Playing I Want To Hold Your Hand - The Beatles (John Lennon rhythm guitar)
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 19 ก.พ. 2024
- Hey guys,
This is a video where I´m playing Lennon´s rhythm guitar in ´I want to hold your hand´.
I´m using amp vox ac15.
Hope you like it. If you like it, you can like and subscribe to the channel!
#thebeatles #johnlennon #rickenbacker325 #luthier
Superb cover. Great work. Great Song. Thank You for Posting.
They were so young and so genius. Thanks for this.
Imagine....Singing and playing that!!! Lennon was a Great Rhythm guitarist and singer!!!!
Lennon was a great guitarist. Anyone who says otherwise doesn't understand rock n' roll
SWEET! Nice Ricky too!
Thanks Tommyr! ;)
I love it! 🎉🎉 inspiring ..
Amazing cover and love the Rick!
Thanksss, dude ;)
Amazing cover🎉🎉🎉
Thaaaanks 😊🎊
Awesome......
Thanks 🤗
Spot on just like Lennon.😎
Thankss! ;)
Nope.
Excellent Sir!
Glad you liked it! 😊
Absolutely fantastic have a wonderful day also what is your favorite year from the 2010s ❤❤❤❤❤❤😊😊😊😊😊😊
Thankksss, @Aminahmed2220!
Very interesting style Lennon had of playing rhythm guitar. Nicely done!
Glad you enjoyed it ;)
Yeah, I dig that Rick you built, too!
He's not playing it as Lennon actually played it on the record or live. In fact too many of the chord voicings he fingers vs the audio recording presented ...very sus.
@@jamescreswell9037 When you gonna do your own video and show us how it’s done?
@@carlbaumeister3439 I'm awaiting yours first. Apparently you're the Lennon "style" expert. 😏😎
Nice work. That Rick deserves a vintage Vox amp. It will sound wayyyy different
Thanks. A Vox Ac30 from 60’s is a dream ❤
Very nice :)
What's the model of that beautiful Ric?
Really nice job. In particular, you've captured that somewhat muffled, nasal/quacking sound his Rickenbacker put out in the studio version.
If you slightly flatten the A string, it’d be pretty much impossible to discern your version from the Lennon studio version.
I understand the R' 325 tends to fall out of tune faster than many guitars. John strummed hard for many of their songs and that probably contribute to being out of tune, and who knows how many takes he did before retuning.
You did an Impressive job.
Thanks for your comment, Howard. The roller bridge with the bigsby helps me to keep the guitar in tune
The fingerboard wood doesn’t look Rick. Is this a custom made guitar? Nice playing.
Yes, build by me. Check this out:
th-cam.com/video/EEb1xKX-JQ4/w-d-xo.htmlsi=_wcgVyqZAtdiA9Ne
@ That rosewood you used on your build is probably better than what Rickenbacker uses 😉
@@vayabroder729I love our woods for musical instruments. The fretboard is a brazilian rosewood called ‘Jacarandá’. In the neck I’ve used ‘Pau-marfim’ wood and in the body ‘Freijó’ wood. All brazillian woods 😊
@ Beautiful!
What’s that called again: Pau’l McCarfim wood? 😜
Lovely sound, only 2 chords wrong. Sorry I had to.( E,B7)
Thanks, dude
It's not an E, it would be more of a E5
Used to love playing this music. Is it an ac15C1? Upgrading the tubes made mine sing.
Are you using flatwounds?
Its a ac15VR.
Yes, I'm using Rotosound Top Tape Flatwounded 012 on that guitar.
This music is awesomee!
Oh nice its just all the Chuck Berry songs.
Indeed!
NO NO NO NO NO ......John DID NOT play with all down strokes. C'mon, dude.....go back and study the films!!!
The way he played songs live was usually different to how he played them on the record
Undeniably Lennon was a very aggressive rhythm guitarist, heavy on downstrokes & emphasis in the intro accompanied by staccato in the verses [*of this song in the particular*]. Pre-chorus he returned to a lighter & up-down conventional strum. Same lighter up-down in the initial bars of the middle eight followed by contrasting heavy down strumming where he plays the first form C alternating to his banjo chord form D rock and rollin' it with his pinky prior to returning to the verse.
@@iPro3million True of both Harrison & Lennon and most every other band.
This is how he played on the record, not necessarily what he played live. See the doyen of Beatles song construction Mike Patchelli, it’s this. Everyone’s an expert.