'Cry Me a River' (Julie London Version) Barney Kessel Guitar Lesson
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- Опубліковано 9 лис 2024
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Hey Buddies
I've created this Patreon page to help with the production of my guitar tutorial videos. I'm not planning to change what I already do and I will continue to respond to requests regardless of someone being a contributor or not. I have therefore set the patron amount at the lowest level of just $1 for those who wish to show their appreciation and to help with the purchase of strings, picks, music paper, sharpie pens, hard drives and cups of tea.
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Jase
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Great stuff. I'll be back in ten years to let you know I've mastered it.
Only 9 more years to go!
8!
eight, how is it going?
If you can make a reasonable facsimile of Bareny Kessel in just ten years, you are a better man than I
7 years to go
You my friend have the patience of a saint to teach this to us. You did a fantastic job and now I have my new challenge.
Really great lesson, Jason, thanks for teaching this beautiful arrangement. I once saw Barney Kessel in a coffee-house playing solo, when I was 16 years old. I sat right by the stage while he played tunes like this. There were only a couple of dozen people in the audience. At the time I was not very musically educated and did not know about his great career and reputation, but later on I definitely found out. Since then he has became one of my all-time greatest guitar idols.
I would have loved to see Barney play, he's always been one of my Guitar heroes :)
I saw Barney, along with Charlie Byrd and Herb Ellis, play in Silver Spring, MD, back in the 70's. Wonderful experience! Barney's playing just a few feet from where I was sitting was quite a treat!
@@thejaseguitar Whilst a student in the late 70's I saw Barney play at a jazz club held in a Sheffield secondary school hall. In three years I was lucky enough to see Clapton, Wilko Johnson, Segovia, Santana, Chris Rea, George Thorogood, Gary Moore and many other guitarists whose names I have long forgotton. Thanks for posting this.
I always loved Barney :)
So glad I found your video. I've never played jazz guitar, but have always loved the song. There are some crazy ass chords in there and the tab doesn't make much sense on its own. Decided I'll practice this every day as part of my routine. Your tutorial is going to help big time.
Very well done, much appreciated. This will be my first jazz standard once I've got it down! Thanks for taking the time to share this with people.
Just what I've been waiting for! Thanks for your clear, easy-to-study approach to this great song.
great lesson this is quite my type of explanation, we can see the fingers, hear the notes that build the chords makes it easy to learn , the teacher has a good vibeee thanks
The "real" Kessel Run. And you completed it in about 16 "parsecs." Lol. Great job. It'll take me the rest of my natural life to master what you've shown here. Thanks, I think.
Great teacher and to have the chords explained is fantastic, thanks Jason.
You're welcome :)
Very good lesson from a very good teacher
killer intro, trying to train my baby finger to stretch like that, guess i got some work to do, great song and thanks for posting it, hope it will be a fav of mine to play !!
Were you able to train it? I didn’t know this was even possible
Try leaning your fingers to the right.
Thanks so much for breaking this amazing guitar piece down, great tutorial, well appreciated.
Great lesson,thankyou very much,those chords are very jazzy wasn’t easy but got it in the end,calling out the intervals helped immensley
Unbelievable, Jason. What a great choice of song. I'm far too intimidated to venture anywhere near a Barney Kessel version of a tune, but now I've got to give it a go. Cheers, buddy.
Steve
Thanks, there's another Barney Kessel tune I wanna do this year - Midnight Sun.
Looking forward to it.
Wonderfull tutorial
Thanks, always had trouble deciphering that last chord
thank you so much! Great lesson
Awesome lesson working my way through it slowly really want to nail this thank you Jason
Excellent video thank you
This sounds very accurate to me
Really good layout on the fretboard - thanks Jason - you've helped me a lot with this.
You're welcome :)
What a wonderful way to get dislocated fingers (or even broken ones)
(flutist / saxist)
Great pedagogy.
Great tutorial! Could you do a tutorial on no moon at all?
Great lesson. Congratulations from Spain!
THANKS !
Excellent - quite a challenge with those stretches
brilliant thank you... so many chords in a 2+ minutes song :)
Fantastic, thanks to much!
yes very nice !
thank you for repeating everything and being fleek with it ! repeating sections is great. if at the end you would play all of it together- 100% positive feedback , haha ;)
perhaps for another following tutorial this would be great for the one learning to have it all in a fluent and slowish version to kann along and get the 'journey'
thanks man !
*to jamm along :)
so after watching her tokyo performance from the 60s ive set out to find more of these dark japanese style strings, can you recommend any other artists or music that sounds like this? great video by the way youre the first person ive found
Sounds right to me!
Great job!
Awesome!
Thanks very much, I really enjoyed this
You're welcome :)
Hey mate! This is freaking awesome, by far the best I've found-I'm a little bit learning impaired though and noticed you mentioned in the comments you were linking in the chords/tabs, where abouts do I find those please? :)
Great work Jason!
Thanks :)
Awesome! amazing song!
Thanks a million!
Man you are the best!!
I am from Russia, but I understood everything without knowing English. thanks !
the main thing is to understand music
Big hands or small guitar? Can't wait to try.
Very nice, thank you, coud you do S-wonderful, same album?
Great lesson, but on the original Julie London recording I feel the turn around on the Middle 8 sounds more like a F#7#9 to F#7b9 - kikely I'm wrong but wondered what you thought?
Thx!!
Great tune.do you have a tab sheet on this?
very cool - thank you! as it's quite a bit to digest in a short time I'd wish there were some tabs, though...
moreorlesslikeso I have written the chords out, which I could post a link to. :)
Hey Jason. Vince here. This was very helpful learning this beautiful song. Barney Kessel's guitar and Julie London's voice is a superb combination. Is that a 175 you're playing? What kind of pickups?
nice tutorial. why not play the opening lick up at fret XII (Emin) like you play the second figure at fret V (A min) its a lot easier. i enjoyed learning this. which gibson guitar?
hello, original song is on E flat ?
Hmm, I'm thinking it's a Les Paul Deluxe?
Yes, you're right :)
I got little hands but big dreams 😔
😂
I have small hands too. And gave up playing for mNy years but now with Maton minis and Taylor minis. It makes the stretches much better.
Also the pinky on my left hand (chord fretting hand) is longer than the right by about 1 cm.
I can post some songs I play if you are interested?
You dont need big hands.
Traduire en francais
My god just tab it
не ну это слишком сложная херня. фингерстайлом куда проще
There are a lot of wrong chords in this version. The Eb before the A13 is an abomination. The fingerings are all wrong too.
Too fast and jumbled with not much clarity. He's usually better
Barney Kessel's work on the Julie London recording in 1955 is classic. But I'm sorry, Mr. Read......your loud and shrill voice caused me to turn off this video. As far as those people requesting TAB, why not try using your ears instead? TAB is a crutch. Play with your ears, not with your eyes. Isn't that right, Jimmy Bruno??
Sorry Richard it’s the only voice I’ve got! Enjoy your tine on UA-cam finding reasons to criticise everyone;)
Jason,
Although my comments were not intended to be hurtful to you personally I certainly understand your response and I wish to express my apology. I have no idea what kind of gear you use to record your voice and your guitar and how you create the mix but I think it could be improved upon. My guess is that you simply do it with a smart phone. I've never posted anything on this site and never will. I consider it to be arrogant. When you expose yourself on an open forum you must be willing to withstand critique. I have no qualms about your musical skills but even you must admit that there is a lot of junk posted on UA-cam that is just plain bad. I'm just an old man in his late sixties who has been a musician for six decades. Along with paying for instruction from skilled professionals, I learned most of what I know by dropping a needle on a record and woodshedding the music one phrase or one note at a time. The ear training I have gained from doing this has been invaluable. The Internet did not exist in those days. I prefer to recommend a site called TrueFire, especially the instruction by guys like Frank Vignola. These videos are professionally produced and well worth the price of admission, if you will. I again extend my apologies. I can sometimes be a sour old curmudgeon.
Apology accepted. Also this was one of my early videos and the quality has been improved upon. I started making these videos when friends who were learning guitar would ask me how to play a certain song. I never imagined anyone other than those few friends would ever watch them. However, for some reason people did and I now have over 1000 lessons on UA-cam and have since invested in lights and a better microphone. They are all shot on a DSLR camera. Like so many things in life, the more you do something the more you improve. A lot of people now ask me for help learning songs and if I can help in a small way I’m happy to do so. I don’t consider that an arrogance. These are free lessons and yes there is a lot of junk on UA-cam but it is after all a public forum so you will get that. Though I have obviously posted videos on here which is something you said you would never have the arrogance to do, I have also never had the arrogance to claim a superiority to other musicians because they have asked for tabs. The world is always changing as are the methods used to learn. As the great philosophers Bill & Ted said “Be excellent to each other.” Cheer up buddy, you’re a musician and music is a wonderful thing. Enjoy it, and if there’s something you don’t like then jog on - life’s too short:)