The reference to Spain is not referring to the actual country or style of music, it’s in reference to the actual *song*, Spain, by Chick Corea… Which this track sounds very similar to.
What a fantastic backing track! I think we should all thank you ,for your time and hard work that you put in to this backing track. Greetings from Maryland
The simplest you can think of this track is as two scales shifting back and forth. The notes not covered in one scale are covered by the other and vice versa Therefore a lot of notes are right all the time, but every note is right eventually. The specific scales I use are G major and then B minor, but I'm sure a diminished scale can be added too.
brillian
omg every backing track you made sounds so good ~
Putting it mildly I am obsessed with this track, it's brilliant, more please
I've started jamming on jazz tracks for the first time and this it's just encouraging, what a beautiful backing track :)
This phenomenal! 🤙💞🙏 Oh my...
I wanted an 118 BPM track in B minor. This and one other video appeared in my search results. If this one is way better, IMHO.
Love this!
Brazillian, really. Samba beat and bass groove.
The reference to Spain is not referring to the actual country or style of music, it’s in reference to the actual *song*, Spain, by Chick Corea… Which this track sounds very similar to.
What a fantastic backing track! I think we should all thank you ,for your time and hard work that you put in to this backing track. Greetings from Maryland
Thanks so much...a wonderful track full of taste and invention. Lovely work.
invention!!!
Once I heard this I was picking up my Stellar les paul custom and jumped right into it, whatta jam!!!!🎸 Thanks so much for your skills.
missing the break
Amazing track. 👏🏿👏🏿
sowwwrrrr much furrrrnnnn
🖤🖤🎶🎶🤘🤘
Put they chorfs please
Not gonna lie, I was bored and started playing random notes with this, and it was actually really fun and sometimes kind of good
The simplest you can think of this track is as two scales shifting back and forth.
The notes not covered in one scale are covered by the other and vice versa
Therefore a lot of notes are right all the time, but every note is right eventually.
The specific scales I use are G major and then B minor, but I'm sure a diminished scale can be added too.