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mudbone
DJ is always a fraction too 'late' where as Bill was right in the pocket. Keeping keith and mick on their toes..make no mistake
I think Bill said himself (in the Crossfire Hurricane movie) that he's actually a fraction early on the beat, which together with Charlie and Keith creates a bit of a ”wobble” which he thinks is part of the Stones magic.
Interestingly, in Satisfaction, he is actually a bit later than the main riff. Very cool to listen to.
indeed, it's one of my favorite parts.
In fact he's playing a completely different line wich is just as groovy as keith's. He start's with the low E and indeed delays a bit to keith's first two notes. I wouldn't call it a delay but just a different rythm.
The two lines combined is arguably the best piece of music ever. Bill's got 50 % dipps on that..just saying.
I can think of so much more riffs where Bill plays his OWN riff and mixed with keith's it becomes MAGIC
In fact...Bill's a Riffmaster too
DJ sounds 'dumbed down'because he is following keith in a way..Bill never did that..he Added and weaved and messed with the rythm. And in music..as Keith often states..that becomes 'to the power of'
You don't need brilliant shit from one player. Just cool shit from two and when it works it can't be beaten.
That's why he was a star...in the stones!
No, he played a millisecond later - all the time. That's the wobble!
yeah yeah...fraction later or earlier..like I said he messed with the rythm. But that's not even my point...although it is what creates the 'wobble'.
But also, he ADDED his own riffs, mixing them with keefs, to create a whole nother beast. like...two different riffs/patterns..often with different timing, even melody...that become one unique powerful thing. The second guitar player was always replaceble for the stones. BW really was not..
Bill and keith..in a way.. had the same tension mick and keith have.
Like...Fck you mr rock and roll...mr cool! I'm not too impressed so suck on this for a while. In music you need tension...well rock and roll anyway. just my honest opinion
He actually had different roles, depending on the guitar players he played with.
With Keith and Ronnie, he got more space to to exactly what you're talking about here. Listen to songs like When The Whip Comes Down from 1981. It's marvellous.
With a fixed lead/rhythm arrangement, like Taylor and Keith did, he had less space to be as adventurous. He was more loose when Brian was in the band.
It's all about the band's sound, and where he finds room to do his thing, at the same time as he can be able to lock the rhythm down with Charlie.
Quite fascinating, really. Bill is a great bass player.
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kleermaker
But he is often too low in the mix, especially on the studio work.
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James Kirk
Wyman quit the band two decades ago. They were nice enough to invite him onstage and to tour with the band in the same manner Mick Taylor did. I don't see what his issue is or why they were "mean" to him.
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kleermaker
But he is often too low in the mix, especially on the studio work.
I sorta agree. He often has a very bassy bass sound, whether it's caused by the mixing or his bass. It's a bit too boomy with no definition. It doesn't stick out a lot, but if you listen to it, it is often quite audible.
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kleermaker
But he is often too low in the mix, especially on the studio work.
I sorta agree. He often has a very bassy bass sound, whether it's caused by the mixing or his bass. It's a bit too boomy with no definition. It doesn't stick out a lot, but if you listen to it, it is often quite audible.
Hah. That's what I like about it. If you listen to any old Chess blues records you'll see exactly where Wyman is coming from. Typical rock bass is boring. As for being low in the mix, you'll notice that's true on all the old Stones records, except when Keith plays bass!
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kleermaker
But he is often too low in the mix, especially on the studio work.
I sorta agree. He often has a very bassy bass sound, whether it's caused by the mixing or his bass. It's a bit too boomy with no definition. It doesn't stick out a lot, but if you listen to it, it is often quite audible.
Another bass player who was often criminally low in the mix is John Paul Jones, thanks to Jimmy Page's mixing I suppose.
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kleermaker
But he is often too low in the mix, especially on the studio work.
I sorta agree. He often has a very bassy bass sound, whether it's caused by the mixing or his bass. It's a bit too boomy with no definition. It doesn't stick out a lot, but if you listen to it, it is often quite audible.
Hah. That's what I like about it. If you listen to any old Chess blues records you'll see exactly where Wyman is coming from. Typical rock bass is boring. As for being low in the mix, you'll notice that's true on all the old Stones records, except when Keith plays bass!
Hmm Keith doesn't play bass on Start Me Up does he?
That's actually another great example of Bill/Keith weaving.
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kleermaker
But he is often too low in the mix, especially on the studio work.
I sorta agree. He often has a very bassy bass sound, whether it's caused by the mixing or his bass. It's a bit too boomy with no definition. It doesn't stick out a lot, but if you listen to it, it is often quite audible.
Hah. That's what I like about it. If you listen to any old Chess blues records you'll see exactly where Wyman is coming from. Typical rock bass is boring. As for being low in the mix, you'll notice that's true on all the old Stones records, except when Keith plays bass!
Hmm Keith doesn't play bass on Start Me Up does he?
That's actually another great example of Bill/Keith weaving.
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kleermaker
But he is often too low in the mix, especially on the studio work.
I sorta agree. He often has a very bassy bass sound, whether it's caused by the mixing or his bass. It's a bit too boomy with no definition. It doesn't stick out a lot, but if you listen to it, it is often quite audible.
Hah. That's what I like about it. If you listen to any old Chess blues records you'll see exactly where Wyman is coming from. Typical rock bass is boring. As for being low in the mix, you'll notice that's true on all the old Stones records, except when Keith plays bass!
Hmm Keith doesn't play bass on Start Me Up does he?
That's actually another great example of Bill/Keith weaving.
There is no weaving on SMU. Only fixed rhythm/lead playing and a steady bass line.
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kleermaker
But he is often too low in the mix, especially on the studio work.
I sorta agree. He often has a very bassy bass sound, whether it's caused by the mixing or his bass. It's a bit too boomy with no definition. It doesn't stick out a lot, but if you listen to it, it is often quite audible.
Hah. That's what I like about it. If you listen to any old Chess blues records you'll see exactly where Wyman is coming from. Typical rock bass is boring. As for being low in the mix, you'll notice that's true on all the old Stones records, except when Keith plays bass!
Hmm Keith doesn't play bass on Start Me Up does he?
That's actually another great example of Bill/Keith weaving.
There is no weaving on SMU. Only fixed rhythm/lead playing and a steady bass line.
one man's weaving is another man's steady... or does weaving have a technical definition i'm not familiar with?
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kleermaker
But he is often too low in the mix, especially on the studio work.
I sorta agree. He often has a very bassy bass sound, whether it's caused by the mixing or his bass. It's a bit too boomy with no definition. It doesn't stick out a lot, but if you listen to it, it is often quite audible.
Hah. That's what I like about it. If you listen to any old Chess blues records you'll see exactly where Wyman is coming from. Typical rock bass is boring. As for being low in the mix, you'll notice that's true on all the old Stones records, except when Keith plays bass!
Hmm Keith doesn't play bass on Start Me Up does he?
That's actually another great example of Bill/Keith weaving.
There is no weaving on SMU. Only fixed rhythm/lead playing and a steady bass line.
one man's weaving is another man's steady... or does weaving have a technical definition i'm not familiar with?
You can´t just say that something is weaving. The musical definition is (simple explanation) that the instruments weave into eachother, and sort of finish eachother´s lines.
That doesn´t happen on SMU, although you hear active instrumentation going on at different times.
Beast Of Burden, Down In The Hole and Let Me Go (Still Life) are classic examples of weaving.
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sweet neo con
Remember the first tour with DJ...Mick would always introduce him as having played with Miles Davis & Madonna.
Hard to mention those two in the same breath with a straight face (for me) but I guess Mick respected Madonna on some level. I recall Sir Mick and Sir Elton discussing her in Being Mick.
He respects her both as his groupie and as a musician obviously.
Hmm probably as a performer...not necessarily on stage.
I think Mick likes her music as well..
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kleermaker
But he is often too low in the mix, especially on the studio work.
I sorta agree. He often has a very bassy bass sound, whether it's caused by the mixing or his bass. It's a bit too boomy with no definition. It doesn't stick out a lot, but if you listen to it, it is often quite audible.
Hah. That's what I like about it. If you listen to any old Chess blues records you'll see exactly where Wyman is coming from. Typical rock bass is boring. As for being low in the mix, you'll notice that's true on all the old Stones records, except when Keith plays bass!
Hmm Keith doesn't play bass on Start Me Up does he?
That's actually another great example of Bill/Keith weaving.
There is no weaving on SMU. Only fixed rhythm/lead playing and a steady bass line.
one man's weaving is another man's steady... or does weaving have a technical definition i'm not familiar with?
You can´t just say that something is weaving. The musical definition is (simple explanation) that the instruments weave into eachother, and sort of finish eachother´s lines.
That doesn´t happen on SMU, although you hear active instrumentation going on at different times.
Beast Of Burden, Down In The Hole and Let Me Go (Still Life) are classic examples of weaving.
amazing. i'd always thought it meant a seamless interchange between the playing of rhythm and lead parts, where one instrument will play rhythm and then switch to something melodic, while another does the reverse, etc. someone should probably explain the meaning of weaving to keith, it sounds like he has been using the term the wrong way according to you.
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kleermaker
But he is often too low in the mix, especially on the studio work.
I sorta agree. He often has a very bassy bass sound, whether it's caused by the mixing or his bass. It's a bit too boomy with no definition. It doesn't stick out a lot, but if you listen to it, it is often quite audible.
Hah. That's what I like about it. If you listen to any old Chess blues records you'll see exactly where Wyman is coming from. Typical rock bass is boring. As for being low in the mix, you'll notice that's true on all the old Stones records, except when Keith plays bass!
Hmm Keith doesn't play bass on Start Me Up does he?
That's actually another great example of Bill/Keith weaving.
There is no weaving on SMU. Only fixed rhythm/lead playing and a steady bass line.
one man's weaving is another man's steady... or does weaving have a technical definition i'm not familiar with?
You can´t just say that something is weaving. The musical definition is (simple explanation) that the instruments weave into eachother, and sort of finish eachother´s lines.
That doesn´t happen on SMU, although you hear active instrumentation going on at different times.
Beast Of Burden, Down In The Hole and Let Me Go (Still Life) are classic examples of weaving.
amazing. i'd always thought it meant a seamless interchange between the playing of rhythm and lead parts, where one instrument will play rhythm and then switch to something melodic, while another does the reverse, etc. someone should probably explain the meaning of weaving to keith, it sounds like he has been using the term the wrong way according to you.
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DandelionPowderman
What NL said. Some of the most interesting weaving is rhythm playing, imo. Rhythm licks traded back and forth.
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DandelionPowderman
What NL said. Some of the most interesting weaving is rhythm playing, imo. Rhythm licks traded back and forth.
i think it's become clear there is no technical definition of weaving. it's a term keith made up to describe his philosophy of how two guitars interact. mudbone and then i used it to describe bill and there was consternation at that but at the end of the day, when we talk about weaving, we are not talking about a specific term like pentatonic scales or arpeggios or harmonies where there are specific meanings. nor is it something like which tours brian was sick on or how many times can't be seen was played where there are established facts.
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Turner68
Here's the question I'm surprised isn't discussed more: should they have stopped when Bill quit?
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DandelionPowderman
What NL said. Some of the most interesting weaving is rhythm playing, imo. Rhythm licks traded back and forth.
i think it's become clear there is no technical definition of weaving. it's a term keith made up to describe his philosophy of how two guitars interact. mudbone and then i used it to describe bill and there was consternation at that but at the end of the day, when we talk about weaving, we are not talking about a specific term like pentatonic scales or arpeggios or harmonies where there are specific meanings. nor is it something like which tours brian was sick on or how many times can't be seen was played where there are established facts.
Totally agree. Weaving is a very vague idea, it's not a musical concept like f.i. counterpoint, harmony and the other things Turner mentioned. In fact it's quite meaningless. Well, making believe it is really something real is quite an achievement of Keith. One of his strong points for sure. I recall his remark: "making two guitars sound as one" and my comment on it: well, then you also can play just one guitar. Less complicated, same result.
Btw: I don't buy the theory that Bill couldn't play melodic lines when Taylor played lead (licks). On the contrary, he did many times actually.
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DandelionPowderman
What NL said. Some of the most interesting weaving is rhythm playing, imo. Rhythm licks traded back and forth.
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DandelionPowderman
What NL said. Some of the most interesting weaving is rhythm playing, imo. Rhythm licks traded back and forth.
You mentioned a couple of ER tracks........IMO, 78'-80' period, SG and ER, epitomise weaving. SSC in another great example.