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British Guitarist reacts to Hank playing Apache.

PostPosted: Sat Nov 23, 2019 11:02 am
by drakula63

Re: British Guitarist reacts to Hank playing Apache.

PostPosted: Sat Nov 23, 2019 12:12 pm
by Tigerdaisy
This is being mimed.

Re: British Guitarist reacts to Hank playing Apache.

PostPosted: Sat Nov 23, 2019 12:48 pm
by Iain Purdon
Tigerdaisy wrote:This is being mimed.

Is it?

Re: British Guitarist reacts to Hank playing Apache.

PostPosted: Sat Nov 23, 2019 5:50 pm
by John Brown
Wasn't this from the Countdown Concert with Cliff at the NIA. I remember Hank doing this and also Ghost Riders in the Sky, the setting looks very similar. I was there and he certainly did not mime, it was also 1999 - Countdown to the end of the Millennium!

Re: British Guitarist reacts to Hank playing Apache.

PostPosted: Sat Nov 23, 2019 5:58 pm
by Uncle Fiesta
I think he liked it!


PS - not mimed, surely.

Re: British Guitarist reacts to Hank playing Apache.

PostPosted: Sat Nov 23, 2019 6:14 pm
by dave robinson
He isn't miming and I think it was the Milennium concert as suggested. I noticed the late Pete May on drums at one point. :)

Re: British Guitarist reacts to Hank playing Apache.

PostPosted: Sun Nov 24, 2019 11:39 am
by Tigerdaisy
No, you're all right it isn't mimed... I could only tell by the 'big night out' ending... which I hate. The performance is very faithful to the original recording playing and sound wise- the middle section where he plays the A minor chord with a aggressive waggle of the tremelo was missed out of this video and I can usually tell by that bit if it's the original.

Re: British Guitarist reacts to Hank playing Apache.

PostPosted: Mon Nov 25, 2019 1:45 am
by abstamaria
I believe the host is right. The melody has to be good of course, but it is the simplicity of the melody and the way it is played - just enough notes, as the host explains many times - that made Apache appeal to so many. And encouraged a generation to pick up guitars. Why, I could play that, I thought.

That is true, too, I believe for the Ventures in the very early days. Their equivalent was Walk Don’t Run.

Andy