Great video. Great job. I grew up listening to that one a lot. I love the chess record one where it takes Jimmy awhile to get in the groove. For cryin out loud Jimmy. I'm trying to get it. Great musician. Great video.
Great lesson. I met Jimmy once after a gig he did. We talked for a bit. He had Hound Dog Taylor's drummer with him and I asked Jimmy about Brewer Philips. Jimmy starts cracking up and yells to the drummer, "This guy wants to know about Brewer Philips!" Apparently the drummer lived in the same building as Brewer and Philips was always bugging him to jam. Cool old guys. Jimmy had a couple kids (daughters I think) and pit bull dogs that he was fond of. I remember him talking about the pit bulls. I shook his hand. He was a gentleman. The way you show it makes sense when I think back. He would play the solos in open position and whizz up to those seventh chord block chunks and swing like crazy. I remember be being blown away by it. That old time swing. I've seen a bunch of my guitar heroes over the years but he stands out. Thanks for the channel.
@@mikegarner He talked about kids. I thought it was daughters but I remember he told me about pit bull dogs. I shook the mojo hand. I'll never forget that show. He had a young dude with an afro who could burn like Hendrix/SRV but then Jimmy would step up and do what Johnny B just taught us all to do and it would blow the kid away. Thanks for the info on Jimmy D. Lane. I'll look him up.
That drummer was probably probably Ted Harvey. I remember a story that Hound Dog woke up at 6 in the morning with a cigarette in his hand and slapped Ted in the back of the head and yelled 'wake up and argue!'
Johnny you well know I love anything and everything by Jimmy Rogers. As I go deep into these blues, hoping you will someday touch on the "great-grandfathers" - Big Bill, Tampa Red, Bukka White, etc. Each deserve their own dedicated lessons.
I will definately be doing some Tampa Red and Big Bill before too long. I'd like to hit some Scrapper Blackwell and Johnny Shines too. Thanks a lot my friend!
Love it JOhnny no one is playing in this style anymore and that's a pity. Accompaying blues harp players is the most fun and difficult thing to do properly !
Absolutely great lesson! Great way to start off the work week, is that particular song of the famous Jimmie Rodgers album w / The Muddy back up band? what a great record! similar to Robert night Hawk? Thanks for the inspiration full moon in Chicago tonight time to boogie
Merci j'adore si un jour j'ai le plaisir de te rencontrer... En France je t'offrirai une cafetière de ma collection, il semble que quelqu'un te l'ai empruntée!😂😉❣️
Thank you Johnny for these lessons!
Thanks a lot Ken!
Great video. Great job. I grew up listening to that one a lot. I love the chess record one where it takes Jimmy awhile to get in the groove. For cryin out loud Jimmy. I'm trying to get it. Great musician. Great video.
Jimmy Rogers never overplayed. Every note made sense.
It just keeps growing on me, thanks a lot!
This is a great lesson! Thank you, Johnny!
Thanks so much Don!
I am a member of your Patreon, and I greatly appreciate your lessons.
Thank you very much John!
Jimmy Rogers is proof of the elegance found in 'simplicity'. Thanks for another awesome lesson, Johnny. Keep cool !
Thanks very much John, agreed!
Great lesson.
I met Jimmy once after a gig he did. We talked for a bit. He had Hound Dog Taylor's drummer with him and I asked Jimmy about Brewer Philips. Jimmy starts cracking up and yells to the drummer,
"This guy wants to know about Brewer Philips!"
Apparently the drummer lived in the same building as Brewer and Philips was always bugging him to jam. Cool old guys. Jimmy had a couple kids (daughters I think) and pit bull dogs that he was fond of. I remember him talking about the pit bulls.
I shook his hand. He was a gentleman.
The way you show it makes sense when I think back. He would play the solos in open position and whizz up to those seventh chord block chunks and swing like crazy. I remember be being blown away by it. That old time swing. I've seen a bunch of my guitar heroes over the years but he stands out.
Thanks for the channel.
awesome thanks man keep pickin!
Jimmy had a son, Jimmy D. Lane, who is a fine guitar paler with a career in his own right.
@@mikegarner He talked about kids. I thought it was daughters but I remember he told me about pit bull dogs. I shook the mojo hand. I'll never forget that show. He had a young dude with an afro who could burn like Hendrix/SRV but then Jimmy would step up and do what Johnny B just taught us all to do and it would blow the kid away. Thanks for the info on Jimmy D. Lane. I'll look him up.
@@mikegarner He's a great player in either a trad or a kinda SRV mode
That drummer was probably probably Ted Harvey.
I remember a story that
Hound Dog woke up at 6 in the morning with a cigarette in his hand and slapped Ted in the back of the head and yelled 'wake up and argue!'
Johnny you well know I love anything and everything by Jimmy Rogers. As I go deep into these blues, hoping you will someday touch on the "great-grandfathers" - Big Bill, Tampa Red, Bukka White, etc. Each deserve their own dedicated lessons.
I will definately be doing some Tampa Red and Big Bill before too long. I'd like to hit some Scrapper Blackwell and Johnny Shines too. Thanks a lot my friend!
Love it JOhnny no one is playing in this style anymore and that's a pity. Accompaying blues harp players is the most fun and difficult thing to do properly !
there are some guys out there in the US, South America and EU, thanks a lot Jipes
Absolutely great lesson! Great way to start off the work week, is that particular song of the famous Jimmie Rodgers album w / The Muddy back up band? what a great record! similar to Robert night Hawk? Thanks for the inspiration full moon in Chicago tonight time to boogie
Right on Steven thanks a lot!
Merci j'adore si un jour j'ai le plaisir de te rencontrer... En France je t'offrirai une cafetière de ma collection, il semble que quelqu'un te l'ai empruntée!😂😉❣️
thanks a lot Bibi!