This is how we should remember Tony. This video of his great voice and incredible guitar playing that will never be forgotten. Rest in peace Tony Rice 🕊
Ive been watching this video for six months after buying a dreadnought and learning the instruments history. Tony Rice really was the flat picking / crosspicking master and because of him I have learned to venture into a whole new way of playing. RIP Tony Rice.
This song always makes me cry. It reminds me of when I moved to the city. I lived in a shotgun shack and I worked as a dishwasher for less money than I deserved. I used to walk four miles to work everyday and I had nothing to eat at home but beans and rice. I used to hang out with some hobos and we'd get drunk and talk shit about "rich people". When I had spare time I would sit around the square and play my guitar for money and food. This song feels like it was written just for me. Thank you if you've taken the time to read this. It's a sappy little story, but I still have nightmares about those days and I just had to get it off my chest. I have no one else to talk to about it so I decided this would help me somehow. I'm very glad to be living back at my little home in the country.
Thank you for sharing. I was just a little kid as the depression was drawing to a close. Even at 4YO I remember hard times as you described. Dad had a job but as you said - not much. Mom made clothes from feed sacks. Living in the country, if dad could get a few 22's he'd hunt and maybe we'd have squirrel, rabbit or if lucky a fat racoon. The war made things a little better but rationing didnt help. Still took those critters to make a meal. LOL Young people today have no clue.
Thanks for your story Joe. I can relate to your experiences . I raised 4 children on my own . I can't say I was ever desperate but I certainly learned how to scrounge and pinch pennies. What is the saying, "what doesn't kill you makes you stronger." My children are grown up now. Many grandchildren and great grandchildren as well. But those days are not forgotten. We learn from the hard times, and hopefully we can be kinder to others because we understand. Sorry, this sounds like a sermon. It's not meant to. But appreciate you sharing That. All the best to you. Hope life is alittle easier for you now.
Nobody talks about how good his singing is. Not just vocal quality, the actual singing performance. Modulating timber, volume and rhythm to create compelling emotions while performing on an even higher level on the guitar at the same time is just outer space stuff.
I'm a metal guy, and this is some seriously scary playing. Don't let the deceptively simple harmony of this tune fool you, this is monster technique and melodic sense here.
Had to work heavy on my cross picking, plus pretty much Tony has made me a superior musician thanks to all the little things happening that are insanely difficult
So, my personal interests are a weird amalgamation of traditional folk music and death metal, and flatpicking is absolutely phenomenal. A lot of metalheads don't give it credit, but this kind of music in general is very interesting, even if you don't particularly care for the genre. Kenny Baker referred to bluegrass as hillbilly jazz, and he was absolutely right. It takes tremendous control and technique to be able to get something like Church Street Blues to sound like this.
Every while I’ll jump on and listen to this maybe 10 or 20 times in a row to try and wrap my head around the absolute nonchalance and ease with which he simply annihilates a supremely technical song like this. RIP
I listened to this song 2 days ago to help heal my heart, as my best friend passed suddenly the day before Christmas Eve. 2020 has been so cruel. Thanks for the wonderful tunes Tony.
I’m a music lover and guitarist and i like every kind of music there’s is good in every genre when you search but Tony Rice is my favourite and the first on my list guitarist i have absolutely no doubt about it. Everything he has done is fantastic . He was the master of bluegrass but not only, he mixed bluegrass with jazz that resulted in bluejazz lol . Guitar mastery , there was something so special in his tone and playing . He found so much of space in a mesure even at top speed and not to forget his beautiful voice . Rip Tony Rice
He's been at the top of my list of guitar heros since around 1986 when I first heard of him. I was taking guitar lessons from a small guitar shop with a bluegrass radio station playing in the background. I kept asking the store manager: Who IS that playing!? He told me. I went out and bought every Tony Rice album available right then and there. Saw his live show in Ann Arbor, MI in 1993. Fantastic! Mesmerizing. No one even comes close!
This is literally harder to flatpick than trying to play any guitar solo lol. I thought my right hand was solid and tried for weeks to get a handle on this but ended up fingering half of it. I personally have never been stumped so thoroughly. I've run into some of those steel-guitar licks the country monsters would do that were really weird to learn, but you COULD eventually grasp it enough to at least fake it, but this shit is off the charts. Never say never on the guitar, you can always get it if you immerse yourself in it long enough, but this one might break the mold. I hate to say, but if you haven't flatpicked at the highest level for many many years, you simply will not be able to duplicate even segments of this elegant monstrosity lol
@@tyforsberg88 Take a run at it. In the end, you'll do yourself a world of good busting your ass. The album version is easier but still insane. Then once you nail it, if you don't play it every time you pick up the guitar, you lose it. I'm on to the Tommy Emmanuel/Chet/Merle Travis independent thumb stuff which is literally like starting over on the instrument. Struggling and doubting yourself is what makes this thing the shit, because you will get it eventually, and once you do it's another tool in the bag. Enjoy at your own risk lol
Ikr…bluegrass is often one of the hardest genres to master. Particularly flatpicking like Tony…he was just the best🫡 absolute genius and one of my favorite people ever.
@@clayallen4354 Marvel of the Ages. And those suspended chords, He says he took them from Debussy. How many bluegrassers actually listen to Debussy? Well, probably a lot more these days.
I see it, I hear it, I try and understand, but his gifts are beyond my understanding. The velvety picking that flows like water is masterful. I am in awe.
He was the lead vocalist when he and J.D. Crowe, Dowyle Lawson, Bobby Hicks formed ''The Bluegrass Album Band'',one of the best bluegrass supergroups. Tony Rice's voice is true bluegrass much better than today's newgrass. He was one of the greatest bluegrass legends. Now he sings in heaven. RIP Tony Rice.
Thank you TH-cam for allowing the world to see this... I always get a kick out of Tony, I remember seeing him 20 years ago and always thought the world of Him..
greekflatpicker I agree, I truly enjoy your guys videos. Been playing guitar religiously starting to really get it with the flatpicking I love it keep the videos coming you guys are great thank you Robert
My favorite version of this song. Tony brings class to the music and he's got the smoothest right hand in the business. Couldn't play or sing this any better than Tony does here.
For the first time in a while I searched "Tony Rice" on here. I didn't know he passed. What a sad day for music, though music was all the better for Tony making it. RIP Mr. Rice.
Tony Rice has got to be one of my favourite acoustic players ever. His style of playing blends flatpicking lines and bass chord rhythm work almost seamlessly into one. Also his choice of chord voicings are beautiful, he doesn’t really need to sing his playing speaks for itself. There’s a lot of good bluegrass guitarists out there but Tony’s style is a signature all to his own.
As I understand it, Tony first played this D-28 when he was 9 years old. It had a crazy high action and had been horrendously modified and missed treated. The horrible treatment would continue for years before Tony obtained possession of it and started to restore the instrument. But, after Tony got her back in decent shape. A tropical storm hit the Florida town he was living in and his house was flooded resulting in this Martin winding up under water. So the restoration process had to start all over again. But Tony never gave up on his old Martin
It’s amazing to watch the very best guitarists as they make the highly complex look so simple. Tony was the best, period. This is masterclass. He’s so missed.
@samuraiguitarist brought me here - this is seriously good picking! Never heard of Tony Rice until today and have come to find he's passed away, but I'm going to be checking out more of his music.
I only heard his stuff with Garcia and Grisman. Used to play "Not For Kids Only" for my son when he was a baby. The Pizza Tapes is another good one, if you're interested. Rice is def underappreciated but I'm glad Samurai made that video.
Thank you Tony Rice! i picked up a guitar and learned how to play after i was so inspired from listening to your Manzanita album. I now play guitar in a old timey bluegrass band!
Tony--i have listened to this version about a million times and as an old picker with arthritis you always make me smile but apart from your ability you always seem to be a person that you would call a friend Thank you nova scotia canada we love you
I recently saw Tony playing this live, with Alison Krauss singing lead, Dan Tyminski on backup vocals, and Jerry Douglas on dobro taking mad breaks. Whoa. What an insanely good concert that really blew the roof off of the place. If you have a chance to see Alison Krauss and Union Station w/ Tony Rice on their current tour, then run, do not walk, down to the show an plunk down the trivial ticket price. You'll be very glad you did.
Been working on this song off and on for decades and I'm no where near this master piece of tone, taste and vocal brilliance. It is hard as the dickens to get this song up to speed as smoothly as Tony. I wish you well my friend, I know you're hurtin.
I was raised on Stanley Brothers music and thought no body could beat Bill Napier or George Shuffler but in 1979 I heard Tony Rice and had to practically start all over on the way I approached guitar playing, he was just so smooth and had a tone unmatched.
@@craigjcowan Ah yes but we have that enemy of ours called time and old age as I have been playing for some 35 years and my joints are starting to hurt, but no worries since this final enemy death will be done away with provided that my current actions in life does not penalize me, then and only then I can play any instrument I want to even designing some that have not been invented yet, and I will make a guitar after 1,000's of them, and make one that can not be improved upon.
Kenney- It has once been said and neither twice denied, for the kingdom of conflagration is in our midst! Bark, you dogs of Sistine implantation. Snap the jowls of chrome and silicone, for deliverance is between those that sooner give back; than others who stand fast through stubborn inheritance. Rather, be as the garfish, gloaming, taciturn, incomplacent. We are from the tribe of Jesco, and no other name shall be delivered!
He never picks the high E string except at 1:21 and 3:13. What a master Tony was. It doesn’t even sound like strings, just rolling sounds of bittersweet joy.
Tony is my favorite guitar player. I've listened to this song so many times this week. Really hope that he gets better and can play again soon. Watching this and then his acceptance speech into the IBMA hall of fame brings tears to my eyes.
Danny Irmscher Unfortunately we don't think Tony is ever going to get better. I waited (didn't mind the wait) 6 months for an autographed autobiography and was told by the publisher this would be one of his last to sign.
+Live Holy a photo was posted on Facebook from a concert a week back in Asheville North Carolina. He's with his buddy Dave Grisman. A skeleton is about right, sadly.
I watched this VHS so many times growing up and tried to learn it. So much joy. Even though he’s on Church Street with the blues. Grateful for my dad who let me watch (and probably wear out) his VHS tape
[Verse 1] Well I've been hangin' out of town, Lord, in that low down rain Watchin' good time Charlie Francis drivin' me insane Up on shady Charlotte Street, Lord, the green lights look red I wish I's back home on the farm, Lord, in my feather bed [Chorus] And I got myself a rockin' chair To see if I could lose These thin dime, hard time Hell on Church Street blues [Verse 2] I found myself a picker friend who's read yesterday's news I folded up page twenty-one and stuck it in my shoes I gave me a nickel to the poor, my good turn for the day I folded up my own billfold, threw it far away [Chorus] And I got myself a rockin' chair To see if I could lose These thin dime, hard time Hell on Church Street blues [Verse 3] Well, I wish I had some guitar strings, Old Black Diamond brand I'd string up this old Martin box and go and join some band But I guess I'm gonna stay right here, just pick and sing a while Try to make me a little change and give them folks a smile [Chorus] And I got myself a rockin' chair To see if I could lose These thin dime, hard time Hell on Church Street blues [Final Repeat of Chorus] And I got myself a rockin' chair To see if I could lose These thin dime, hard time Hell on Church Street blues
One thing I hate is discovering a new artist (well new to me) and then discovering the guy has already passed and I will never get to see him. RIP Tony.
Found this quite by chance...and boy am I glad that I did. Amazing guitar playing & great singing. Simply a faultless performance of a great song. TR rocks !!!!!
This is absolutely my favorite guitar / music video on TH-cam. Must have watched it 100 times over the last 5 years and it just never fails to stop me in my tracks... Gawd Dayyyyum Tony Rice! :-D
I've played guitar for many years. Some professional. Tony Rice is the best and cleanest flatpicker I've ever heard. So, here's to Tony Rice, the best flatpicker that ever was. God has him now; our loss.
Mr. Rice is certainly a great example for all young players that its not just the number of notes you play, but how you convey feeling through those notes.
I almost forgot to watch this today
me too buddy, me too. i have it pinned to my browser so i can watch it whenever
yup, same. Tony is life.
That was a close one!
This is how we should remember Tony.
This video of his great voice and incredible guitar playing that will never be forgotten. Rest in peace Tony Rice 🕊
Goodbye, guitar man :'(
Rest Easy Freeborn Man.
Ive been watching this video for six months after buying a dreadnought and learning the instruments history. Tony Rice really was the flat picking / crosspicking master and because of him I have learned to venture into a whole new way of playing. RIP Tony Rice.
@@NathanBily Have you explored Tony's early guitar hero, Clarence White, yet?
@@NathanBily if you ain't ever, check out Norman Blake also.
This song always makes me cry. It reminds me of when I moved to the city. I lived in a shotgun shack and I worked as a dishwasher for less money than I deserved. I used to walk four miles to work everyday and I had nothing to eat at home but beans and rice. I used to hang out with some hobos and we'd get drunk and talk shit about "rich people". When I had spare time I would sit around the square and play my guitar for money and food. This song feels like it was written just for me. Thank you if you've taken the time to read this. It's a sappy little story, but I still have nightmares about those days and I just had to get it off my chest. I have no one else to talk to about it so I decided this would help me somehow. I'm very glad to be living back at my little home in the country.
Thank you for sharing. I was just a little kid as the depression was drawing to a close. Even at 4YO I remember hard times as you described. Dad had a job but as you said - not much. Mom made clothes from feed sacks. Living in the country, if dad could get a few 22's he'd hunt and maybe we'd have squirrel, rabbit or if lucky a fat racoon. The war made things a little better but rationing didnt help. Still took those critters to make a meal. LOL Young people today have no clue.
Thanks for your story Joe.
I can relate to your experiences . I raised 4 children on my own . I can't say I was ever desperate but I certainly learned how to scrounge and pinch pennies.
What is the saying, "what doesn't kill you makes you stronger." My children are grown up now. Many grandchildren and great grandchildren as well. But those days are not forgotten.
We learn from the hard times, and hopefully we can be kinder to others because we understand. Sorry, this sounds like a sermon. It's not meant to. But appreciate you sharing
That. All the best to you. Hope life is alittle easier for you now.
Sending much love to you
Votre histoire n'attend qu'une très belle chanson...
Elle le mérite ...👍👍
Meilleurs sentiments de France ... ❤❤
@@frederickwise5238 that's right but they protest as though they're oppressed. Thanks for your story
I always come back to this video when I need something that feels real and natural. It's like drinking spring water after wandering through a desert.
same here
Couldn't have written it any better or made it any clearer. :)
Here I am, thirsty as.
Well said!
Poetry
Tony Rice what the acoustic should sound like
Nobody talks about how good his singing is. Not just vocal quality, the actual singing performance. Modulating timber, volume and rhythm to create compelling emotions while performing on an even higher level on the guitar at the same time is just outer space stuff.
Yeah, vocally he was amazingly talented. He wasn't just an incredible guitar player. He was the whole package and underrated.
Exactly right
This!!! He is just an all around amazing musician. Everything!
I have read that Roy Orbison, no mean singer himself, once said after hearing Tony sing a song "That's the best singer I've ever heard."
Outstanding all around magic!
As a picker myself, it’s amazing how easy Tony makes this look. Trust me, it’s absolute wizardry.
That's putting it mildly. Quite possibly the most talented picker of all time.
pickin' 55 years and that makes my jaw drop and a big smile . Immaculate performance
Its a pretty crazy tempo but it isn't really that wizardly, haha
They always make it look easy lol. Its a trick
@@japaneserequired6314 post a video of you playing it
His economy of motion is otherworldly. RIP Mr. Rice
he left us so many gifts. rest easy, Tony Rice.
I'm a metal guy, and this is some seriously scary playing. Don't let the deceptively simple harmony of this tune fool you, this is monster technique and melodic sense here.
I'm attempting to learn it right now, i'm lucky to hit every other note
@@strings1586 I learned it, and it's insanely difficult.
Taken me 3 months to get this down and I’m still rough ..
Had to work heavy on my cross picking, plus pretty much Tony has made me a superior musician thanks to all the little things happening that are insanely difficult
So, my personal interests are a weird amalgamation of traditional folk music and death metal, and flatpicking is absolutely phenomenal. A lot of metalheads don't give it credit, but this kind of music in general is very interesting, even if you don't particularly care for the genre.
Kenny Baker referred to bluegrass as hillbilly jazz, and he was absolutely right. It takes tremendous control and technique to be able to get something like Church Street Blues to sound like this.
Every while I’ll jump on and listen to this maybe 10 or 20 times in a row to try and wrap my head around the absolute nonchalance and ease with which he simply annihilates a supremely technical song like this.
RIP
Rest In Eternal Peace, Tony. You touched too many hearts to count.
Dear TH-cam, Please don't ever die. I want to be able to watch this when I'm eighty.
The level of perfection is astounding, never overplayed yet played to the highest level possible. Breathtaking on every level.
I listened to this song 2 days ago to help heal my heart, as my best friend passed suddenly the day before Christmas Eve. 2020 has been so cruel. Thanks for the wonderful tunes Tony.
Well now tony can play this for your friend in heaven ☺️
Hope you're doing better this holiday season
Sorry for your loss! Listening to Tony's playing can help ease your pain, for me only thing that helped!!
I’m a music lover and guitarist and i like every kind of music there’s is good in every genre when you search but Tony Rice is my favourite and the first on my list guitarist i have absolutely no doubt about it. Everything he has done is fantastic . He was the master of bluegrass but not only, he mixed bluegrass with jazz that resulted in bluejazz lol . Guitar mastery , there was something so special in his tone and playing . He found so much of space in a mesure even at top speed and not to forget his beautiful voice . Rip Tony Rice
He's been at the top of my list of guitar heros since around 1986 when I first heard of him. I was taking guitar lessons from a small guitar shop with a bluegrass radio station playing in the background. I kept asking the store manager: Who IS that playing!? He told me. I went out and bought every Tony Rice album available right then and there. Saw his live show in Ann Arbor, MI in 1993. Fantastic! Mesmerizing. No one even comes close!
Same......hearing Tony for the first time is like hearing the Beatles the first time. No peer.
RIP Tony. From Guitar players everywhere, thank you for everything.
Such a sad day today to hear that Tony has passed. God bless him for the music he has left for us and his family for their loss. Rest in Peace Tony.
If this doesn't make you smile, nothing will. Wow.
Rest In Peace Tony, we miss you already...
So hard and sad to hear! You know the deathreason? 😥 RIP Tony! The best guitar player ever!
He will always and forever be remembered!
The Best !!!!! RIP TONY !!!!
Prayers and love brother 🙏❤
...Great! Grace Constable!👍🏻
This is literally harder to flatpick than trying to play any guitar solo lol. I thought my right hand was solid and tried for weeks to get a handle on this but ended up fingering half of it. I personally have never been stumped so thoroughly. I've run into some of those steel-guitar licks the country monsters would do that were really weird to learn, but you COULD eventually grasp it enough to at least fake it, but this shit is off the charts. Never say never on the guitar, you can always get it if you immerse yourself in it long enough, but this one might break the mold. I hate to say, but if you haven't flatpicked at the highest level for many many years, you simply will not be able to duplicate even segments of this elegant monstrosity lol
😂😂
Makes me wanna try though
@@tyforsberg88 Take a run at it. In the end, you'll do yourself a world of good busting your ass. The album version is easier but still insane. Then once you nail it, if you don't play it every time you pick up the guitar, you lose it. I'm on to the Tommy Emmanuel/Chet/Merle Travis independent thumb stuff which is literally like starting over on the instrument. Struggling and doubting yourself is what makes this thing the shit, because you will get it eventually, and once you do it's another tool in the bag. Enjoy at your own risk lol
Yeah, same here. Easy to play Eric Johnson and Van Halen riffs than this. Just gotta keep trying
Ikr…bluegrass is often one of the hardest genres to master. Particularly flatpicking like Tony…he was just the best🫡 absolute genius and one of my favorite people ever.
@@sarahdrawz He was a treasure for sure.
My favorite all time bluegrass picker and singer. What a God given talent.
Tony, Doc, Norman - outstanding guitars...
Also worth mentioning the song writer and original performer, Norman Blake.
It's amazing how much he is able to do with just the simplest of chords.
that right hand isn't so simple
@@clayallen4354 Marvel of the Ages. And those suspended chords, He says he took them from Debussy. How many bluegrassers actually listen to Debussy? Well, probably a lot more these days.
I see it, I hear it, I try and understand, but his gifts are beyond my understanding. The velvety picking that flows like water is masterful. I am in awe.
DUDE, GET THE VIDEO HE EXPLAINS IT BRILLIANTLY
you'll get it immediately
Sorry, which video?
"an imitate lesson with tony rice" DVD 20$ on amazon, best 20 bucks you will ever spend, trust me
I’m mesmerised absolutely by Tony’s left hand, never mind his right. Somebody tell me how to stop listening. I’ve gotten things to do round the home.
Is anyone else on here responsible for 25+ views? I keep coming back to this version - love me some Tony Rice.
+FanBritLit I probably am at this point.
Easily
100
Oh yeah
It’s a marvel and a wonder .
Sounds good when your up or down.
I've done almost as much consecutively. Absolutely addicting.
Oh. Yeah........
This is true talent. The opposite of what you see at the Grammys today.
It’s ain’t all bad, but it ain’t all good. Be thankful for the good, like Tony! ;)
I mean Stapleton has gotten like 8 of them what you mean?
At any other time this would ‘raise a smile’, but but it just hit the sadness button.
Even if he didn't play guitar, he'd be great just by virtue of his singing.
Well said.
I know, right? His picking is so phenomenal that it overshadows amazing vocals. What talent!
Often overlooked. Dead right.
It's incredible that someone could be so incredible at playing an instrument that everyone forgets he had one of the best voices in the business.
He was the lead vocalist when he and J.D. Crowe, Dowyle Lawson, Bobby Hicks formed ''The Bluegrass Album Band'',one of the best bluegrass supergroups. Tony Rice's voice is true bluegrass much better than today's newgrass. He was one of the greatest bluegrass legends. Now he sings in heaven. RIP Tony Rice.
Thank you TH-cam for allowing the world to see this... I always get a kick out of Tony, I remember seeing him 20 years ago and always thought the world of Him..
The stoicism of Tony Rice is sheer brilliance.
There is so much beauty in this world around...
+greekflatpicker Yes indeed
:-)
greekflatpicker So true!
greekflatpicker I agree, I truly enjoy your guys videos. Been playing guitar religiously starting to really get it with the flatpicking I love it keep the videos coming you guys are great thank you Robert
Never was, nor will there ever be a more comprehensively great bluegrass musician. Legends never die.
My favorite version of this song. Tony brings class to the music and he's got the smoothest right hand in the business. Couldn't play or sing this any better than Tony does here.
For the first time in a while I searched "Tony Rice" on here. I didn't know he passed. What a sad day for music, though music was all the better for Tony making it. RIP Mr. Rice.
this man is a wizard with the picking. Absolutely beautiful. This song is danm hard to learn.
Wow! Hard to believe he’s gone. 😢
God bless you Tony, you made this world a better place to live. RIP.
RIP Tony Rice. Thank you for your beautiful music.
Tony Rice has got to be one of my favourite acoustic players ever. His style of playing blends flatpicking lines and bass chord rhythm work almost seamlessly into one. Also his choice of chord voicings are beautiful, he doesn’t really need to sing his playing speaks for itself. There’s a lot of good bluegrass guitarists out there but Tony’s style is a signature all to his own.
As I understand it, Tony first played this D-28 when he was 9 years old. It had a crazy high action and had been horrendously modified and missed treated. The horrible treatment would continue for years before Tony obtained possession of it and started to restore the instrument. But, after Tony got her back in decent shape. A tropical storm hit the Florida town he was living in and his house was flooded resulting in this Martin winding up under water. So the restoration process had to start all over again. But Tony never gave up on his old Martin
Absolutely the best to ever do it. Clarence is a close second. RIP
Simply put the very best. I first heard Tony when I was 18 years old. Now at 65 his voice and playing is as fresh as ever
It’s amazing to watch the very best guitarists as they make the highly complex look so simple. Tony was the best, period. This is masterclass. He’s so missed.
@samuraiguitarist brought me here - this is seriously good picking! Never heard of Tony Rice until today and have come to find he's passed away, but I'm going to be checking out more of his music.
I only heard his stuff with Garcia and Grisman. Used to play "Not For Kids Only" for my son when he was a baby. The Pizza Tapes is another good one, if you're interested. Rice is def underappreciated but I'm glad Samurai made that video.
Thank you Tony Rice! i picked up a guitar and learned how to play after i was so inspired from listening to your Manzanita album. I now play guitar in a old timey bluegrass band!
Tony--i have listened to this version about a million times and as an old picker with arthritis you always make me smile but apart from your ability you always seem to be a person that you would call a friend Thank you nova scotia canada we love you
No matter how many times I watch this I am still spellbound...absolute perfection!
Rice the greatest. He's about feeling, soul, attitude. He can take the simplest song and when he's finished, it's a masterpiece!
I recently saw Tony playing this live, with Alison Krauss singing lead, Dan Tyminski on backup vocals, and Jerry Douglas on dobro taking mad breaks.
Whoa. What an insanely good concert that really blew the roof off of the place.
If you have a chance to see Alison Krauss and Union Station w/ Tony Rice on their current tour, then run, do not walk, down to the show an plunk down the trivial ticket price. You'll be very glad you did.
I bet some tears of joy were shed at that one.
I hope it's a great memory, my friend
Been working on this song off and on for decades and I'm no where near this master piece of tone, taste and vocal brilliance. It is hard as the dickens to get this song up to speed as smoothly as Tony. I wish you well my friend, I know you're hurtin.
Upload ur rendition dude!
I was raised on Stanley Brothers music and thought no body could beat Bill Napier or George Shuffler but in 1979 I heard Tony Rice and had to practically start all over on the way I approached guitar playing, he was just so smooth and had a tone unmatched.
Me too.
ha! Yeah, I had to fool my wife the other day and show her his face while singing and then as the video went on it pans to his fingers goin to town!
@@craigjcowan Ah yes but we have that enemy of ours called time and old age as I have been playing for some 35 years and my joints are starting to hurt, but no worries since this final enemy death will be done away with provided that my current actions in life does not penalize me, then and only then I can play any instrument I want to even designing some that have not been invented yet, and I will make a guitar after 1,000's of them, and make one that can not be improved upon.
Kenney- It has once been said and neither twice denied, for the kingdom of conflagration is in our midst! Bark, you dogs of Sistine implantation. Snap the jowls of chrome and silicone, for deliverance is between those that sooner give back; than others who stand fast through stubborn inheritance. Rather, be as the garfish, gloaming, taciturn, incomplacent. We are from the tribe of Jesco, and no other name shall be delivered!
@@johngeddes7894 what the?
Here from Punch Brothers cover of this song they did recently. Very thankful for them introducing me to such a wonderful song and artist.
Rest easy TR, your music changed my life.
He never picks the high E string except at 1:21 and 3:13. What a master Tony was. It doesn’t even sound like strings, just rolling sounds of bittersweet joy.
Tony is my favorite guitar player. I've listened to this song so many times this week. Really hope that he gets better and can play again soon. Watching this and then his acceptance speech into the IBMA hall of fame brings tears to my eyes.
This has to be my dessert island youtube video. If this was the last video I could ever watch for the rest of my life I’d be alright…
Rice is one of the greatest. I absolutely love this song and the way he performed it. I hope he gets healthy soon!
I just learned today that he is my mother-in-law's first cousin. Funny how it only took 38 years to find that out! LOL
Danny Irmscher Unfortunately we don't think Tony is ever going to get better. I waited (didn't mind the wait) 6 months for an autographed autobiography and was told by the publisher this would be one of his last to sign.
+Live Holy a photo was posted on Facebook from a concert a week back in Asheville North Carolina. He's with his buddy Dave Grisman. A skeleton is about right, sadly.
He's just cool and makes amazing skill look so easy.
@@sandytaylor8482 That's why he's so cool...
I love Norm Blake and I want to thank him from the bottom of my heart for writing this song for Tony, :-).
This is as good as it can be! He is absolute master of this style!
And not just a master, but pretty much the inventor, too.
He's the master of like 15 different styles as well. So good
Tony has always been able to do the perfect interpretation of any song he approaches, like this great tune from the pen of Norman Blake.
This is as good as it gets.
Dale Ludewig sweet as bourbon whiskey
can't believe anyone would dislike this it's pure beauty.
RIP Mr Rice. Thank you for the gifts you shared with us.
I watched this VHS so many times growing up and tried to learn it. So much joy. Even though he’s on Church Street with the blues.
Grateful for my dad who let me watch (and probably wear out) his VHS tape
heard Mr Rice live at Paul's Saloon in San Francisco 1973..that's over 40 years ago.
still in my mind
Some of the work he does with his middle finger on these runs in chord shapes is insane.
[Verse 1]
Well I've been hangin' out of town, Lord, in that low down rain
Watchin' good time Charlie Francis drivin' me insane
Up on shady Charlotte Street, Lord, the green lights look red
I wish I's back home on the farm, Lord, in my feather bed
[Chorus]
And I got myself a rockin' chair
To see if I could lose
These thin dime, hard time
Hell on Church Street blues
[Verse 2]
I found myself a picker friend who's read yesterday's news
I folded up page twenty-one and stuck it in my shoes
I gave me a nickel to the poor, my good turn for the day
I folded up my own billfold, threw it far away
[Chorus]
And I got myself a rockin' chair
To see if I could lose
These thin dime, hard time
Hell on Church Street blues
[Verse 3]
Well, I wish I had some guitar strings, Old Black Diamond brand
I'd string up this old Martin box and go and join some band
But I guess I'm gonna stay right here, just pick and sing a while
Try to make me a little change and give them folks a smile
[Chorus]
And I got myself a rockin' chair
To see if I could lose
These thin dime, hard time
Hell on Church Street blues
[Final Repeat of Chorus]
And I got myself a rockin' chair
To see if I could lose
These thin dime, hard time
Hell on Church Street blues
It's not 'good time Charlie Francis', rather 'good-time Charlie friends'.
@@johnhudson9167 Not a bad place to point out that Norman Blake wrote the song.
One thing I hate is discovering a new artist (well new to me) and then discovering the guy has already passed and I will never get to see him. RIP Tony.
Found this quite by chance...and boy am I glad that I did. Amazing guitar playing & great singing. Simply a faultless performance of a great song. TR rocks !!!!!
Oh god! , don't you just LOVE this man's version... Tony Rice - amazing musician!!!!!!!
What a fantastic guitar and player. The guitar is so subtle and full of volume. Takes a great player to make it sound like that.
That was amazing. Marvelous playing and singing.
This is one the most beautiful performances I've ever heard. Wow!
Absolutely remarkable...living proof that perfection exists on this planet..and plays guitar!
This is absolutely my favorite guitar / music video on TH-cam. Must have watched it 100 times over the last 5 years and it just never fails to stop me in my tracks... Gawd Dayyyyum Tony Rice! :-D
Me too!
Visited my mom’s tiny hometown this summer. Whenever we passed Church street, I couldn’t help but sing this. I adore this song. Thank you Sam.
I've played guitar for many years. Some professional. Tony Rice is the best and cleanest flatpicker I've ever heard. So, here's to Tony Rice, the best flatpicker that ever was. God has him now; our loss.
And not just Tony the whole Rice family is this way I've grown up with several of his cousins and his aunts and uncles they all play this good
Playing this smooth with a thumb pick is hard. With a flat pick it is impossible. Thanks for the music. Rest easy.
R.I.P. Tony
Thanks for the sounds
I keep coming back to watch this, it has a healing calming and purifying effect it seems
How could anyone in their right mind give this a thumbs down??
Flip through your local radio stations and listen to the crap that passes for music today. People have lost touch with what beautiful music really is.
Mike J yep totally, music now is about bragging and flashing money, not bringing people together. We live in a sad sad era my friend :(
Steve Dyer It's just bitter small minded people pissing on someones playground.
Tony rice probably stole someone's girlfriend back in the day and they're still mad about it.
idiots
Mr. Rice is certainly a great example for all young players that its not just the number of notes you play, but how you convey feeling through those notes.
Tony's skill level is of the highest order. He plays with so much confidence & it's all clean & well articulated.
Perfection is simplicity. A man and his guitar - no more. He's under-rated. He's a freakin ICON!
The coolest wink in the history of modern music right there.
This is just supreme. This technical work and excellent voice.
Tony Rice...there are no words!!
you did gave us a lots of smiles Tony, thank you , and rest in peace ❤
Just perfect, It moves me. So grateful it was recorded.
thats clarence whites d-28 with the enlarged sound hole, it's a legendary insturment
it's worth millions
i think marty stewart has it now
Hook on the Fly Marty owns clarence’s b bender telecaster, a legendary instrument.
@@yoyomaniac50250 ahhh you're right, knew he wound up with one of the famous clarence guitars
@@HookontheFly Marty's is original B Bender Tele. I don't know if he has this one or not I'm going to have to look Marty up and see who owns this one
@@truckerkevthepaidtourist curious to hear what you find!
I always love to hear Mr. Tony Rice. It does not matter what song he plays, He certainly is a legend, hands down.
I wish I could do anything as well as he plays guitar. What hands!!
Im not sure if I can stop listening to this everyday.
RIP TONY. You will be missed....
This is beyond magical!
This dude is my hero.
me too
The king…. We all try to be as good as you. Hope your soul is resting easy tony