Русские видео

Сейчас в тренде

Иностранные видео


Скачать с ютуб 7 Great Led Zeppelin Riffs No One Ever Mentions в хорошем качестве

7 Great Led Zeppelin Riffs No One Ever Mentions 2 года назад


Если кнопки скачивания не загрузились НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса savevideohd.ru



7 Great Led Zeppelin Riffs No One Ever Mentions

Greetings! I’m Carl Baldassarre, a composer, musicologist, and a guitarist. In this episode, I dig deep into Jimmy Page’s riffs which are often overlooked because they are not the primary riff of a song. These secondary riffs are so great and would be any other guitarist's primary riffs!! I dug deep into the studio and live tracks to curate these riffs. They are amazing and fun to play as well. Riff 1: Riff 1 is essentially found in two places! Version (a) is found at 2:43 during Over the Hills and Far Away – it’s the great post-solo riff. Version (b) is found at 0:57 during Good Times Bad Times. It’s very cool to see the similarity in these two F# chordal shapes. Jimmy must have liked it! Riff 2: The Song Remains the Same (4:43) is right after the 3rd studio solo. It’s an amazingly fast and gorgeous figure. Jimmy Page brings a hint of country phrasing to the rock world. It’s also blazing fast! Riff 3: What is and What Should Never Be (3:32). The great outro riff on the coda. A beautifully constructed binary phrase (Q&A) dialogue and a great rocking ending to this beautiful song. Riff 4: Down by the Seaside (2:10). This is the rhythm guitar figure underneath the pedal steel-styled soloing Page employs. Another binary phrase with an A & B part. It’s simple elegance!! Riff 5: Heartbreaker (~3:00). Everybody knows the great opening, iconic Heartbreaker riff, but this rhythm track figure underneath the 2nd guitar solo of is quintessential rock guitar using an open A. The shape of which foreshadows the iconic riff two albums later for the track “Rock & Roll”. Riff 6: How Many More Times (6:08). I call this “The Hunter” riff (for obvious reasons – given the vocal). It’s a killer open E riff that would be the envy of any guitar player as a featured riff! Riff 7: Dazed and Confused – live 1973 MSG (23:02). Here I go very deep to dig out one of the most ominous Jimmy Page riffs. It occurs during the post-violin bow jam where so many great riffs were worked out. Its tritone feel and hybrid picking are haunting and very cinematic. Ironically, this riff never became part of any other Zeppelin tracks that I’m aware of! Thanks for watching! If you have any thoughts or video ideas, please leave them in the comments section. I love engaging with all of you! If you'd like to learn more about me and my music, please visit my website: www.carlbaldassarremusic.com #LedZeppelin #JimmyPage #CarlBaldassarre

Comments