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#143311 by Dajax
Sat Mar 26, 2011 11:29 am
Gonna try to sell the boys on a cover of "Shake Rattle And Roll" at tonight's rehearsal. Here's separate versions of Clapton, and Beck doing it. I will have to see if it a Gretsch guitar+old tube amp+slap back played with oomph will fill in enough sound to make up for a horn section.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r0rp6B09Nd4

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZUfneTpNgaQ

P.S. "Like a one eyed cat peeping in a seafood store" Dear me, what could that be referring to? :wink:

#143314 by philbymon
Sat Mar 26, 2011 12:43 pm
Hell yes!

#143386 by jw123
Sun Mar 27, 2011 2:14 pm
Dajax my band is basically a three piece with a singer who also plays some harp.

When I approach songs on guitar I try to fill in all the key things that stick out. Whether it be a horn line, or guitar. Makes it fun for me, also being a three piece you dont have to worry about getting alittle out of key with the other guitar player. I invert chords, switch from minor to majors in the middle of songs just to keep myself amused, plus the bassist in our group and I just play off each other at times and take songs in whole other directions. Doing these things creates a musical tension in familiar songs that people who listen cant put thier finger on but makes all of our performances special in some way, cause we dont just paly songs by the book. I may learn a song note for note but over time it becomes our own song, played our way. The essence of the song is still there for the casual listener but the musicians really seem to dig the way we turn them inside and out.

Take a song like Roadhouse Blues, weve played it a million times,but in the middle the bassist and I will do these wired harmony lines together and when the harp comes in, the singer and i do a trade out, he plays a line then I mock it, then back and forth. Being a 3 piece allows for this freedom that Ive never found playing with another guitar or keys for that matter.

Just take whatever song you are playing and put your stamp on it and make it your own.

Good Luck and Keep On Rockin!

#143436 by fisherman bob
Mon Mar 28, 2011 2:18 am
Good advice from jw123 as usual and YES it can easily sound great as a three piece. I've played Shake Rattle and Roll for YEARS and it can work great. Create your OWN version of it. If you try and copy somebody else's copy it'll probably sound lame. I believe the original version is Big Joe Turner's. Maybe imagine what some other famous guitarists would have done with it and approach it that way. Think out of the box and play it in a way you've never heard before...

#143437 by philbymon
Mon Mar 28, 2011 2:29 am
I've played flute parts, keyboard parts, guitar parts on bass in a three piece. I love how it opens up whole new areas for me. I've seen guitars do amazing stuff, too - like keyboard washes & such. Three pieces are where a bass guy really has to open up & be versatile, imho, & I always loved that challenge. Many many songs can be done this way, with a little imagination, & pulled off quite well. Some can't of course, but I think that's prolly more due MY limitations, rather than the limitations of the three-piece.

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