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View Full Version : Adam Rogers killer playing on this...


jazzgtrl4
02-08-2012, 10:20 AM
Check out his right hand on this, there are some new videos from this show just posted as well

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Robertito
02-08-2012, 10:23 AM
Beautiful - thanks for posting!

jb70
02-08-2012, 10:59 AM
adam is a total badass

scottl
02-08-2012, 11:31 AM
Fantastic!

And what iron chops. Harmonic concepts and chops!

TNJ
02-08-2012, 11:50 AM
Damn...what's the use? :(

Happy for him, of course! He's a shining light.

:cool:

S.
j

clintb
02-08-2012, 12:03 PM
I checked out his right hand.

It looks like he holds his pick like I do where it is slightly angled up like this: /
as opposed to most players that seem to slightly angle it down like this: \

I find that I can pick faster and smoother with the pick angled upwards. So I use it for fast runs and tremolo picking.

But I noticed I get more power if I play with the pick angled downwards which seems to work better for playing metal. I just wish I could play smoother with it angled downwards.

clintb
02-08-2012, 12:24 PM
Fantastic!

And what iron chops. Harmonic concepts and chops!

I guess I don't "get" this kind of jazz. I can't tell if the band is actually playing a composition or just noodling. I can't tell if the guitar is playing something that goes with the bass part. So I have no idea if he has great harmonic concepts.

I actually like the way it sounds, I just don't understand it.

TNJ
02-08-2012, 03:07 PM
For speed, I sometimes put the plane of the pick more perpindicular to the string axis, rather than parallel. The pick seems to slip over the strings easier that way, hence giving you more speed. Try it sometime.

S.
j

gennation
02-08-2012, 03:29 PM
That dude is so good.

That's a sight variation of the Benson picking style. It's like a mix of MAB and Benson ;)

scottl
02-08-2012, 03:30 PM
How about this one? He outlines the changes beautifully.

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I guess I don't "get" this kind of jazz. I can't tell if the band is actually playing a composition or just noodling. I can't tell if the guitar is playing something that goes with the bass part. So I have no idea if he has great harmonic concepts.

I actually like the way it sounds, I just don't understand it.

Structo
02-08-2012, 03:57 PM
You know, I can handle about 10 seconds of millions of notes being played.
But if it is just for the sake of a million notes without any melody structure, then I get bored quickly.
Sorry not my cup of tea.

GtrWiz
02-08-2012, 05:30 PM
I love his fusion playing with a tele, but his jazz stuff doesn't do much for me.

bopplayer
02-08-2012, 05:41 PM
He is a much better player than me, but as a listener I just hear an endless stream of lines like Pat Martino. I much prefer lyrical guys like: Joe Pass, Herb Ellis, Ron Eshete, George Benson, Grant Green.

guitarjazz
02-08-2012, 08:12 PM
It's really weird to think of Sco and Metheny as the old guys but now they are. Adam is one of my favorite post-Sco and Pat modern players. They first thing by him that caught my ear was his incredible comping on Michael Brecker's Wide Angles CD.
He can play beautiful lyrical nylon string stuff,rock out, or play super-hip modern jazz.

jb70
02-08-2012, 08:21 PM
i'm really going to start working on my economy picking. i didn't realize just how much adam uses it

projam619
02-08-2012, 08:39 PM
Great clip! I've always been tempted to start from square one with Benson picking. But it feels so unorthodox that I can never adapt to it, so I go back to the traditional grip. But the tone one gets from the Benson grip, plus the feel of the pick slicing at the strings at that angle, seems better than the traditional grip. Anyone here change to Benson grip for their right hand?

Steve Snider
02-08-2012, 08:43 PM
That is so killer. Adam is amazing. Had the good fortune to see him in a Monterey CA with Lost Tribe and he has definitely evolved so much as a solo artist. Love his playing.

projam619
02-08-2012, 08:44 PM
You know, I can handle about 10 seconds of millions of notes being played.
But if it is just for the sake of a million notes without any melody structure, then I get bored quickly.
Sorry not my cup of tea.


I agree with you to an extent about melody in modern jazz. I love hearing the note choices and interesing chords of "modern" jazz guitarists, but overall their compositions don't grab me so much. Seems there's less "swing" and groove in much of their music. I'd rather hear Grant Green, Martino, instrumental Benson. But there's no denying the deep musicality and creativity behind Rodgers, Moreno, Kreisberg, etc

jb70
02-08-2012, 09:01 PM
but overall their compositions don't grab me so much. Seems there's less "swing" and groove in much of their music. I'd rather hear Grant Green, Martino, instrumental Benson. But there's no denying the deep musicality and creativity behind Rodgers, Moreno, Kreisberg, etc

i guess i'm the opposite. while green, martino, and benson are great players, i don't think much of their writing. to me it wasn't until guitar players like metheny, abercrombie, and ralph towner came along that the overall level of composition caught up to the level of the playing (even though there are some wes montgomery tunes that i really dig!)

clintb
02-09-2012, 01:09 AM
How about this one? He outlines the changes beautifully.

BaJKT9OtnwA

Thanks for trying, but I wasn't familiar with the song, so I had no idea if he outlines the changes beautifully.

So I listened to a bunch of versions of it on YouTube. I first listened to the Frank Sinatra version. OK, there's a melody, but it doesn't seem like a very strong one. After listening to it a bunch of times, I could still only remember the melody of the first line.

Then I listened to a bunch of instrumental versions. I couldn't really detect the melody at all! But with some versions, like a Joe Pass one I heard, and some piano versions, I could hear how they played over the chords because they actually played the chords.

So to fully appreciate this particular video, it seems like you really need to know the song really well.

dlguitar64
02-09-2012, 09:09 AM
Jazz is not always about instant gratification.Sometime it takes several listens before the form and harmony become clear and it is like one of those fractal 3d paintings from the 90s where finally see the spaceship pop out of the picture(Mr.Pitt from Seinfeld).Those moments are very exciting to me and i find that often music like this has more long term value then something that is obvious from the first listen.

jb70
02-09-2012, 10:45 AM
So to fully appreciate this particular video, it seems like you really need to know the song really well.

correct

pinner
02-09-2012, 10:49 AM
Amazing stuff!!! I love Adam. Thanks Scott!! It is different to those used to more of a traditional approach. You almost have to change the way you listen. Sit back and listen to the whole picture. I love it!!!

clintb
02-09-2012, 10:53 AM
Jazz is not always about instant gratification.Sometime it takes several listens before the form and harmony become clear and it is like one of those fractal 3d paintings from the 90s where finally see the spaceship pop out of the picture(Mr.Pitt from Seinfeld).


I was never able to see those images either! I guess I'm screwed! LOL!


Those moments are very exciting to me and i find that often music like this has more long term value then something that is obvious from the first listen.

I can sympathize with that point of view. I guess that's why I tend to like progressive rock more than a lot of pop music. Sometimes pop music is too simple and immediately accessible that I quickly grow bored of it.

harry65
02-09-2012, 02:29 PM
AWESOME!!!!!!!!!!!!
:bow:bow:bow

jazzgtrl4
02-11-2012, 10:18 AM
i'm really going to start working on my economy picking. i didn't realize just how much adam uses it

Yes this....ive made the switch to economy and have really focused on my techniqe. I dont use Benson picking... Adam makes it look so easyyyy. it just flows.

gawfshot
02-11-2012, 10:36 AM
If you read up on Adam or attend a clinic, he's MOST passionate about classical guitar... and he plays jazz at this level. I wish I could find the adjective!

Jim S
02-11-2012, 10:37 AM
I guess I don't "get" this kind of jazz. I can't tell if the band is actually playing a composition or just noodling. I can't tell if the guitar is playing something that goes with the bass part. So I have no idea if he has great harmonic concepts.

I actually like the way it sounds, I just don't understand it.
Ditto.


It's over my head.

projam619
02-11-2012, 10:57 AM
i guess i'm the opposite. while green, martino, and benson are great players, i don't think much of their writing. to me it wasn't until guitar players like metheny, abercrombie, and ralph towner came along that the overall level of composition caught up to the level of the playing (even though there are some wes montgomery tunes that i really dig!)

That's a good point. I guess its just personal taste. For some reason, I never could get into ECM jazz, Frisell's stuff (though his playing is obviously topnotch), even much of Metheny's catalog. Precisely the stuff that would wield strong influence upon the newer modern guys. In terms of composition, I don't have the ears for this stuff; perhaps an epiphany awaits in the future.

jb70
02-11-2012, 11:54 AM
That's a good point. I guess its just personal taste. For some reason, I never could get into ECM jazz

yeah, it just comes down to personal taste. some of my favorite music ever has been released on the ECM label and most of the modern jazz guitar players have been influenced by that music. that early metheny, frisell, abercrombie, towner, and bass desires (sco and frisell) music changed my life.