that l knew him & was fortunate enough to hang with him sharing bass ideas & play guitar with him & hang out at his home . Such a great human being to add to being a great player/musician . He is so sooooooo missed & irreplaceable . But now he is onward to a home in the great beyond !!! RIP my music friend .
“As long as you don’t step on anyone’s toes” but sure
3 роки тому+1
lots of practical wisdom on that staying. It is quite different to play a lot of notes (both fretted and ghosted) when somebody else is playing something than when there is free space. Or playing the main melody along with the wind section all the time, or just playing it along on some specific and accentuated moments. Actually the bassist can destroy a good session if he doesn't aply that piece of wisdom, "play it as much as you want as you do not step on somebody elses toes).
Rocco makes the impossible sound MORE than just impossible. It's improbable we will ever see his equal. I've watched dozens of videos and live sets with other bass players trying to imitate him. Its kind of sad and funny at the same time. Even if they play all the same notes that Rocco plays, it never works. They just can't get the feeling, or the subtle differences that Rocco puts into his musical framing -- and straight on into your emotional soul. I've tried to explain this strange and wonderful gift to many folks, who just seem to admire Rocco's technical skills as he connects the musical dots to keep TOP chugging along in their butt- kicking style. But Rocco has another role in the groove. The subtle pushes, bounces, tonal changes, micro-moments of silence, and so many other enhancements in his music weave through the TOP sound, and keep it on fire. A lot of bass players try it at home, but the matches won't stay lit.
Francis "Rocco" Prestia was Awarded, " Life Achievement Award" by Bass Player Magazine on Oct. 24th, 2009. He's been with Tower of Power since he was 14 years old, years before the Band was called "Tower of Power" til today! He really was born to play Bass! 👌😁👍❤
@@Tomatohater64 No doubt about it. He is a "busy" player but in a way that always compliments the song. Doesn't feel the need to play a million notes up and down the fretboard if it's not called for. When it's very clear he can.
Back in the day, if you could play What Is Hip? on bass, you could get into any band. That was the criteria between being ok/good and being excellent. Rocco was the coolest around.
Realizing so much of what I love about Little Feat is Tower of Power and presumably Rocco. Had to come here to acknowledge Tower of Power's beautiful influence in my life to this day.
Heyrocco I've always thought you were the baddest bass player anywhere anytime I love your style your Technique you you just kick ass bro you just kick ass over everybody I heard is as far as keeping busy man we have to tie your fingers together to stop you from being too busy but you're not too busy bro you're awesome keep it Rockin brother
Is it wrong of me to say that I love and respect everything these guys are doing and at the same time say that I really can't feel any of it? Like these guys are badass, they can all kick my ass but I don't find my soul on fire next to this.
Crocodile Avoider No need to feel sorry for me, I love soul but as much as I respect and indeed use Rocco's technique, I have a hard time getting into Tower of Power. I'm much more likely to lean towards The Swampers, The Funk Brothers, Funk Power 1970, Funkadelic, Pulse, Head Hunters, The Meters, etc.
Crocodile Avoider Oh no worries at all. You know, it's a tough threshold to describe in my personal tastes and I truly mean no offense to TOP, that goes double if you happen to be affiliated with them in any way. It's clear they are one of the most lasting and successful funk ensembles out there. For me, it's a case of each person of the band being so talented that it's hard to feel the song over the individuals. My ear tends to migrate to each musician. Everything is almost too pristine and therefore the songs tend to not stick as hard in my head. I find my personal ear craving something a bit more loose and organic. A great historical example is "Just Kissed My Baby" -- a very stripped down song but extremely memorable. A more modern example is that "drunk" behind the beat sound D'Angelo put together 16 years ago with Pino and ?uest. Such a brilliant way to find a true human feel in the world of Soul. In the school of overplaying, Medeski Martin Wood is a good example of making a lot sound interesting and organic. As a bass player, my challenge is always to go towards what's good for the song verses what I actually can play. In my opinion, no one balanced both better than James Jamerson -- but man that's a hard level to get to and it requires a drummer, or drummers in the case of Motown that are willing to have that push/pull. So in the end, for me, TOP is a little too pristine, too polished but what doesn't make them right for me is exactly what makes them right for so many others. That said, Rocco has one hell of a right hand/left hand muting technique and I've spent many a year building up that stamina to be able to get such thick, percussive notes as he has in my personal bag of tricks.
That's a good way to describe them. TOP are definitely musicians musicians pushing the very technical side of funk. The James Brown camp definitely illustrated the more raw, gritty approach (even though James fined his band for mistakes, haha!). Stevie's work in the mid to late 70's is about as refined as I can go before it starts to lose something for me. I'm a sucker for intelligent simplicity. I love ambient subtleties, a good hook, a smooth swing, a tight interesting rhythm and a punchy, winding bass line all bathed in human imperfection. Diana Ross's "Reflections" or even Dusty Springfield's "Son of a Preacher Man" is a good example. In more recent years, I've become a fan of the lesser known hip-hip movement (kind of the more substantial, more complicated, grittier, oozing soul side of the tepid top 40). The less materialistic, more poetic side, the side that was birthed from funk breakbeats and raps that go back as old as African tribes. The Bristol sound known as "Trip-Hop" qualifies for sure. The electronic movement over the last 20 years has become a source of interest for me as well a lot of artists off of Warp Records are beyond fantastic. It seems just below the bright shining "Coke Machine" on the pop surface today is a wealth of amazing new sounds. A lot of them harken back to the 70's. Vulf Peck is a great example of guys younger than me rediscovering that deep, dirty soulful rhythm funk coupled with with the sparkling melodic hooks found in the late 70's and early 80's. Just today I Shazam'ed a few new ones: Mac Demarco, Connan Mockasin and Unknown Mortal Orchestra. Thanks for the love on the bass side, I love great rhythm guitar players for sure. I love the great studio rats that played on all the great albums. My favorites are great songwriters, those great arrangers who have a sense for smart production and chord changes that don't follow your typical pop formula. Too much to mention there but in general, the visionaries. People like David Byrne, Paul Simon, Brian Wilson and Al Green/Willie Mitchell, I mean if you listen to "Let's Stay Together" it's a very odd song but somehow it made the charts in a big way. Same with The Talking Heads and "Once in a Lifetime." I love stuff like that that appeals to art and pop universally. That's such hard work but those are the tunes that stand the test of time. Sorry for the book I just wrote but it's a subject I'm passionate about.
Rocco and Dave Garibaldi, akways tighter than a gnat's ass stretched over a boxcar. If your feet weren't tapping, better check yourself, you're probably dead. I've missed him the last couple of times TOP had come around up here in New Hampshire, I knew things weren't good. RIP Rocco.
TOP are incredible, and Rocco is indispensable to their style. Just an incredible bassist. I've been a huge fan forever, but this lineup is very weak. It's about as unfunky as I've ever heard them...the vocalist is not soulful and is extremely unsuited to this music, the guitarist is wheedly wheedly, and the funk ain't flowin like it should. If you think this is funky, it'll blow your mind when you see them at their best. Rocco and Garibaldi are a legendary rhythm section.
Live, From Beautiful Downtown (your city here), it's the (host's name) Show! Tonight's Guests: The guy that invented the hammer. Gas Station Sushi You Can Make at Home and We'll get some Summer Sightseeing Tips For Your Broke Ass from City Events Director (your city events director here).
It's not quite grooving like it was in the early and mid 70s. The drummer is no Garibaldi, and the organ player is no Chester Thompson. That organ clone is pretty arse, too. Still cool though
Yes ... ❤ we can never forget Rocco or his priceless contribution to the art of Bass Playing . He was so innovative & unique !! Such a rare bird who came along at & in the perfect noch of time in History . Am so appreciative of *how he helped shape the direction , impact & definition of Rhythmic Soul Music & you might also say Modern Music Elements* too !! I Thank God that l knew him & was fortunate enough to hang with him sharing bass ideas & play guitar with him & hang out at his home . Such a great human being to add to being a great player/musician . He is so sooooooo missed & irreplaceable . But now he is onward to a home in the great beyond !!! RIP my music friend .
You were never a soloist, you just Soloed all the time. R.I.P. Rocco Prestia.
The best bass player I've ever seen. RIP Rocco
Legends never die! Rest in peace Rocco
An original member of the Motowns, Gotham City Crime Fighters and oh yes, Tower of Power.
God bless you Rocco for all you’ve done for us.
A beast on the Bass man that guy could play. The bass lines are insane.
R.I.P. Rocco
He was the reason for the TOP sound!!! R.I.P. God be with you
"I just want to make the point that it's ok to be busy, as long as your not stepping on anyone's toes." -FRP
*you're
“As long as you don’t step on anyone’s toes” but sure
lots of practical wisdom on that staying.
It is quite different to play a lot of notes (both fretted and ghosted) when somebody else is playing something than when there is free space.
Or playing the main melody along with the wind section all the time, or just playing it along on some specific and accentuated moments.
Actually the bassist can destroy a good session if he doesn't aply that piece of wisdom, "play it as much as you want as you do not step on somebody elses toes).
@@McDoinky Actually, Rocco said, "...just as long as you don't step on nobody's toes."
Rocco makes the impossible sound MORE than just impossible. It's improbable we will ever see his equal. I've watched dozens of videos and live sets with other bass players trying to imitate him. Its kind of sad and funny at the same time. Even if they play all the same notes that Rocco plays, it never works. They just can't get the feeling, or the subtle differences that Rocco puts into his musical framing -- and straight on into your emotional soul. I've tried to explain this strange and wonderful gift to many folks, who just seem to admire Rocco's technical skills as he connects the musical dots to keep TOP chugging along in their butt- kicking style. But Rocco has another role in the groove. The subtle pushes, bounces, tonal changes, micro-moments of silence, and so many other enhancements in his music weave through the TOP sound, and keep it on fire. A lot of bass players try it at home, but the matches won't stay lit.
The best.... this rhythm section shows up to the gig ON TIME! Funky as hell.
Francis "Rocco" Prestia was Awarded, " Life Achievement Award" by Bass Player Magazine on Oct. 24th, 2009. He's been with Tower of Power since he was 14 years old, years before the Band was called "Tower of Power" til today! He really was born to play Bass! 👌😁👍❤
ROCCO, you will be sorely missed! Thank you for all the grooves!
I like how matter of fact and straight to the point he is. As a consummate student of the bass I've come to realize that's essentially a bassist job.
Francis Rocco Prestia is a bassist that "GET IT". This man is a bass guitar genius.
Larry Cooper Love it! Not a slap or a pop in site. Muting like the champ he is. A real rhythm guru.
I have to second this comment. He plays amazingly without showing off and throwing a bunch of junk that doesn't compliment the song.
@@Tomatohater64 No doubt about it. He is a "busy" player but in a way that always compliments the song. Doesn't feel the need to play a million notes up and down the fretboard if it's not called for. When it's very clear he can.
RIP ROCCO... HUMBLE..TALENTED..SKILL PLAYER
Rocco's Groove is the 8th wonder of the world
Rocco and Jaco... The best Bass players ever.
And Foley. Don’t forget Foley!
@@garymelnyk7910 who is foley ?
Rocco,......Rest in Peace.....in Funk Heven
The King of pumpin' bass funk !! Genius. And NO he was NOT too busy, cause the man was in da pocket hugh deeg?
Bought your sig bass before you passed brother. RIP. Thanks for all the jams.
Really sad he's gone. Huge influence. R.I.P. Rocco, thanks for the music. On the video it looks like the lineup from 1991's Monster On A Leash era.
One of Jaco's influences.
Ok Nice
he's undressing me with his eyes
and his voice
Rocco is still the man...
R.I.P. Rocco, you will truly be missed 😭❤
gran bajista !!! un monstruo. Que pena que ya no este entre nosotros
amazing tight and so clear every details THE BEST IN THE WORLD.. NO2 ..BLOOD SWEAT AND TEARS... NO3.. CHICAGO...NO4..EARTH WIND AND FIRE.
Back in the day, if you could play What Is Hip? on bass, you could get into any band. That was the criteria between being ok/good and being excellent. Rocco was the coolest around.
RIP Rocco mate you were one of my idols.
Rest in peace, the legend. Im pretty sure you will play the best eminors wherever you go...
Master of funk! RIP
Absolutely NO wasted movement whatsoever!! Wonderful!
Rest in peace Rocco.The grove master.
RIP Rocco Prestia
Memory Eternal dear Rocco.
Realizing so much of what I love about Little Feat is Tower of Power and presumably Rocco. Had to come here to acknowledge Tower of Power's beautiful influence in my life to this day.
Heyrocco I've always thought you were the baddest bass player anywhere anytime I love your style your Technique you you just kick ass bro you just kick ass over everybody I heard is as far as keeping busy man we have to tie your fingers together to stop you from being too busy but you're not too busy bro you're awesome keep it Rockin brother
this is like an ad for one of those old vhs dating services
Awesome .. Success and GBU ALWAYS
Nice to see Russ Mckinnon on the drums right next to the Legend. Rocco is the funkiest bassist I heard.
He was playing with such an incredible high action😲
he played so hard that any lower and he would have gotten fret buzz, makes sense
Rocco-‘The Master’
Even his voice has the funk
One of the best in history and he didn't slap a note. Well, maybe 2 or 3. 😆😃
rocco.. qué genio por dios..
RIP Rocco
oh and one note samba was one note.. did well too
Man!! This dude sounds like an original Steven Seagal ..
this man is one of the funkiest human beigns ever
R.I.P. Rocco Prestia
Rest in peace Funk Legend Rocco
Good tips here too!
bring back the tucking shirt into black jeans style
R.I.P.
R.I.P. Roco !!
Is it wrong of me to say that I love and respect everything these guys are doing and at the same time say that I really can't feel any of it? Like these guys are badass, they can all kick my ass but I don't find my soul on fire next to this.
+Evan J It's totally understandable. It's simply a matter of personal music taste.
Crocodile Avoider No need to feel sorry for me, I love soul but as much as I respect and indeed use Rocco's technique, I have a hard time getting into Tower of Power. I'm much more likely to lean towards The Swampers, The Funk Brothers, Funk Power 1970, Funkadelic, Pulse, Head Hunters, The Meters, etc.
Crocodile Avoider Oh no worries at all. You know, it's a tough threshold to describe in my personal tastes and I truly mean no offense to TOP, that goes double if you happen to be affiliated with them in any way. It's clear they are one of the most lasting and successful funk ensembles out there. For me, it's a case of each person of the band being so talented that it's hard to feel the song over the individuals. My ear tends to migrate to each musician. Everything is almost too pristine and therefore the songs tend to not stick as hard in my head. I find my personal ear craving something a bit more loose and organic. A great historical example is "Just Kissed My Baby" -- a very stripped down song but extremely memorable. A more modern example is that "drunk" behind the beat sound D'Angelo put together 16 years ago with Pino and ?uest. Such a brilliant way to find a true human feel in the world of Soul. In the school of overplaying, Medeski Martin Wood is a good example of making a lot sound interesting and organic. As a bass player, my challenge is always to go towards what's good for the song verses what I actually can play. In my opinion, no one balanced both better than James Jamerson -- but man that's a hard level to get to and it requires a drummer, or drummers in the case of Motown that are willing to have that push/pull. So in the end, for me, TOP is a little too pristine, too polished but what doesn't make them right for me is exactly what makes them right for so many others. That said, Rocco has one hell of a right hand/left hand muting technique and I've spent many a year building up that stamina to be able to get such thick, percussive notes as he has in my personal bag of tricks.
That's a good way to describe them. TOP are definitely musicians musicians pushing the very technical side of funk. The James Brown camp definitely illustrated the more raw, gritty approach (even though James fined his band for mistakes, haha!). Stevie's work in the mid to late 70's is about as refined as I can go before it starts to lose something for me.
I'm a sucker for intelligent simplicity. I love ambient subtleties, a good hook, a smooth swing, a tight interesting rhythm and a punchy, winding bass line all bathed in human imperfection. Diana Ross's "Reflections" or even Dusty Springfield's "Son of a Preacher Man" is a good example.
In more recent years, I've become a fan of the lesser known hip-hip movement (kind of the more substantial, more complicated, grittier, oozing soul side of the tepid top 40). The less materialistic, more poetic side, the side that was birthed from funk breakbeats and raps that go back as old as African tribes. The Bristol sound known as "Trip-Hop" qualifies for sure. The electronic movement over the last 20 years has become a source of interest for me as well a lot of artists off of Warp Records are beyond fantastic. It seems just below the bright shining "Coke Machine" on the pop surface today is a wealth of amazing new sounds. A lot of them harken back to the 70's.
Vulf Peck is a great example of guys younger than me rediscovering that deep, dirty soulful rhythm funk coupled with with the sparkling melodic hooks found in the late 70's and early 80's. Just today I Shazam'ed a few new ones: Mac Demarco, Connan Mockasin and Unknown Mortal Orchestra.
Thanks for the love on the bass side, I love great rhythm guitar players for sure. I love the great studio rats that played on all the great albums. My favorites are great songwriters, those great arrangers who have a sense for smart production and chord changes that don't follow your typical pop formula. Too much to mention there but in general, the visionaries. People like David Byrne, Paul Simon, Brian Wilson and Al Green/Willie Mitchell, I mean if you listen to "Let's Stay Together" it's a very odd song but somehow it made the charts in a big way. Same with The Talking Heads and "Once in a Lifetime." I love stuff like that that appeals to art and pop universally. That's such hard work but those are the tunes that stand the test of time. Sorry for the book I just wrote but it's a subject I'm passionate about.
ofc it isnt wrong of you to say. theres loads of different kinds of music, to each their own.
Rocco and Dave Garibaldi, akways tighter than a gnat's ass stretched over a boxcar. If your feet weren't tapping, better check yourself, you're probably dead. I've missed him the last couple of times TOP had come around up here in New Hampshire, I knew things weren't good. RIP Rocco.
How great would it be to see Dennis McMurrin playing with Rocco!
"OK here's a G" - yeah you mate!
I still got this video, on VHS, it was not his thing, he was no teacher he was Rocco find out
but now he is in the greatest soulnand on earth, leave the planet , and jamm in the hall with the greatest , god bless his soul, francis rocco prestia
You can so hear that he’s one of joe darts main influences
From 2:30! Whoa! Cheers for posting.
TASTY!!!!!!!!
8:34 Dean Town - The Origin
And where can I find the rest of this lesson?
3:53 Genius!! :O
rest in peace.
R.I.P
it's very good
dave weckl on keyboards????????? jajajajajajaja
Check out his CD, Everybody On The Bus, Enjoy !
Rocco: esto es groove!!!
we wanted to be you
Play thank funky music whitw boy
RIP
What's the name of the kryboardist at 0:46
Rip Francis.....Wich bass is it ?
Fernandes Gravity 5
❤️😔
This has to be the worst damn year ever. R.i.p. and rest well Francis Rocco Prestia
THE PORNO THING IS SO F... TRUE ¡¡¡¡ JAJAJAJAJAJAJAJAJAJA
Who's on keys?
Adiós amigo!!
8:38 Dean Town? lol
whats the name of the first song????
Paulo Rodr Squib Cakes.
Thanks bro!!!
Paulo Rodr release it by prince
...sitting on the left side of God...outstanding left hand playing...im sad....
Is that an Ibanez?
John Steed its a Fernandez - I think he was an endorsee with the company at that time ( I may be wrong )
Hate the new Tower Of Power! 70's were the best! Bassist is the best for this style or this band. He has it down up.
That finished at a frustrating point...
TOP are incredible, and Rocco is indispensable to their style. Just an incredible bassist. I've been a huge fan forever, but this lineup is very weak. It's about as unfunky as I've ever heard them...the vocalist is not soulful and is extremely unsuited to this music, the guitarist is wheedly wheedly, and the funk ain't flowin like it should. If you think this is funky, it'll blow your mind when you see them at their best. Rocco and Garibaldi are a legendary rhythm section.
I didnt know Chuck Norris was a talented bassist amongst other things
Perfect bass ,, and drums ,,but that organ is not what is hip..if you know what I mean .just to much ..
Live, From Beautiful Downtown (your city here), it's the (host's name) Show! Tonight's Guests: The guy that invented the hammer. Gas Station Sushi You Can Make at Home and We'll get some Summer Sightseeing Tips For Your Broke Ass from City Events Director (your city events director here).
It's not quite grooving like it was in the early and mid 70s. The drummer is no Garibaldi, and the organ player is no Chester Thompson. That organ clone is pretty arse, too. Still cool though
Wil Sargisson if youre talking about the guy shown at :46, what's his name?
Yea I hear you. It’s like drummer Russ McKinnon is trying to hard to be funky like Garibaldi.
Wow that guitar tone is horribly dated. Rocco sounds great though.
+allrequiredfields wrong gtr and tone as well
Well it's from the 80s. Soooo...there's that. Hahahahaha ;)
Guitar players gotta go. Kick rocks...
The band were amazing,.. I just don't like the 'cock rock' guitarist style,.. he is totally out of context on this tune. In my opinion.
Look up Wilbur Bascomb. Much the same style, and probably better>
DK
R.I.P. Rocco
R.I.P