All time Great Jazz Guitarist Joe Pass plays an Original Piece and share some words about Improvisation in this Clip from the SOUNDBOARD TV # 25 DVD

23 thoughts on “JOE PASS "JOE’S BLUES" (1984)

  1. Hes not Fingerstyle but Andreas oberg is a monster that many shall enjoy!

  2. Let’s not forget Lenny Breau? And great Recommend on Tuck Andress, damn near the greatest guitarist i’ve ever seen

  3. I have this Guitar I bought in the early 80’s and a little work and it’s a Peach!! In my avatar!

  4. If you are new into jazz and like the fingerstyle guitar players, I recomend Tuck Andress and Martin Taylor. To state the obvious 😉

  5. that can be good or bad depending on whether it inspires you to play better or give up

  6. I agree with what you’re saying, but there are a lot of genuinely great things that many people don’t know about or acknowledge. For example, James Joyce’s last paragraph in ‘The Dead’ you got to be really into literature to understand his genius. Or Calculus, you have to dedicate a lot of time to understanding it to get the beauty and genius of it, there are sooooo many amazing things in this world. BUT it’s cool that Jazz is one of them!

  7. Most brilliant thing is he could repeat it all again, note for note

  8. and not a stinking pedal to be seen! That’s what real guitar playing is supposed to be.  There is no one that can even remotely come close to that these days. It’s all loud and lousy!

  9. Il be 240 years old before I could play anywhere near this guy

  10. @shizot dont tab stuff its better doing stuff by ear. Help creativity as well!!

  11. its always hilarious to me when genius’ almost seem to downplay their methods or thought process’ regarding how they come up with their stuff lol. its like he thinks if he explains it, we can all do it lol

  12. He always says how he keeps things simple then plays something that looks harder than Chinese math.

  13. I get it, I was just goofing. I always wondered why jazz players refused to bend strings.

  14. Blues in the sense that they are blues changes, but yes, JP is (was) definitely a jazzer, and he is swinging not shuffling so the style is more jazz. Blues changes/chord progressions in all variations are great building blocks for learning how to improvise too.

  15. Stunning, amazing, unbelievable knowledge and skill, ridiculously good, but still "jazz", not "blues".  Technically, I say for something to be called blues, you have to bend one string at least once.

  16. im trying to learn this by ear, but i wish i had a tab man..

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