Thanks for posting this video. Paul was a great guy and was extremely intelligent. His remarkable talent has been much too often overlooked. He was also a very good at modifying and setting up guitars to make them sound as good as they could. Chet depended on him heavily not only as a side man but to keep his guitars in shape.
In the title it states the year as 1986. But at the very end of the video the date 1994 is displayed. However old Paul was at the time this instructional video was made Paul sure could play !!!
The first section of this video is interesting for the exposure it gives to the Kentucky players from the mid-C20. What bothers me is that it makes no acknowledgment of the African-American guitar greats such as Mississippi John Hurt, the near-miraculous playing of Blind Arthur Blake, whose range of abilities makes other players look like simpletons. And then he was a songwriter, too!
Many thanks! Iconic performances by master Yandell!
Super!
Paul was the greatest!
What a great guitar player.
Wow thanks for this what a great picker at last some of those guitar licks shown
Thanks for posting this video.
Paul was a great guy and was extremely intelligent. His remarkable talent has been much too often overlooked.
He was also a very good at modifying and setting up guitars to make them sound as good as they could. Chet depended on him heavily not only as a side man but to keep his guitars in shape.
How great a guitarist was this wonderful man? No wonder he played alongside Chet for years.
Thanks for posting!
★★★★★
Muy bueno el video 👍
In the title it states the year as 1986. But at the very end of the video the date 1994 is displayed. However old Paul was at the time this instructional video was made Paul sure could play !!!
Great video! Thank you
The video starts out saying Kennedy Jones died in 1990. You sure this video is from 1986?
Is it possible to get the notation for this video?
Nowadays you only need to know 4 chords to be a "superstar": so what does that make Paul!
The first section of this video is interesting for the exposure it gives to the Kentucky players from the mid-C20. What bothers me is that it makes no acknowledgment of the African-American guitar greats such as Mississippi John Hurt, the near-miraculous playing of Blind Arthur Blake, whose range of abilities makes other players look like simpletons. And then he was a songwriter, too!
Wow! Quite a player! Enjoyed immensely. Saw a few pointers I may try...