As much as I would love to see him recreate so many of Dokken's classics verbatim, I always appreciated he never felt beholden to the original, and never rested on his laurels. He was always willing to experiment, which sometimes meant making mistakes. His "In the Spirit Of" live solo in 2017 is a perfect example of George expanding his own boundaries. And also, he's getting older. He has earned the right to play with his tone too. 😄
@@mwbrada100%. A true musician, very improvisational, just making music in the moment. Always weird when people think he should have stopped evolving and growing as an artist. I LOVE Back for the Attack - one of the best guitar albums ever recorded, in my opinion - but it's not 1987 anymore. Players gotta play.
I appreciate that and I understand that throughout time all of us explore different approaches to our playing. However the point I'm trying to make is that when you listen to George in his Hay Day and listen to him today I am not convinced and this is my personal opinion that his playing has gone in the right direction in terms of the sonic construction evident in many videos throughout the years, nor his note choice which is at times bizarre and out of tune@@DavidClark-vu3dw
George Lynch needs to apologize to the Peavey corporation for defaming them with claims they use prison labor in Mississippi to build their products. Peavey was good enough to endorse you and equip you, talk about biting the hand that feeds you.
@jurgencuypers8350 well I'm an American writing in American English about an issue with one of my fellow Americans defaming an American company. Do you have anything pertinent to add to the conversation?
GL. = George Lynch, Guitar Legend , George Legend
Totally rocking
Love Mr Lynch
😍😍😍😍😍 Gerorge Lynch
Thought it was Roger Daltrey in the thumbnail.
George's tone and note choice has.....changed
I noticed that, too.
As much as I would love to see him recreate so many of Dokken's classics verbatim, I always appreciated he never felt beholden to the original, and never rested on his laurels. He was always willing to experiment, which sometimes meant making mistakes. His "In the Spirit Of" live solo in 2017 is a perfect example of George expanding his own boundaries. And also, he's getting older. He has earned the right to play with his tone too. 😄
@@mwbrada100%. A true musician, very improvisational, just making music in the moment. Always weird when people think he should have stopped evolving and growing as an artist. I LOVE Back for the Attack - one of the best guitar albums ever recorded, in my opinion - but it's not 1987 anymore. Players gotta play.
He's playing in someone's band using their amp.
I appreciate that and I understand that throughout time all of us explore different approaches to our playing. However the point I'm trying to make is that when you listen to George in his Hay Day and listen to him today I am not convinced and this is my personal opinion that his playing has gone in the right direction in terms of the sonic construction evident in many videos throughout the years, nor his note choice which is at times bizarre and out of tune@@DavidClark-vu3dw
George Lynch needs to apologize to the Peavey corporation for defaming them with claims they use prison labor in Mississippi to build their products. Peavey was good enough to endorse you and equip you, talk about biting the hand that feeds you.
I believe the Peavey is used by the Bass player from the band AON George used the Marshall.
@jurgencuypers8350 well I'm an American writing in American English about an issue with one of my fellow Americans defaming an American company. Do you have anything pertinent to add to the conversation?
@@detroitrockvideo8983 and? What does that have to do with my post?
@@austinknowlton1783 Blah Blah Blah
@@Pewtooyou wow what an intelligent well thought out statement. Must have taken you awhile to come up with it.