被老黑同事带到沟里去了。

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"Moore was known for his highly emotional approach to guitar playing. Despite his technical proficiency and mastery of the guitar, he stood out through his phrasing and dynamic control which was mostly influenced by the melodic blues. Being an avid improviser, in many of his songs he featured an improvised solo section when playing live.

Moore was very popular in Europe, Scandinavia, Eastern Europe and Japan, but less successful in the US.[12] Throughout his career, Moore was recognised as an influence by many notable guitarists including Martin Barre,[13] Vivian Campbell,[14] Patrick Rondat,[15] John Norum, Paul Gilbert,[16] Gus G, Slash,Orianthi, Joe Bonamassa, Adrian Smith, Phil Collen, George Lynch, Doug Aldrich, Zakk Wylde,[17] Randy Rhoads, John Sykes, Henrik Freischlader, Gary W Suede, and Kirk Hammett.[18]"

看WIKI上的背景介绍看,Gary Moore是欧洲人,BB king是美国人,从表演技艺和文化传承角度都有各自的优越感,他们的同台是挑战赛性质。
 
嗯,至少从视频里他的身体语言,能特别明显地看出来,一点不怵king。反而是步步紧逼的姿态,King反而有所退让的感觉。从飙吉他形式看,两人互有领先。完全不像是clapton等人的那种始终跟随的形式。脸部表情也是,gary的表情相当的丰富,很具侵略性,是一种必胜的斗争自信。但还是不如king的表情丰富。king的表情是一种自得其乐的自信。两人在一起,有几处不是很协调。king此时已经习惯了小辈众星捧月。可惜,两人都不在了。
 
BB King 影响力很大,一直很活跃一直到死。 不过他一辈子基本就在BB box里面即兴独奏,音符选择的范围较小。 我一直认为他有点Overrated. 有很多布鲁斯吉他手的音符选择有更多的空间和味道,如robben Ford, 等。。当然布鲁斯这东西很多人说还要讲feelings 不光是音乐元素的问题。 个人意见哈。 说的不对,请直接忽略。[emoji1]
 
说话直来直去就好。

观点肯定有不同。音乐欣赏品味这东西,千差万别。心宽些没坏处。

我是更倾向于音乐的非形式部分。也许是没时间玩技术的原因。不愿意在技术上多花时间。

所以我更欣赏非技术的音乐感觉。Gary 和king比起来,我肯定是倾向于king。前者是吉他手。后者的地位崇高主要还真是他把blue的味道抓出来了。
 
雷利·班·金(英语:Riley Ben King,1925年9月16日-2015年5月14日),艺名B·B·金(英语:B. B. King,来自于Blues Boy的缩写),生于美国密西西比州布鲁斯音乐家、吉他手和歌曲作者。他是有史以来最伟大的布鲁斯音乐家之一,外号“布鲁斯之王”("The King of Blues")。他创造与推展了电吉他推弦、揉弦的技法,2003年在滚石杂志评选的一百大吉他手获得名次,B·B·金是第六名[1]
(最后一句引错了,King是第三名,Clapton第四名,Hendrix第一名。)

刚才抽空,研究BBKing。看到不少人认为BBKing被过誉了。http://www.harmonycentral.com/forum/forum/guitar/acapella-29/1798795-
Is BB King the worst guitarist ever, or just the most overrated?
里面踩King的多是自己玩吉他的。都认为King的吉他不咋地。自己玩的比King好多少多少。讨论了19页,唇枪舌剑。
挺有意思。
 
Jeff Healey - As The Years Go Passing By
太好听了,白人小子,鲜肉一枚,嗓音味道十足,这都是其次,吉他玩的独到,收发之间。精彩绝伦。
我以前结论说blues今不如昔,看来是错滴,错得离谱。blues白人玩不出那感觉,也是大错特错。音乐这玩意就是无界。相信,黑白不论,当今还是有很好的新blues地。我是坐井观天。

 
最后编辑:
可惜这小伙也已经走了。音乐天才,活着好像都不容易。很多惊才绝艳,早早地就走了。很少能听到如此如泣如诉的歌了。4分钟开始那段吉他。。。
 
最后编辑:
居然是加拿大小伙。自幼失明,因此创造了自己的吉他玩法。
音乐世界,天才太多,好东西一辈子听不完。

Canadian music icon, Jeff Healey, was born in Toronto on March 25, 1966. Blind from early childhood due to retinoblastoma (a rare form of eye cancer), Jeff Healey’s guitar playing virtuosity and soulful voice saw him rise to prominence in the entertainment world in the late 1980s and ‘90s selling millions of albums worldwide.

Getting his first guitar at the age of three, he developed a unique style of playing. Placing the guitar flat on his lap, and playing it like a lap steel with his hands over the fret board, gave him the flexibility of fretting with all five fingers and the power of pulling notes with the strength of his whole hand.

For over two decades, Jeff enjoyed a successful music career that spanned rock, blues and traditional jazz. Grammy nominee and Juno award winner, he was a radio personality, a jazz historian and world famous record collector (owning a collection of 1920’s and ‘30’s jazz 78s that would ultimately top out at over 30,000 records).
 
“He was like another one of my sons… Jeff Healey… (exhales hard)… oh my God.”
~ BB King

“He was SUCH a great musician… a voice that is missed.”
~ Steve Lukather

“Jeff was one of the sweetest, most humble and talented artists I’ve met…”
~ Bonnie Raitt
 
Jeff cover the doors 的
Roadhouse Blues
两者都是精彩绝伦。


更蓝

原唱

更摇滚
 
主坛狂欢之时,哈哈,在这里继续纪念加拿大blues天才。盲眼人玩音乐果然是god blessed

 
真正的天才,真正的音乐精灵。

Jeff Healey, Guitarist and Singer, Dies at 41
By DOUGLAS MARTINMARCH 4, 2008

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Jeff Healey, a Canadian guitarist, singer and songwriter whose band sold millions of blues-rock records and who also pursued a passion for old-time jazz, playing the trumpet and clarinet, died on Sunday in Toronto. He was 41.

He died of lung cancer, his publicists said.

Mr. Healey, who was blind, played his guitar with the instrument flat on his lap, resulting in what Guitar Player magazine called “astoundingly fluid bends and vibrato.” He blended jazz, rock and the blues.

Mr. Healey’s greatest success came in the late 1980s, when his band recorded the album “See the Light.” It reached platinum status in the United States by selling more than one million copies and eventually two million worldwide. A single from that album, “Angel Eyes,” was the Jeff Healey Band’s only Top 40 hit, reaching No. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 in September 1989.

The same year the band performed the soundtrack for “Road House,” a movie starring actor Patrick Swayze. The band also had speaking parts. Soon the group was big enough to be booked in stadiums.

Mr. Healey also played the trumpet and clarinet in his own traditional jazz band, the Jazz Wizards. He collected as many as 30,000 old-time jazz records, mainly those on 78 r.p.m., which he played as the host of an hour-long radio show on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.

Jeff Healey in 2000. Credit Stephen Chernin/Associated Press
Mr. Healey, son of a firefighter, was born and raised near Toronto. He lost his sight to eye cancer when he was a year old and was given his first guitar two years later. At a school for the blind, he was shown how to play the guitar the usual way but found it felt more comfortable on his lap.

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At a Toronto-area high school he played the guitar and trumpet in school bands. His early guitar inspirations were country stylists like Chet Atkins, but he moved on to Eric Clapton, Jimi Hendrix and B. B. King, according to the reference work Contemporary Musicians. He studied music theory on his own.

He formed the Jeff Healey Band in 1985, with the drummer Tom Stephen and the bassist Joe Rockman. The trio gave as many as 300 concerts a year for about two years before signing with Arista Records in 1988. Their second album for the label (after “See the Light”) was “Hell to Pay,” which featured guest artists including George Harrison.

As the group’s popularity grew, so did their concert venues. Jon Pareles, writing in The New York Times in 1989, described the band’s music as “showy, arena-style blues rock,” although he praised Mr. Healey’s technique.

In 1990, a reader poll in Guitar Player magazine named Mr. Healey the best blues guitarist and best new talent.

Mr. Healey is survived by his wife, Cristie; his daughter, Rachel; and his son, Derek.

By 2002, Mr. Healey had opened a music club named after himself in Toronto; he later closed it to open a larger one. In 2003, he started his jazz band.

He made a total of 10 albums, including both jazz and blues-rock; it would be hard to guess that some of the albums were by the same artist. In January 2007, Guitar Player said, “Jeff Healey may be the only cat around who can play the prewar jazz of Louis Armstrong on the trumpet, and the heavy electric blues-rock of ZZ Top on the guitar.”

Correction: March 8, 2008
An obituary on Tuesday about the guitarist, singer and songwriter Jeff Healey misspelled the given name of his wife, who survives him. She is Cristie Healey, not Christie.
 
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