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Re: Bruner with Holdsworth (Dan Quayle Edition)

Posted: Mon Oct 24, 2011 7:03 am
by Clint Hopkins
old_K_ride wrote:surely most here don't know that Dan Quayle spelled potato with an E one time on camera during the 1st Bush White House .

let's get with the times here . this video is the Joe Biden Edition . No one...and I do mean no one...gaffes like our beloved VP Joe Biden
there are endless gaffes on video and audio to prove it .
Sorry but Biden didn't come to mind when I saw the 'e' at the end of potato. ;) :) I just think of it as a good-natured flub that Quayle will never live down.

Re: Bruner with Holdsworth (Dan Quayle Edition)

Posted: Thu Dec 15, 2011 11:01 am
by sjj123
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=67de6XrNKeI[/youtube]


Man...this is hot...he's a beast. I've been listening to (and trying to play) this tune for decades and I still dont know how to feel the groove...help?

Re: Bruner with Holdsworth (Dan Quayle Edition)

Posted: Thu Dec 15, 2011 11:34 am
by Steve Holmes
I enjoyed that. He's having a lot of fun making music, that's awesome.

Re: Bruner with Holdsworth (Dan Quayle Edition)

Posted: Thu Dec 15, 2011 11:41 am
by willyz
Holy moly that was intense! Jimmy's solo was incredable... looks like Allan and Bruner were having a bit of fun there...

Re: Bruner with Holdsworth (Dan Quayle Edition)

Posted: Thu Dec 15, 2011 11:51 am
by Isaac Lee
HOLY SHIT

Re: Bruner with Holdsworth (Dan Quayle Edition)

Posted: Thu Dec 15, 2011 12:49 pm
by Clint Hopkins
^^^^ That's what I like! I enjoyed Bruner, in that clip, way more than the one that started off this thread! Beautiful playing!

Re: Bruner with Holdsworth (Dan Quayle Edition)

Posted: Fri Dec 16, 2011 12:15 am
by Yussuf
This was way better! I'm starting to like the childlike enthusiasm he brings to the table. It's over-confident and brash, but in an innocent kind of way. :)

Re: Bruner with Holdsworth (Dan Quayle Edition)

Posted: Sun Dec 18, 2011 5:50 am
by Gary Husband
Here's the original recorded version of this tune - as a song (no less!) "Water On The Brain" (Part 1), and this is what it the piece was like before all the bass and then drum soloing on it. Also features a stellar guitar solo by Allan. Shame it was never released.

It was an outtake from the IOU album all those years ago back in 1980, and I uploaded from an old cassette rough mix copy I had...

Got to http://www.drummerworld.com/drummers/Gary_Husband.html and scroll down to "Gary Husband with Allan Holdsworth -
Studio Track, London, 1980."
Just press play.

It may be a bit easier to understand the thinking of the bars and where the bar lines are. Actually it's just all in four (with the first chord being the second 8th beat of the first bar) except for one 3/4 bar just before the last (more normally placed sounding) eight bars of the sequence. The chords are all funny and displaced, which gives it it's apparent complexity I guess.

Best wishes all and hope you like the bit of nostalgia,

GH

Re: Bruner with Holdsworth (Dan Quayle Edition)

Posted: Sun Dec 18, 2011 10:18 am
by Manu
sjj123 wrote:[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=67de6XrNKeI[/youtube]


Man...this is hot...he's a beast. I've been listening to (and trying to play) this tune for decades and I still dont know how to feel the groove...help?

I enjoyed that until the drum solo, Bruner has SO MUCH potential, but he needs to just relax and learn to play dynamics.

His technique is just bananas.

Re: Bruner with Holdsworth (Dan Quayle Edition)

Posted: Sun Dec 18, 2011 10:21 am
by Manu
Gary Husband wrote:Here's the original recorded version of this tune - as a song (no less!) "Water On The Brain" (Part 1), and this is what it the piece was like before all the bass and then drum soloing on it. Also features a stellar guitar solo by Allan. Shame it was never released.

It was an outtake from the IOU album all those years ago back in 1980, and I uploaded from an old cassette rough mix copy I had...

Got to http://www.drummerworld.com/drummers/Gary_Husband.html and scroll down to "Gary Husband with Allan Holdsworth -
Studio Track, London, 1980."
Just press play.

It may be a bit easier to understand the thinking of the bars and where the bar lines are. Actually it's just all in four (with the first chord being the second 8th beat of the first bar) except for one 3/4 bar just before the last (more normally placed sounding) eight bars of the sequence. The chords are all funny and displaced, which gives it it's apparent complexity I guess.

Best wishes all and hope you like the bit of nostalgia,

GH

Amazing as always. :)