I am so grateful I got the chance to talk with you after your first gig with Fourplay at the Birchmere in Alexandria, VA. Your playing has always been so incredibly well crafted and tasteful, and your work with Fourplay, totally brilliant. You were so kind to listen and even have a chuckle when I shared my story about me recognizing your playing on the radio, in a new Fourplay song, after Larry Carlton had left the group. As a fellow musician and aspiring jazz musician (bass), I'm so thankful I learned about you early on enough to have been blessed by so much of your music and your great playing. Thanks for being so kind to my wife and I when we met you and for being so generous with your time. May God rest your soul.
Learning Chuck's arrangement got me passed my university audition. Did not know he passed until just now. Very sad news, and thanks for everything Chuck.
Chuck, just got to see you perform in Cleveland at Night Town. Amazing. You sir truly are a jazz guitar master. Thank you for putting these videos together.
Hi Chuck, I studied with you back in Fall '84/Spring '85 when I first came to NYC and was a student at L.I.U. in Brooklyn. You sound as great as ever, man! Great to see your videos and I've seen your Guitar curriculum in various places around the internet. (I'm still out here playing and teaching, and I still remember the material you showed me back then!) Cheers! Steve Bloom
Hi, Chuck . I wanted first of all to congratulate you on the wonderful jazz guitar lessons that can be seen on UA-cam . I am fascinated by your technique , but above all by the sound that you throw it out of your beautiful Sadowsky . I would love to know if the model of your Sadowsky is the custom LS17 model just for you , since it is known that the neck pickup , would seem to be similar to the Super '57 Gibson . I'd love to buy that guitar model up even after a Gibson ES-175 Natural and Ibanez PM 35 Pat Metheny Signature , with the neck pickup Gibson Super '57 . Thank you very much , Chuck and again congratulations ! You are very good !
First and foremost; Rest inPeace Chuck. Secondly, I’d die, or kill to get that tone outta my axe(s). They consist of Gibson Byrdland, ES335, and an Eastman 810 Uptown. I used either a Polytone minibrute II, or fender twin. If there’re any players that can advise me in this endeavor it would be greatly appreciated.
Hi Maestro, just a question for you, sometime I play F-Maj7 as secon chord as a substitution for E7, could it be correct? ex. ( CMaj7 F-Maj7, Em7 A7, D-7 G7, Cmaj7 ecc) Sorry for my bad English
It is really difficult to see how your are fingers playing the chords at the angle the guitar is facing the camera. If you would just turn to your left a bit more so we could clearly see your fingers and the finger board, it would be helpful.
if you have some rudiments about jazz guitar and follow CHUCK's explanations you can understand easily just watching and hearing how to play exactly and copy .
What !.... It's Martin Scorsese, not De Niro !! What's wrong with you !! ...I'll never understand people, where they get things all discombobulated !...Go figure........
R.I.P Chuck Loeb
Such a great musician :(
I am so grateful I got the chance to talk with you after your first gig with Fourplay at the Birchmere in Alexandria, VA. Your playing has always been so incredibly well crafted and tasteful, and your work with Fourplay, totally brilliant. You were so kind to listen and even have a chuckle when I shared my story about me recognizing your playing on the radio, in a new Fourplay song, after Larry Carlton had left the group. As a fellow musician and aspiring jazz musician (bass), I'm so thankful I learned about you early on enough to have been blessed by so much of your music and your great playing. Thanks for being so kind to my wife and I when we met you and for being so generous with your time. May God rest your soul.
Your legacy in helping aspiring musicians find their way continues to thrive. Rest easy, you are missed by many.
Learning Chuck's arrangement got me passed my university audition. Did not know he passed until just now. Very sad news, and thanks for everything Chuck.
Absolutely superb demo.
Clarity, dexterity, and skill abound!
Those 22 thumbs down are immeasurably abominable!
This is wonderfully explained..R.I.P Mr Loeb..you were the finest.
I miss you so much. I listen to your music every day.
R.I.P. Chuck, A much loved man of guitar. What a player. FROM NEW ZEALAND, WILL ALWAYS BE MY FAVOURITE.
"Discovered" Chuck Loeb Guitar Lessons in ArtistWork just yesterday, will most definitely join! What a cast of teachers!
Will be missed! Amazing talent
Very pleased to have found this video and link to the guitar school. Thank you Chuck.
So much talent. We miss you Sir.
One of the greats! RIP Chuck Loeb.
Chuck, just got to see you perform in Cleveland at Night Town. Amazing. You sir truly are a jazz guitar master. Thank you for putting these videos together.
Great teacher ❤
he was one of the absolute top guitar players........
Beautiful, Beautiful!
Totally awesome 💪🏿💪🏼💪🏾💪💪🏽💪🏻
Hi Chuck, I studied with you back in Fall '84/Spring '85 when I first came to NYC and was a student at L.I.U. in Brooklyn. You sound as great as ever, man! Great to see your videos and I've seen your Guitar curriculum in various places around the internet. (I'm still out here playing and teaching, and I still remember the material you showed me back then!) Cheers!
Steve Bloom
Excellent thank you for sharing
Very nice. Liked that. Thanks.
Beautiful
Very good! Thank you!
Hi, Chuck .
I wanted first of all to congratulate you on the wonderful jazz guitar lessons that can be seen on UA-cam .
I am fascinated by your technique , but above all by the sound that you throw it out of your beautiful Sadowsky .
I would love to know if the model of your Sadowsky is the custom LS17 model just for you , since it is known that the neck pickup , would seem to be similar to the Super '57 Gibson . I'd love to buy that guitar model up even after a Gibson ES-175 Natural and Ibanez PM 35 Pat Metheny Signature , with the neck pickup Gibson Super '57 .
Thank you very much , Chuck and again congratulations ! You are very good !
MX GIBSON gh
RIP Mr Chuck Loeb
good job chuck
First and foremost; Rest inPeace Chuck.
Secondly, I’d die, or kill to get that tone outta my axe(s). They consist of Gibson Byrdland, ES335, and an Eastman 810 Uptown. I used either a Polytone minibrute II, or fender twin. If there’re any players that can advise me in this endeavor it would be greatly appreciated.
this is great!
That's a Sadowsky "What" ? The Jim Hall model and the LS-17 have no fret markers. The SS-15 does but that's too big to be a an SS-15. Anyone know?
Artist works put stickers on the guitar Brad so the students could figure where he was on the fretboard. R.I.P Chuck
Chuck, I appreciate the example but can you explain why you use the chords you use?
MrArtist1971 o
Love that sadowsky tone ,
RIP Chuck.
I miss Chuck
that's my Guitar hero !...
Hi Maestro, just a question for you, sometime I play F-Maj7 as secon chord as a substitution for E7, could it be correct?
ex. ( CMaj7 F-Maj7, Em7 A7, D-7 G7, Cmaj7 ecc)
Sorry for my bad English
Great lesson...
to my ear at 5:00 it's G chord - not B...
R.I.P Chuck Loeb
It is really difficult to see how your are fingers playing the chords at the angle the guitar is facing the camera. If you would just turn to your left a bit more so we could clearly see your fingers and the finger board, it would be helpful.
Nice playing but as far as teaching goes, we can't see the fretboard close enough to understand what you're playing. You need to zoom in there.
if you have some rudiments about jazz guitar and follow CHUCK's explanations you can understand easily just watching and hearing how to
play exactly and copy .
Gret Vid!!! Rip
Robert De Niro plays guitar!??
What !.... It's Martin Scorsese, not De Niro !! What's wrong with you !! ...I'll never understand people, where they get things all discombobulated !...Go figure........
What do you mean...
Brad ! I'm just joking ! Don't you get my response ? Of course it's neither Di Niro or Scorsese ! Just pulling your leg like you pulled mine...M
DeNiro! end of story!
Brad Kazama working
Too soon left us....
How do you fall asleep when you realize you are Chuck Loeb?
SOUNDS CHOPPY.