A friend of mine went to jazz academy in Gratz and he played for entrance exam a Joe Pass composition. When the jury asked him why he choose that, he answered he want to pass. And he did.
Absolutely mind warping !. Dear Joe. Everyone has something to say. But !, we won’t hear his like again. Marvellous !. Pointless to even dare to compare him with anyone else !. He’s Joe Pass !. Say no more x x .
El tiempo que pasó encarcelado hizo que Joe Pass se convirtiera en un 'revirtuoso'. Ingresó muy joven siendo virtuoso ya, pero las horas que pudo dedicar a su instrumento y al estudio de la armonía, lo dejaron en otra galaxia muy muy lejana: tanto en técnica de dedos, como con vitela o una mezcla de ambas (a lo Chet Atkins)... Se desintoxicó de las sustancias y dio clases a otros reclusos, así empezó a reestablecerse ... Aquí un blues suyo con vitela GRACIAS POR SUBIRLO! Diferente a otros blues con técnica de dedos. Este Joe's Blues con vitela es un poco rockn'roll también... Dijo el mismo Joseph Passalaqua: "Hubo un tiempo en el que me perdí y no fui un buen individuo. Si me prestabas una guitarra, iba a empeñarla para tener sustancias para consumir. La vida me dio otra oportunidad y desde ahí cuidé o traté de cuidar cada pequeño momento de vida que tengo"....
Joe Pass, Joseph Anthony Jacobi Passalacqua (Nuevo Brunswick, 13 de enero de 1929 - Los Ángeles, 23 de mayo de 1994), fue un músico de jazz estadounidense. Caracterizado por su uso del walking bass, del contrapunto melódico en medio del curso de una improvisación y de un estilo melódico de acordes, se trata de uno de los más alabados guitarristas de jazz, tanto por la crítica como por sus compañeros de profesión, a algunos de los cuales sirvió de eficiente acompañante en distintos trabajos. 65 AÑOS.
It’s not “ A contest” !. If you start comparing Joe and a mixture of great Jazz Guitarists, you’ve already lost the argument !. You are not “ getting the picture “. All are wonderful individuals. Joe is such a “ one of”. For fantastic creativity, I believe he was fabulously on his own. This is for @ Kex986 !.
Never understood comments like that-- when I hear great playing i want to practice harder so I can achieve it, not give up... That's what's known as INSPIRATION. If you feel negatively instead, then you're not a true musician.
@@epf1961 ……you misunderstand…..I’d never really hang up my guitar. I’ve been playing for nearly 60 years and it’s part of my life. But every once in a while a naturally gifted player, like Pass, or Djago etc, comes along and leads the way. No amount of practice will beat natural talent. You might get close….and it’s fun trying…..but some just have the gift. Keep enjoying the journey though 👍🍷.
I'm guessing that you play guitar. So do I. The transcripts might be interesting, but notes on paper won't help me to play like Joe Pass. Nor will they increase the ability of any of us. Are you thinking that with the transcripts you could play this like Joe? Just curious.
Joe was truly an improvisational genius, like Danny Gatton, Les Paul, a few others. And another example of why it’s so foolish to place Hendrix atop a list of best guitarists, as so many do.
Hendrix was the best because he transcended what is considered ‘normal’ guitar sound. He literally made the guitar speak and gave it a voice like nobody has ever done, before or since. Just listen to All Along the Watchtower if you need a refresher. NOBODY makes the guitar sound like that. Lots of guys have great tone or play fast or have great technique or whatever, but at the end of the day it’s all about the SOUND you can make with the instrument.
@@justin1978 There is no “best” guitarist. I was in London in ‘66-‘69, Hendrix transformed from a doo wop guitarist to psychedelic master, in part related to the expanded awareness and LSD use. John Coltrane, Miles Davis, a few others expanded their playing noticeably, from selective use of Hallucinogenics. The Beatles song-writing for example, changed dramatically after their use of Lysergic. That said, Terry Kath, Jeff Beck, Roy Buchanan and Carlos Santana were all capable of playing similarly to Hendrix, but were much less flamboyant. Les Paul was a square, and would have benefitted from proper drug use, but still a far better fretsman in the 40’s and 50’s. than rock guitarists decades after. So Hendrix was great, but has plenty of company
Jimi was beyond a great guitar player, he was an innovator. Few of the techniques and styles Jimi used in his playing had ever been used or heard before. He changed everything about how an instrument could be used and perceived and those changes have had a lasting impact on countless musicians. All of those musicians you listed are great guitar players too, but they didn’t transform everything we thought we knew about guitar into something entirely different that would have a permanent impact on how the electric guitar is used and perceived. I can’t think of another guitar player who made such an impact and that’s why I and many others consider him to be the best.
@@justin1978 you’re so enamored you must have only recently learned about Hendrix on Wikipedia and UA-cam. I lived in London in the late 60s and saw him numerous times. Among others but would have to conclude after seeing many live gigs, Terry Kath, Jeff Beck, Roy Buchanan, Carlos Santana are just a few, quite capable of playing with effects that your hero demonstrated, though less flamboyantly. Kath was actually more skilled. And had he been a front man, history would be different. His “Freeform Guitar” inspired Hendrix to do TSSB at Woodstock. Les Paul was doing so much more, with actual fingers on frets, simultaneous lead/rhythm, could hear something once and embellish it, way back in the late 40’s. And after seeing Danny Gatton up close the night they recorded “The Humbler Stakes His Claim” and Redneck Jazz LP, Hendrix seems like a dinosaur.
@@commanderthorkilj.amundsen3426 Sorry you saw him and didn’t ‘get it’. What a shame. PS. If you think Santana and Terry Kath are in the same league you really on that dope. Maybe too much of your beloved ‘lysergic’??
A friend of mine went to jazz academy in Gratz and he played for entrance exam a Joe Pass composition. When the jury asked him why he choose that, he answered he want to pass. And he did.
Truly awesome legend. and His eyes are closed for most of this.
One of the most important guitarist all the time.
Also Pat Martino one of the greatest ever lived.
Absolutely mind warping !. Dear Joe. Everyone has something to say.
But !, we won’t hear his like again. Marvellous !. Pointless to even dare to compare him with anyone else !. He’s Joe Pass !. Say no more x x .
The way he modulates so effortlessly is brilliant
El tiempo que pasó encarcelado hizo que Joe Pass se convirtiera en un 'revirtuoso'. Ingresó muy joven siendo virtuoso ya, pero las horas que pudo dedicar a su instrumento y al estudio de la armonía, lo dejaron en otra galaxia muy muy lejana: tanto en técnica de dedos, como con vitela o una mezcla de ambas (a lo Chet Atkins)... Se desintoxicó de las sustancias y dio clases a otros reclusos, así empezó a reestablecerse ... Aquí un blues suyo con vitela GRACIAS POR SUBIRLO! Diferente a otros blues con técnica de dedos. Este Joe's Blues con vitela es un poco rockn'roll también... Dijo el mismo Joseph Passalaqua: "Hubo un tiempo en el que me perdí y no fui un buen individuo. Si me prestabas una guitarra, iba a empeñarla para tener sustancias para consumir. La vida me dio otra oportunidad y desde ahí cuidé o traté de cuidar cada pequeño momento de vida que tengo"....
fucking perfect can't believe he is always on time and using perfect harmonic movements
He’s The king
Classical guitar is BACK :)
I don't know about that... I heard that he used to be late for gigs all the time...?
A master at work...
Genius at work - sit back and admire!
This guy is one of the reasons i signed Guitar Lessons - Classical Guitar. I am 38, but want to learn the Guitar :P
Good luck.....practice daily...🎸🎵🎸
@@marcusbuckner5582 joe pass started on classical guitar when a boy.
if you like classical guitar great but if you want to play jazz wouldn't a jazz teacher be best if you can?
@@guillermor.r4831 I used to play Piano. Guitar is 2nd instrument. More like Flamenco oriented. Jazz.... i can play on PIano )
Dude! That's fucking awesome! Go for It!
REMARKABLE! Thanks for sharing, chris in ny
Anthony Passalacqua, amazing guitar player of every time!
it's Joe Passalaqua.....and I agree certainly uppermost quality
Thee best guitarist of all time and a pretty good guitar player too 😊
Guitar master at work
Love Joe Pass
Legend!!!!!!
Nobody does a guitar solo like Joe.
Excellent.. The technique.. Damn!
You can tell Lil Wayne was influenced by this guy.
my hero
Besides the fact Joe Pass is a Guitar God, the camara transitions were awesome too. Very according to the tune mood.
Master !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Such awesome tone
Bravo!
Joe Pass, Joseph Anthony Jacobi Passalacqua (Nuevo Brunswick, 13 de enero de 1929 - Los Ángeles, 23 de mayo de 1994), fue un músico de jazz estadounidense. Caracterizado por su uso del walking bass, del contrapunto melódico en medio del curso de una improvisación y de un estilo melódico de acordes, se trata de uno de los más alabados guitarristas de jazz, tanto por la crítica como por sus compañeros de profesión, a algunos de los cuales sirvió de eficiente acompañante en distintos trabajos.
65 AÑOS.
1 dislike? Must've been Pass himself
Lol
Solo a 11 pendejos no les gusta
muito bom musico uauu
After listening to many jazz guitarists I'm sure I like Joe Pass best. I'm not one to claim one is "best ever" but who can do it better?
Wes Montgomery might come close
Django
Lenny breau
ted Greene
Ron esteche
Pasquale gramasso
Josh meader
George Van Eps
It’s not “ A contest” !. If you start comparing Joe and a mixture of great Jazz Guitarists,
you’ve already lost the argument !. You are not “ getting the picture “. All are wonderful individuals.
Joe is such a “ one of”. For fantastic creativity, I believe he was fabulously on his own.
This is for @ Kex986 !.
grande joe....miss you
1:54 I wouldn't mind being a shoeshine boy for Uncle Joe while he's Jazzin' it up on his guitar.
A God among us
Sou fã do veinho!!!
Leggenda ❤
As far as I am concerned, Joe Pass is always the winner!
fucking legend
Kenny, Chet, then Joe. Joe is among best ever.
Its hard to believe this guy didn't make Rolling Stones top 250 Guitarists of all time.
I was reading about George Gershwin's Rhapsody In Blue when it was first done (1928?) the critics just piled on about how bad it was...
Master.
The one person who down voted this needs to get better taste in music.
some people just don't like zeroes i guess.
C'mon; that's obiuovus the he is somebody envy !! Joe is direct way to a 3d dimension of Planet guitar!!
@@inclinethineearmusic2732 Those people who are still stuck on root notes. Joe pass just changes to a new one so often it must piss them off.
Wooooweeeeee
Joes blues, Hendrixs red house always different.
❤️
Супер
Is he know for any particular song/s?
LOOK OUT !!
I've just hung up my guitar ☹️.....he was so good.
Never understood comments like that-- when I hear great playing i want to practice harder so I can achieve it, not give up... That's what's known as INSPIRATION. If you feel negatively instead, then you're not a true musician.
@@epf1961 ……you misunderstand…..I’d never really hang up my guitar. I’ve been playing for nearly 60 years and it’s part of my life. But every once in a while a naturally gifted player, like Pass, or Djago etc, comes along and leads the way. No amount of practice will beat natural talent. You might get close….and it’s fun trying…..but some just have the gift. Keep enjoying the journey though 👍🍷.
@@emlyngriffith5846 nah you realize they put in countless hours of effort
Any tab or sheet music for this one?
Please !!
Nice he balls out on this one
where can I buy the transcipts?
I'm guessing that you play guitar. So do I. The transcripts might be interesting, but notes on paper won't help me to play like Joe Pass. Nor will they increase the ability of any of us. Are you thinking that with the transcripts you could play this like Joe? Just curious.
Russs Pilgrim@ Yes it works for me transcripts help to navigate on the fretboard but I know getting the feel is totally a different ball game, though.
The transcripts are in ‘Joe Pass on Guitar’
Joe Pass with a pick?
i was about to say it too
mrrusss He’s always used a pick, mostly for the fast solos
He started favoring fingerstyle almost exclusively as he got older, but in the 60’s and 70’s he frequently used a pick.
Actually he used half a pick...
fera de maissssss
You can tell Tony Iommi was influenced by this guy.
666 Likes. Well, I,m going to Change That!
Joe was truly an improvisational genius, like Danny Gatton, Les Paul, a few others. And another example of why it’s so foolish to place Hendrix atop a list of best guitarists, as so many do.
Hendrix was the best because he transcended what is considered ‘normal’ guitar sound. He literally made the guitar speak and gave it a voice like nobody has ever done, before or since. Just listen to All Along the Watchtower if you need a refresher. NOBODY makes the guitar sound like that. Lots of guys have great tone or play fast or have great technique or whatever, but at the end of the day it’s all about the SOUND you can make with the instrument.
@@justin1978 There is no “best” guitarist.
I was in London in ‘66-‘69, Hendrix transformed from a doo wop guitarist to psychedelic master, in part related to the expanded awareness and LSD use.
John Coltrane, Miles Davis, a few others expanded their playing noticeably, from selective use of Hallucinogenics.
The Beatles song-writing for example, changed dramatically after their use of Lysergic.
That said, Terry Kath, Jeff Beck, Roy Buchanan and Carlos Santana were all capable of playing similarly to Hendrix, but were much less flamboyant.
Les Paul was a square, and would have benefitted from proper drug use, but still a far better fretsman in the 40’s and 50’s.
than rock guitarists decades after.
So Hendrix was great, but has plenty of company
Jimi was beyond a great guitar player, he was an innovator. Few of the techniques and styles Jimi used in his playing had ever been used or heard before. He changed everything about how an instrument could be used and perceived and those changes have had a lasting impact on countless musicians. All of those musicians you listed are great guitar players too, but they didn’t transform everything we thought we knew about guitar into something entirely different that would have a permanent impact on how the electric guitar is used and perceived. I can’t think of another guitar player who made such an impact and that’s why I and many others consider him to be the best.
@@justin1978 you’re so enamored you must have only recently learned about Hendrix on Wikipedia and UA-cam. I lived in London in the late 60s and saw him numerous times. Among others but would have to conclude after seeing many live gigs, Terry Kath, Jeff Beck, Roy Buchanan, Carlos Santana are just a few, quite capable of playing with effects that your hero demonstrated, though less flamboyantly. Kath was actually more skilled. And had he been a front man, history would be different. His “Freeform Guitar” inspired Hendrix to do TSSB at Woodstock.
Les Paul was doing so much more, with actual fingers on frets, simultaneous lead/rhythm, could hear something once and embellish it, way back in the late 40’s.
And after seeing Danny Gatton up close the night they recorded “The Humbler Stakes His Claim” and Redneck Jazz LP, Hendrix seems like a dinosaur.
@@commanderthorkilj.amundsen3426 Sorry you saw him and didn’t ‘get it’. What a shame. PS. If you think Santana and Terry Kath are in the same league you really on that dope. Maybe too much of your beloved ‘lysergic’??
Вот так....
He has shiny shoes
Certainly has a lot to say!
Amazing, hides behind zero gear
Good God....stop it...i am soooo behind..
4 people are clueless!
more cowbell....
Oh this is just the blues....oh wait what the fuck?
Amazing playing!
But this cameraman had strange foot fetish...
Imagine a more amplified Joe with a Strat or Gibson, bank of floor pedals, wah, tube screamer, some heavy bass and drums…
E eu pensando que tocava guitarra...
Kkkkk foda
There seems to be 12 people that want to be labeled as pronouns.