Jerry was a peerless thumbpicker, but what set him apart from all the other great pickers was PERSONALITY. Lord, that man lit up any room he walked in to, with or without a guitar. Every time I watch one of these old clips, I get very nostalgic for The Alabama Wild Man. There's never been anyone like him. The world became far less fun when he passed in 2008.
Sad thing is if someone like Jerry showed up today in Nashville and could play like this they wouldn't want them because talent like this isn't what they want today
Jerry showed us what a love for the guitar and tons of practice could do. We should note that very few guitar pickers got close to Chet Adkins. Jerry was one of the few. I shed tears that both Jerry and Chet are gone, but their music will live on and will be standard for all guitarists. Thanks Jerry. RIP
honkpimpie ,when Jerry hit Nashvegas, Chet was more into record production ,and when he heard Jerry he got him started doing session work,they would jam and Chet recording many of Jerry's guitar instrumentals, the two album's they made together should be in everyone's collection .Two the best at the top of their game ...
I think playing the joklster is part of the tradition with these country players. I guess that's where the idea of picking & grinning is derived. Roy Clark was the same way--a total cornball with crazy guitar chops.
Never hardly see Jerry on a Les Paul, and hes blowing away all the guitar gods in 5mins. Making that Les make sounds ive never heard before. RIP Jerry thanks for the memories and inspiration.
Sometimes you find footage of someone and you think this is literal footage of their greatest moment on earth. I get goosebumps hearing such beautiful playing. Jerry Reed had more talent than we knew, imagine him doing just instrumental music. It would have been culturally defining. To top it of he starts this off by saying he'd been "doing a lot of praying". God Bless Jerry Reed and thank you for having the passion and courage to bless our nation with such amazing tunes.
I met Jerry with Dolly Parton and Glenn Campel when I was 10 years old. He is one of the reasons I've played giutar for over 40 years. Notice the echoplex he's playing through? Still have the exact model today. And what about Porter Wagner's hair!
I figure Mr. Jerry Reed was underrated as a guitarist because he primarily played country......If he played any other genre, he would be regarded as highly as Vaughn, Hendrix, Lee, Paige......etc...........R.I.P. Mr Jerry.
March 20, 1937 - Jerry Reed is born in Atlanta, Georgia. He learned to play the guitar at eight years old after his Momma bought him a $2.00 Guitar. And the rest is history! Rest in peace Jerry. You may be gone, but your music and your memory live on in our hearts!
I remember being a young boy in the Uk seeing smokey and the bandit,when I found out it was snowman singing eastbound n down,i asked my old man if he could find me some jerry reed records,he did and not long after that I got my first guitar all due to the great mans music and influence.
Most underrated guitarist of our time. A true innovator and master of the guitar. Chet Atkins even recorded over 30 Jerry Reed songs. And that's Paul yandell who went on to play with Atkins for 25 years. Great rhythm guitarist in his own right.
Brilliant and plus i just hit the jackpot and took the likes thru to 1000! i hope jerry s looking down on us and can see that he s got so many admirers - he certainly leaves me in awe. thx 4 the post.
Classy set when the camera backs out- and you see the industrial floor. And then there’s the fact that you can hear the other guys more than jerry. And lastly, he reminds of a banjo being played under the sea , a happy, carefree sound
You know what I really hate? When somebody uploads a video like this and forgets to name the songs. You didn't forget, and as a result, I discovered Snowbird. Thank you!
what iv always enjoyed about this man, is how humble he always was and funny. he always made jokes like i dunno if i can play this but we gonna try, yet he knew he could blinded folded. kids could learn a lot from the old pickers. and im not even a country music fan parse. i dig what i grew up with of course which were some of the great country pickers. but what i hear on the country radio these days is just pop with twang. shrugs.
Chet Atkins admitted a number of times that Jerry Reed was actually a better picker than he was, with much less time devoted to his craft (so much time spent on goofy movies, etc). Reed was a truly natural prodigy who could play from the moment he picked up the instrument. Glen Campbell was good but not at Jerry's level. Chet Atkins and Roy Clark are the other two premier country guitarists. Roy's 12th street rag and Malaguenia are stellar and can be seen here on You Tube. Chet and Jerry were Travis' style pickers, Roy a straight picker who also won the National Banjo Championship as a teen.
It's hard for me to good there are so many great guitarist in country music you had Willie Nelson Waylon Jennings and Vince Gill and the latest one is Brad Paisley. But my all-time favorite would have to be Jerry Reed. The best lead guitarist for any man was probably Luther Perkins for Johnny Cash and The Tennessee Two and then later on it was Johnny Cash and Bob Wooten in the Tennessee three.
I miss Jerry and the Porter Wagoner show. Jerry was an outstanding guitarist, composer and showman! Those complaining about the sound should keep in mind that the equipment and the mix are probably older than you are and are probably 2nd or 3rd generation recordings off the original video tape. As far as Jerry's guitar, yes it would have been nice to have been louder. I bet on the original tape and on the show it was. As far as tone, that was the typical tone of the guitarists from that era a la Roy Clark, Chet Atkins, Jimmy Bryant etc. Keep in mind this recording is about 45 years old. The tones and styles of country guitar have changed a lot. All that considered I really enjoyed this and it sure brought back memories of my teenage years and learning to play the the guitar. I had a Les Paul Deluxe almost exactly like the one Jerry is playing about this same era. 🎸🎶👍🏻
It looks to like it was a Standard that had full size humbucker in and he put mini humbucker in, I say that because the of the very large plastic rings on the pups.
and before anyone dismisses jerry as just the truck driver in Smokey and The bandit, (which, of course, he was), he was virtually a musical prodigy. No less than Chet Atkins (Jerry's father-in-law, BTW) once said that he never knew anyone that could pick up a lick or melody as quickly Jerry Reed.
@galberke2009 Europe isn't the only place that Reed isn't that well-known. Here in the US, most people know him for his role in the 'Smokey and the Bandit' films instead of for his great guitar work and songwriting! Fortunately, I came across him a few years--about four now, I think. But, yeah--it certainly is a shame that not too many people seem to know about Reed's great music and especially his guitar work.
If Jerry's amp was very loud on stage, then the sound tech would have to reduce the volume at the mixing board to make the mix correct for the audience. The sound feed for this vid was probably straight off the board with no separate mix for the video. This is a long time ago, but I've heard exactly the same thing happen a few times. Jerry's playing is still awesome!! :)
I gave it my yearly try...using Cool-edit pro, I tried for the umpteenth time to restore Jerry's solos in this video....there is just nothing that can be done. You can't restore something that isn't there. Every year, I get excited thinking "I can do it NOW!" The only thing I can think to do is find the original guitar, the original echoplex and the original amp and have someone like Phil Hunt or Richard Smith recreate some of the parts where Jerry disappears. It might also be cool to get a lower generation video copy as well! Anybody know who owns that guitar?
Really unique style. I never new a lot of him other than Smokey and the Bandit, and maybe some variety shows in the 70s. But that Jerry Reed could really get down. Very nice.......
When it's played on guitar the song is called Yakety Ax but I guess you'ld need to be a guitar player to know that. Thanks for posting, Ol' Porter & Jerry , good to see'em again!
thank you very much, jedzxol for posting this medley,please don't ever remove it,this is the wickest guitar picking, you could ever hear,you can't get much better than that..the only guy that could do that kind of picking is glen campbell,but his guitar wouldn't be tuned that way, he had a different way of tuning a guitar that i ever heard.wicket just wicket. thank you again. John B.
Mike GILBERT Someone set the mikes up. This was on a tv show. Someone there had to be in charge of what the sound was about. There was a rehearsal. Why didn't they notice it then?
You have to remember, this was taped at WSM-TV in the early 70's. The sound's just not going to be that great. Especially since this was the kind of performance the sound guy was probably not used to dealing with on the stage, three big amps and a full set of drums. You can see Jerry on two occasions looking over at the drummer telling him to tone it down.
+Merlyn Schutterle im thinking maybe it sounded better in the tv studio, who knows, maybe the mic´s were different, and the sound levels of the amps were probably set different, and the mixer just sent it straight to tape.. I agree with you, its seems raw
Fantastic! Really cool to see Jerry playin' a les paul. Don't know if I've ever seen him play a solid body (listened a lot more than watched with him). It's a shame, though, that the backing bad was way too damn loud. Drowned him out more than a few times.
What the hell? I've been playing and studying guitar for over 24 years. This is the first time I've seen Jerry Reed's awesomeness. I've studied Merle and Chet, but this is a different technique all together.
Lynn Anderson recorded her famous version of this in 1973, and the Porter Wagoner show went to an outdoor set sometime in the late 70's, so I'm pretty sure that this would have had to have been sometime in the mid-70's.
Joe South, a good friend of Jerry Reed, wrote this song and had it on his 1969 "Introspect" album... Jerry is playing the Lynn Anderson arrangement from 1970,71
I have been periodically going back to this video for 7 yrs now. I realize the sound mix isn't so great. I am Not Gay,but the thing is so good that it makes me cry !
Not sure of the date of that recording, but going by the 'big Elvis collars' and 'boxtail shirt', along with that 1972 Les Paul guitar that Jerry is sporting...I'll go with 1974-1976...this was probably a year or so before he made 'Smoky and the Bandit'....
Yup. I'm a refugee from the 60s rock era and kinda dismissed a number of these guys. Played a couple of Chet Atkins pieces not even realizing until later that Jerry wrote many. 40 years later I'm rediscovering these guys, some long gone, and playing those tunes. Tommy Emmanuel Thom Bresh and Richard Smith are keeping a lot of this finger style playing alive. Jerry's picking was unique.
According to legend, Reed picked up a guitar at around eight years old and just started to play the durned thing. He probably did study the instrument at various points in his life, but there is no explaining away a natural, intuitive gift for music. You either have it or you don't, and Jerry Reed had it in abundance
Ok, Now can you send someone over here to pick my Jaw up off the floor please.. Jerry really was the stuff, I had the privilege to work with him in the 90's, he had his wife on keyboards also,, Great memories of him that day for sure...
SisterSmiley writes...I never remember seeing him young and with long side burns. I do remember him being extremely handsome and I loves his fast songs and rhythm n beat, GREAT DANCE MUSIC. He can really pick at that guitar. Love Wabash Cannonball. I played that on the organ with a medley of other polkas...I like his version of Snowbird, too. Loved the Johnny B. Goode of course.
Renee Grate Great dance music? That's insane! You'd have to drop a ton of speed just to keep up and then, have a cardiac arrest half way through the medley!
Jerry was a peerless thumbpicker, but what set him apart from all the other great pickers was PERSONALITY. Lord, that man lit up any room he walked in to, with or without a guitar. Every time I watch one of these old clips, I get very nostalgic for The Alabama Wild Man. There's never been anyone like him. The world became far less fun when he passed in 2008.
Sad thing is if someone like Jerry showed up today in Nashville and could play like this they wouldn't want them because talent like this isn't what they want today
A lot of people have forgotten or just don't know, maybe because of his acting career, but Reed was an excellent guitarist
He also played on some of Elvis's songs in the 70s.
Jerry Reed is simply one of the worlds best guitar players ever!!!
What a talent!!!
Pick it Son! What a total package Jerry was. Nice to see people still appreciating his talents.
Jerry showed us what a love for the guitar and tons of practice could do. We should note that very few guitar pickers got close to Chet Adkins. Jerry was one of the few. I shed tears that both Jerry and Chet are gone, but their music will live on and will be standard for all guitarists. Thanks Jerry. RIP
honkpimpie ,when Jerry hit Nashvegas, Chet was more into record production ,and when he heard Jerry he got him started doing session work,they would jam and Chet recording many of Jerry's guitar instrumentals, the two album's they made together should be in everyone's collection .Two the best at the top of their game ...
Who can put a smile on a face like Jerry could?😄
Jerry was one of the best guitarists country music ever knew.
Also gotta mention that's a beautiful Les Paul he's playing.
People who don’t play don’t realize what a genius this guy is, and he plays it off joking and wisecracking, like it ain’t nothing....Right. I hear ya
Jerry and Chet just OOZED taste and musicality, beauty, humility. OHH!!!
Like Roy Clark
I think playing the joklster is part of the tradition with these country players. I guess that's where the idea of picking & grinning is derived. Roy Clark was the same way--a total cornball with crazy guitar chops.
When Jerry, Chet and Roy passed away, a big chunk of America died too.
And Glen
@@garyhiland6013 And oh so many.
His guitar was way ahead of it's time...Rip Guitar Man
Never hardly see Jerry on a Les Paul, and hes blowing away all the guitar gods in 5mins. Making that Les make sounds ive never heard before. RIP Jerry thanks for the memories and inspiration.
Sometimes you find footage of someone and you think this is literal footage of their greatest moment on earth. I get goosebumps hearing such beautiful playing. Jerry Reed had more talent than we knew, imagine him doing just instrumental music. It would have been culturally defining. To top it of he starts this off by saying he'd been "doing a lot of praying". God Bless Jerry Reed and thank you for having the passion and courage to bless our nation with such amazing tunes.
What a powerhouse of Talent and Personality!!! I never get tired of his videos.. He's got a new venue now...and what lucky people they are!
I met Jerry with Dolly Parton and Glenn Campel when I was 10 years old. He is one of the reasons I've played giutar for over 40 years. Notice the echoplex he's playing through? Still have the exact model today. And what about Porter Wagner's hair!
I hate to repeat my comments, but that was amazing... simply blew me away.
Those Snowbird licks were sick! Can't stop listening to that stuff.
I figure Mr. Jerry Reed was underrated as a guitarist because he primarily played country......If he played any other genre, he would be regarded as highly as Vaughn, Hendrix, Lee, Paige......etc...........R.I.P. Mr Jerry.
One of the greatest players ever to pick up a guitar. RIP Jerry!
Jerry Reed is one of the most unique guitarists of all time. A true master of the instrument.
An amazing and underrated guitarist. Jerry Reed was always one of my favorites as a kid.
March 20, 1937 - Jerry Reed is born in Atlanta, Georgia. He learned to play the guitar at eight years old after his Momma bought him a $2.00 Guitar. And the rest is history! Rest in peace Jerry. You may be gone, but your music and your memory live on in our hearts!
Babybluebbw thank you Mrs. Reed for buying that guitar! :-)
I remember being a young boy in the Uk seeing smokey and the bandit,when I found out it was snowman singing eastbound n down,i asked my old man if he could find me some jerry reed records,he did and not long after that I got my first guitar all due to the great mans music and influence.
Great playing and a GORGEOUS LP.
Always have and always will love listening to anything Jerry plays nice player....
Most underrated guitarist of our time. A true innovator and master of the guitar. Chet Atkins even recorded over 30 Jerry Reed songs. And that's Paul yandell who went on to play with Atkins for 25 years. Great rhythm guitarist in his own right.
The Snowman, what an extraordinary talent. It's hard to believe that he's gone.
Nobody plays like Jerry Reed, he's gotta be the most unique, and probably the greatest guitar player that ever lived.
Too bad the band is covering up many of his songs.
2 words......... Willie Nelson
Look up roy clarke from hee haw
He even played guitar on some of Elvis's recordings in the early 70's
Well, there are a lot of great ones. One guy that Jerry and Chet followed was a guy named Merle Travis. He was awesome, too.
Brilliant and plus i just hit the jackpot and took the likes thru to 1000! i hope jerry s looking down on us and can see that he s got so many admirers - he certainly leaves me in awe. thx 4 the post.
Seeing Porter Waggoner and Jerry Reed interacting before his medley should also be a cool 'moment in time'.
Holy cow! I'm tired and all I did was watch...
Jerry Reed was an incredibly talented guitarist in anyone's measure.
I got work n im drunk as donkey balls..5hrs till start..fukit im yougooglin more jerry n tommy emanual...from aus cobba
Paul Simmons yep Jerry was one of a kind like Earl Scruggs.
Classy set when the camera backs out- and you see the industrial floor. And then there’s the fact that you can hear the other guys more than jerry.
And lastly, he reminds of a banjo being played under the sea , a happy, carefree sound
Damn I miss Jerry. Not only he's one of the greatest guitarist but a great all around fun guy. Jerry, I love you man.
You know what I really hate? When somebody uploads a video like this and forgets to name the songs. You didn't forget, and as a result, I discovered Snowbird. Thank you!
Another great guitarist, many in the music business world praise Jerry as one of the best guitarists, and great sense of humor.
WOW just WOW. Such a pure player, so pure.
History at its best. I wish music had not been forgotten.
The acoustic player is bloody good too cheers.
what iv always enjoyed about this man, is how humble he always was and funny. he always made jokes like i dunno if i can play this but we gonna try, yet he knew he could blinded folded. kids could learn a lot from the old pickers. and im not even a country music fan parse. i dig what i grew up with of course which were some of the great country pickers. but what i hear on the country radio these days is just pop with twang. shrugs.
One of the all time under appreciated greats.
Reed ,and Campbell were hands down ….the best guitarists in country music and then some……...
Chet Atkins admitted a number of times that Jerry Reed was actually a better picker than he was, with much less time devoted to his craft (so much time spent on goofy movies, etc). Reed was a truly natural prodigy who could play from the moment he picked up the instrument. Glen Campbell was good but not at Jerry's level. Chet Atkins and Roy Clark are the other two premier country guitarists. Roy's 12th street rag and Malaguenia are stellar and can be seen here on You Tube. Chet and Jerry were Travis' style pickers, Roy a straight picker who also won the National Banjo Championship as a teen.
Roy is my cousin!
best anywhere. Guys today are astounded by him
It's hard for me to good there are so many great guitarist in country music you had Willie Nelson Waylon Jennings and Vince Gill and the latest one is Brad Paisley. But my all-time favorite would have to be Jerry Reed. The best lead guitarist for any man was probably Luther Perkins for Johnny Cash and The Tennessee Two and then later on it was Johnny Cash and Bob Wooten in the Tennessee three.
Dustin Vince Gill is my favorite guitarist.
Wow, can you imagine what all the guitars on that stage are worth now? He is truly one of the greats.
Jerry is the man.What a marvelous guitar player-composer! And Funny!
Awesome, truely awesome. A master in action. You´ll be missed.
The greatest country guitar player ever!! and i'd say top 5 over all, ever!!
Shawn Stanley Better than Glen Campbell? I don’t know man...fun discussion though.
Thank You ,My friend ! I have been begging for someone to post this forever. My prayer has been answered . THANK YOU !!!!!!!!
You gotta love TV then as well as Jerry Reed. Man those were the days!
I miss Jerry and the Porter Wagoner show. Jerry was an outstanding guitarist, composer and showman! Those complaining about the sound should keep in mind that the equipment and the mix are probably older than you are and are probably 2nd or 3rd generation recordings off the original video tape. As far as Jerry's guitar, yes it would have been nice to have been louder. I bet on the original tape and on the show it was. As far as tone, that was the typical tone of the guitarists from that era a la Roy Clark, Chet Atkins, Jimmy Bryant etc. Keep in mind this recording is about 45 years old. The tones and styles of country guitar have changed a lot. All that considered I really enjoyed this and it sure brought back memories of my teenage years and learning to play the the guitar. I had a Les Paul Deluxe almost exactly like the one Jerry is playing about this same era. 🎸🎶👍🏻
I was lucky enough to see him in concert in Hunstville Al.
holy carpfish!!! Smooth as silk, cool as ice cream and plays sizzling hot.
amazing! And the presenter is prolly the hippest dood I've seen.
so beautiful, especially the transitions, snowbird-sublime
Jerry Reed must be one of the guitar greats, ever
He most surely is.
areh
Next to Chet Atkins
C. G. P.
Jerry Reed "Guitar Man"
I was so used to seeing him wail on a Tele, I was surprised to see him holding a LP Deluxe; needless to say, he did whatever he wanted with it...
Jerry playing a 1970's Les Paul Deluxe....With mini humbuckers....And it's a beauty !
That guitar has got me drooling. It's like a deep cherry sunburst. Beauty!
joe shmoe someone else noticed, great guitar
Love that Kalamazoo Gibson Les Paul!
It looks to like it was a Standard that had full size humbucker in and he put mini humbucker in, I say that because the of the very large plastic rings on the pups.
I never looked at a guitar before as i did this one. No lye. That guitar pulls you in to it. Its beutiful!
A true musical fucking genius and a hell of a funny guy RIP Snowman
and before anyone dismisses jerry as just the truck driver in Smokey and The bandit, (which, of course, he was), he was virtually a musical prodigy. No less than Chet Atkins (Jerry's father-in-law, BTW) once said that he never knew anyone that could pick up a lick or melody as quickly Jerry Reed.
Sadly, I never knew what a great musician, singer and talented man Jerry Reed was until he died.
Great sense of humor too.
@galberke2009 Europe isn't the only place that Reed isn't that well-known. Here in the US, most people know him for his role in the 'Smokey and the Bandit' films instead of for his great guitar work and songwriting! Fortunately, I came across him a few years--about four now, I think. But, yeah--it certainly is a shame that not too many people seem to know about Reed's great music and especially his guitar work.
The absolute most talented picker ever !!
I love the Whole medley, but his Version of Snowbird here, is just exellent!
Jerry really cooks , even when he holds back and tones down to the pop audience .
If Jerry's amp was very loud on stage, then the sound tech would have to reduce the volume at the mixing board to make the mix correct for the audience.
The sound feed for this vid was probably straight off the board with no separate mix for the video.
This is a long time ago, but I've heard exactly the same thing happen a few times.
Jerry's playing is still awesome!! :)
I agree. Exactly what I was going to say!
I like that he's twangin' on a Les Paul. Sweet tone!
As always Jerry shows what a great guitarist he was. Equally impressive is the drumming by Larry Londin. RIP Snowman.
I love Jerry's playing but the accompaniment is too loud in this recording.
I gave it my yearly try...using Cool-edit pro, I tried for the umpteenth time to restore Jerry's solos in this video....there is just nothing that can be done. You can't restore something that isn't there. Every year, I get excited thinking "I can do it NOW!" The only thing I can think to do is find the original guitar, the original echoplex and the original amp and have someone like Phil Hunt or Richard Smith recreate some of the parts where Jerry disappears. It might also be cool to get a lower generation video copy as well! Anybody know who owns that guitar?
Remarkable so I’m remarking... thank you for a grand reminder of the old t.v daze!
Really unique style. I never new a lot of him other than Smokey and the Bandit, and maybe some variety shows in the 70s. But that Jerry Reed could really get down. Very nice.......
singingrain the claw ,a hybrid pickung technique he is known for, but i still lived him in waterboy,too
When it's played on guitar the song is called Yakety Ax but I guess you'ld need to be a guitar player to know that. Thanks for posting, Ol' Porter & Jerry , good to see'em again!
I love Gibson Les Pauls, but nothing cuts like a Fender Telecaster. Still a treat o see him playing one.
Now that is some mighty fine pickin! Campbell, Clark, Chet, Jerry Reed and then everyone else.
Jerry Reed is hands-down my guitar idol. If I become a mere hundredth the picker Mr. Reed was I'll die a happy man.
R.I.P. Son.
thank you very much, jedzxol for posting this medley,please don't ever remove it,this is the wickest guitar picking, you could ever hear,you can't get much better than that..the only guy that could do that kind of picking is glen campbell,but his guitar wouldn't be tuned that way, he had a different way of tuning a guitar that i ever heard.wicket just wicket. thank you again. John B.
Waouh !! Thanks a lot !! J'adore Jerry depuis trés longtemps.
Wish Jerry's LP was turned up a little more during this performance, but it's still a lot of fun to watch.
A perfect example of the background musicians over powering the lead. Who is the deaf sound man?
Sound man? They had their mics set up in front of their speakers. So much for the sound man.
Mike GILBERT Someone set the mikes up. This was on a tv show. Someone there had to be in charge of what the sound was about. There was a rehearsal. Why didn't they notice it then?
You have to remember, this was taped at WSM-TV in the early 70's. The sound's just not going to be that great. Especially since this was the kind of performance the sound guy was probably not used to dealing with on the stage, three big amps and a full set of drums. You can see Jerry on two occasions looking over at the drummer telling him to tone it down.
+Merlyn SchuttYeah, I agree; the rhythm was drowing out Jerry's playing.
+Merlyn Schutterle im thinking maybe it sounded better in the tv studio, who knows, maybe the mic´s were different, and the sound levels of the amps were probably set different, and the mixer just sent it straight to tape.. I agree with you, its seems raw
Would have been a dream to hear Joe South, Jerry Reed and Ray Stevens playing together back in their early Atlanta beginnings....
Fantastic! Really cool to see Jerry playin' a les paul. Don't know if I've ever seen him play a solid body (listened a lot more than watched with him). It's a shame, though, that the backing bad was way too damn loud. Drowned him out more than a few times.
I completely forgot about all the times he breaks out the tele. Idk, it's just weird to see him with a les paul. Threw me off a bit.
What the hell? I've been playing and studying guitar for over 24 years. This is the first time I've seen Jerry Reed's awesomeness. I've studied Merle and Chet, but this is a different technique all together.
zappasmustache Chet recorded a lot of stuff Jerry wrote. He even confessedthat he was a bit intimidated by his unique guitar antics!
This man was a guitar God.
Awesome picking he takes to a whole new level.
Amen brother!
Lynn Anderson recorded her famous version of this in 1973, and the Porter Wagoner show went to an outdoor set sometime in the late 70's, so I'm pretty sure that this would have had to have been sometime in the mid-70's.
Joe South, a good friend of Jerry Reed, wrote this song and had it on his 1969 "Introspect" album... Jerry is playing the Lynn Anderson arrangement from 1970,71
My favorite guitarist, Jerry... your still the man!!!!!!
Burt n Jerry fight in Gator, was awesome. Gonna do what they say, can’t be done.
How the fuck can someone be so fucking good !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ?
He was a very relaxed guy. Picking comes easy when you chill...
Id like to say ...practice but its not its genius!
I have been periodically going back to this video for 7 yrs now. I realize the sound mix isn't so great. I am Not Gay,but the thing is so good that it makes me cry !
That is a beautiful Gibson Les Paul Deluxe
Is that the Benny Hill theme? Love it
Not sure of the date of that recording, but going by the 'big Elvis collars' and 'boxtail shirt', along with that 1972 Les Paul guitar that Jerry is sporting...I'll go with 1974-1976...this was probably a year or so before he made 'Smoky and the Bandit'....
I never realized how complicated Reed's technique was. Those Nashville pickers were monster players.
Yup. I'm a refugee from the 60s rock era and kinda dismissed a number of these guys. Played a couple of Chet Atkins pieces not even realizing until later that Jerry wrote many. 40 years later I'm rediscovering these guys, some long gone, and playing those tunes. Tommy Emmanuel Thom Bresh and Richard Smith are keeping a lot of this finger style playing alive. Jerry's picking was unique.
I've read that Jimi Hendrix got serious about upping his chops after playing in Nashville, because he witnessed the level there ;-)
It looks more like banjo playing with the fingerpicks, he must have had training.
According to legend, Reed picked up a guitar at around eight years old and just started to play the durned thing. He probably did study the instrument at various points in his life, but there is no explaining away a natural, intuitive gift for music. You either have it or you don't, and Jerry Reed had it in abundance
The one and only!!! There will never be another.
Jerry Reed was way ahead of his time for sure...
Ok, Now can you send someone over here to pick my Jaw up off the floor please.. Jerry really was the stuff, I had the privilege to work with him in the 90's, he had his wife on keyboards also,, Great memories of him that day for sure...
Jerry.....you are really missed down here.....rest in peace.....your records will never be forgotten.....
Wow this is amazing guitar work. It would take me 10000 tries to get that right
Rest in peace Jerry! Love your music as much as Chet Adkins did!
That was amazing😍😘😃✨🌟💙😊
SisterSmiley writes...I never remember seeing him young and with long side burns. I do remember him being extremely handsome and I loves his fast songs and rhythm n beat, GREAT DANCE MUSIC. He can really pick at that guitar. Love Wabash Cannonball. I played that on the organ with a medley of other polkas...I like his version of Snowbird, too. Loved the Johnny B. Goode of course.
Renee Grate Great dance music? That's insane! You'd have to drop a ton of speed just to keep up and then, have a cardiac arrest half way through the medley!
Jerry and Glenn ought to have had a dual. Maybe toss in some Roy Clark as well.
"WHERE YOU AT!?" IM TRYIN TO SHOVE SOME GROCERIES DOWN MY NECK!! RIP