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February 20, 2024
Joe Bonamassa: Modern Blues Guitar Legend as a Sideman?
Please forgive me. Yes, I know this was Oz Noy’s gig, a great guitarist by any standard, who was accompanied by the great musicians of “Late Show” fame Will Lee on bass, and Steve Ferrone on drums. Noy’s solos were great and he incorporated more jazz-blues licks into his playing on stage. Lee on bass and Ferrone on drums provided, as one would expect, the rock-solid foundation. They both are “Top of the Top” echelon musicians. But I’d simply be lying if I told you I came here to see anyone but Joe–as in “Mr. Bonamassa.” It was strange indeed to see Joe up there on stage dressed down in his “Blue Note hoodie” not looking like the guy from “The Matrix” dressed in a suit and shades, trading solos with Noy as a sideman. I suppose this was a fun change for him.Does Joe Bonamassa Play with Feel?
Perhaps what intrigued me so much more to cover this story is that I learned Mr. Joe Bonamassa is a polarizing figure in the guitar world. Being a blues rock guitarist myself for over five decades, I had to find out the truth. All roads lead back to this burning question: “Can Joe Bonamassa play with feel?” What I do know is that he has been (perhaps unfairly) criticized for playing the blues “without feel.” Playing too many notes? Not playing enough notes? Playing the wrong choice of notes? You get it. Going to cover this show was as much about my curiosity of why this modern blues master has received so much hate and to see if I could gain a better understanding of it. Or maybe to completely dispel the myth. After watching Joe play everything from live ripping improvised solos on “Crossroads” to ultra-sensitive yet highly dynamic phasing on “Little Wing,” I am now totally convinced. Nothing could be further from the truth! Joe Bonamassa can play with great feel, AND he is a superb technically gifted player as well! All you need to do is watch this video of "Little Wing", it has to be one of Joe's "feel-wise" greatest guitar solos.A LIVE Case Study: “Crossroads” vs. “Little Wing”
With his classic burgundy-red Gibson SG, Joe absolutely ripped a “new one” into the fabric of the space time continuum during his solo on “Crossroads,” replete with all of those classic high sustaining double bends and rapid-fire pull-offs reminiscent of Clapton off the Cream “Disraeli Gears” album. Toward the end of that solo, when he “lit up” the high end of the neck with crazy searing double bends blended in with that adjacent “shaking string noise,” it was pure fire-breathing. He had “Uncle Willie” on bass smiling!
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