Somebody sent me an intriguing clip by Pat O'Brien, a player I'd never heard of. A brief search on YouTube came up with the following clip. This guy will surprise you. Lots of high note action, and LOTS of joyous energy, all of it in the rack while playing guitar. If you're not familiar with this guy, you should be:
Here's an article that begins to explain who he is:
http://www.priestsoflove.com/POB&POL-WeeklyRecorder.htm
Last Edited by on Nov 22, 2012 6:17 AM
A few years ago as I was discovering all the Internet Harmonica community,my guitar friend put me on to Scott Henderson's album with Pat......Dog House or something.....and Pats playing just blew me away! Since then I have seen him mentioned here a few times and must say am a little surprised at his lack of notoriety. His dual playing seems effortless....... ---------- One of Rubes's bands, DadsinSpace-MySpace Old Man Rubes at Reverbnation
this is the sweetest harmonica playing i've heard in years, sweet and seamless. bravo ---------- TedBurke http://youtube.com/watch?v=-VPUDjK-ibQ&feature=relmfu
Loved the Pat O'Brian rendition of Honeysuckle Rose. He is a great harp & guitar player - loved it.As Ted said 'sweet'. Sorry Rubes the Henderson one was to my ears just awful noise. ---------- HARPOLDIEāS YOUTUBE
I love Django, great version and skill on both instruments.
Rack harp is interesting when you get into the flow of playing it and guitar at the same time. It's almost like a hybrid instrument you are playing, not two instruments.
I sought out Pat O'Brien on the net and after listening to some things he's done with Priests of Love and Scott Henderson, it seems that he is another case in point in how to use speedy playing techniques usefully, musically in a blues and blues/rock context. He is wickedly fast, among the fastest I've heard, and he is precise without seeming merely technically adept. He is very fine at playing a song's head arrangements in unison with his own guitar playing and whatever harmony instrument the particular ensemble happens to have, and he is simply awesome at building solos. He has control of his tone in that he warbles, vibratos, chokes, slurs and bends without nearly a vocal fluidity, and he shares with other masters like Sugar Blue and Jason Ricci the skill at building a solo. Tension and release is the name of the game, something the truly great blues guitarists have done pat-- BB, Albert and Freddie King, Buddy Guy, Johnny Winter, Clapton. He eschews flashy lines for good parts of his improvisations and rather offers up superb note choices from lower, middle and upper registers (his glissando skills in the high notes is enough to make me put my harmonica down for a while and get schooled), long low moans, chilling chord tremelos, short, terse riffs, building to what seems to me an instinctive instance where a cathartic onslaught of fast, crazy , exhilarating lines finally achieving release. I have no doubt that O'Brien's demonstrated skill as a blues/rock guitarist informs his sense of how to build a blues harmonica solo. Many, many technically adept players rely and pat phrases and convenient power moves, too often, when they take their solos (I include myself in this category);this man strikes a player who has mastered his technique to the extent that like Butterfield and Blue it becomes something akin to a speaking. The phrases are spontaneous and individual, appropriate to the material. This is not a man who has only one solo he plays over and over. Pat O'Brien was unknown to me until now, and a big thanks to Adam for posting this. O'Brien combines technique and feeling and shows here and elsewhere a flawless sense of swing. Wild and wonderful harmonica work by someone who should be much, much better known than he already is. -------- Ted Burke http://youtube.com/watch?v=-VPUDjK-ibQ&feature=relmfu
http://ted-burke.com tburke4@san.rr.co,
Last Edited by on Nov 25, 2012 11:27 AM