|
|
#1 |
|
Ibreathe Music Advisor
Join Date: Mar 2002
Posts: 6,096
|
2 cool Hoey-licks
Hi guys,
just found two pretty cool Gary Hoey-licks in one of my folders. They´re both good exercises too. Both of them are from Gary´s arrangement of the old Focus-classic "Hocus Pocus". Nr. 1 is a nice dim-arpeggio which occurs towards the end of his solo. It requires some stretching... And this one is a neat picking-exercise... triads on two adjacent strings. The underlying chords are indicated too... ![]() Have fun with those, and if you have a chance to, listen to some of Gary´s music... it rocks. Eric |
|
|
|
|
|
#2 |
|
i Breathe ... Admin
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Austria & UK
Posts: 1,570
|
Cool Eric
re 1) very interesting and nicely shows the minor third structure of dim chords ..... aaaaa oh damn I only got 21 frets on my Strat re 2) very nice arpeggio run - great exercise to be practiced in different keys and on other 2 string combinations (hint hint) Guni
__________________
Please don't email or send me private messages with music related questions as they will be ignored. Rather use the forums for this and I will try my best to take part as much as I can. |
|
|
|
|
|
#3 |
|
Ibreathe Music Advisor
Join Date: Mar 2002
Posts: 6,096
|
Hey Guni...
well then I guess I gotta see whether I still have the licks I came up with when I still used that 29fret-Washburn j/kSeriously, it might work once you transpose it down at least 3 frets. The stretch will get harder, but it´ll work anyway. Of course one can´t play the original solo without that 23 fret, but hey, that should be enough of a reason to come up with some cool licks to replace this one For everyone who´s interested in Hoey´s music... the site is www.hoey.net , and you can check out his discography there... The debut is pretty cool, "Animal Instinct" ( feat. "Hocus Pocus" ) is an awesome instrumental record with lots of different styles, "Endless Summer II OST" shows Gary´s talent to play surf rock ( a la Dick Dale.. Dick guests on one song ), "Bug Alley" is pretty diverse all, "Money" has a bunch of cool grooves and great playing ( plus a killer-version of Pink Floyd´s "Money" ). I recommend all of them. If I´d have to narrow it down to one or two, I´d say get "Animal Instinct" and "Endless Summer II"... the latter will really put you onto a beach once you close your eyes. Oh, and the "Ho Ho Hoey" series is awesome too. On three CDs ( plus one "Best of Ho-Ho-Hoey" ), Gary plays all the popular christmas songs ( the classics a la "First Noel", "White Christmas" etc. ), each one in a different style, from Nu Rock to Rockabilly, Latin to Fusion... I love those CDs too, and every year in December, those CDs are on heavy rotation in my CD-player... So, go check it out ! Warm regards Eric |
|
|
|
|
|
#4 |
|
Resident Curmudgeon
|
It is difficult to execute those dim7 runs on a strat. you could resort to tapping. I think that everyone should recoginze the min7 patterns since they are subsets of the Minor Pentatonic.
I think Hoey has a great Musical Sense of humour. Fath tried and Hoey tried but No-one can better Jan Akkerman |
|
|
|
|
|
#5 |
|
Central Scrutinizer
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Ill
Posts: 493
|
I really like those.
The second ones a very cool idea to take across any two adjacent string sets in any given key. I did that with the Moore lick in your Lesson lesson and practiced the arp shapes up and down whatever scale and after couple weeks I noticed myself doing that kinna thing subconsciously when I was improvising. Where I guess is where the practicing ends and the real music begins.
__________________
"All other things being equal, the simplest solution is usually the correct one." William of Occam |
|
|
|
|
|
#6 |
|
Ibreathe Music Advisor
Join Date: Mar 2002
Posts: 6,096
|
Exxxactly
Glad you got something out of it. John Petrucci is another dude who uses those diatonic arps quite a bit... you can also hear them in the legendary "Sultans Of Swing"-Solo etc... Eric |
|
|
|
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|