Finding Joe brought back hope that music isn't dead. I'm 70 and for awhile it seemed there just wasn't good music left. I was able to see him years ago. I love hearing such talent. Him and Beth Hart were great together. Thankful for his parents that were behind Joe when he was small. YOU ROCK JOE ❤ LOVE AND APPRECIATE YOU.
@diyautoschool
8 ай бұрын
Your comment is funny -- LOL!
@dr.buzzvonjellar8862
11 ай бұрын
Joe is a treasure. I’m not sure any artist has worked harder or has been more true to his craft.
@BluesRockAcademy
11 ай бұрын
Such a weak songwriter and predictable guitar player…
@paulschipper9428
11 ай бұрын
JB seems like a genuinely nice and humble person, which is why I always enjoy his interviews. Thank you for posting this one.
@willudallmusic
9 ай бұрын
I'm not saying this to troll, but this is the least humble I've seen him 😆 there were a few little jabs in there, anyway, still great interview, and his philosophies are in line with mine 🙏🏻
@These_go_to_eleven_1959
11 ай бұрын
I do not know how much more down to earth JB can get until his haters finally realize the guy is not all ego'ed out. What just because he owns a great collection of vintage guitars that makes him someone that should be criticized in social media? Every single time i have heard JB talk about his situation in life he always says how grateful and lucky he is!
@Tony_Leonardi.
11 ай бұрын
Joe is always very genuine Mom and Dad did a great Job.
@fuzzboxes
11 ай бұрын
sure is nice to grow up in a household where you can blow the modern day equivalent of $10000 on a Stratocaster at age 13
@BryanClark-gk6ie
10 ай бұрын
@@fuzzboxes Wonder how many people if had that opportunity would be as good as joe or alot better? When you're rich and don't have any responsibilities and have all the time in the world as a kid to sit around and play using the best equipment' parents pay for guitar lessons' which he won't admit to. Taking all that in consideration' a person will get good at it. Yes it takes dedication but I've seen several blue collar workers that work every day and didn't have the opportunities joe had' who plays in small home town bars on the weekends that are alot better than joe then back to work on Monday mornings. Those musicians never get a break. Money puts people in the spot light and everything else falls in place.
@tallpaul1020
11 ай бұрын
I love Joe, he's so down to earth and his love for the blues is endless. So humble calling himself a steward of his collection shows it. Can't wait to see him again in February. Go Joe keep up the great work 🎸
@vikiryan822
11 ай бұрын
A preserver of music history. No one will care for it better 🤩🎸🎵
@garcdonald
11 ай бұрын
It is so cool to sea Joe with those incredible instruments and hear him taking them to their limits. You can see and hear and feel his love for them every time he picks one up. Such an inspiration.
@jltrem
11 ай бұрын
This video gives a whole new meaning to "Smokin' Joe".
@jacobvitthuhn1746
11 ай бұрын
Love this guy! 1 thing I love, as a player myself, is when you see him live. You get to hear a pile of holy grail amps dialed right into their sweetspot. Just killer live tone. Thank you Joe! Keep up the good work.
@Humbucker1103
11 ай бұрын
I have never heard Joe play poorly or sound at a loss. Incredible in the moment. One of the finest players I've ever heard. And he is without a doubt authentic and respected.
@davidg-oo1ox
11 ай бұрын
Good for Joe he has a amazing knowledge of all things guitar
@richardwalker8291
11 ай бұрын
Joe is so spot on with many,many points!!! From loving the guitar you buy to doing your own spin on things you learn. I'm 70 years old and have played guitar since I was 11yrs old, I remember playing s guitar in a store when a young boy came up to me saying "Mr your a great player, what could you tell me to help me be better too?" I thought for a minute and said "Take the time to enjoy your playing at the moment, you'll never be a beginner or intermediate, or advanced player again once you've moved up, so just take the time to enjoy playing wherever your at." Joe says basically the same thing too. What a great role model he is, I wish I'd had someone like him when I was young. Rock on Joe, Gods speed!!!
@f.duranleau4416
11 ай бұрын
What I appreciate about Joe is that he's cool and honest...He tells it like it is.
@BossNotes
11 ай бұрын
Seen him at “ Gillys “ & bought the disc on this tour , met him at a local guitar store “ Hauer Music “Dayton Ohio & SO glad I did ! He put on a show with a solid 3 pc band that blew you AWAY !
@chazjr2390
11 ай бұрын
This was a great interview! Great questions! I totally appreciate everything Joe does.
@denmar355
11 ай бұрын
I love how honest and genuine Joe is. He’s the working man’s guitar player. He always says how knows how fortunate he is be in the position he is in. He doesn’t say things to be impressive or liked in social media.
@jltrem
11 ай бұрын
Exactly, that's what I like about him. His down to Earthness. Anyone in his position could easily be a swellheaded egomaniac. He's anything but.
@knockhardproductions7157
11 ай бұрын
He's the Working Man's guitar player with 550 vintage guitars and smoking the cigar on camera during an interview don't be a fool you probably fell for John McCain's Joe the plumber thing also
@bluzzjazz
11 ай бұрын
For someone who has the harem in Nerdville, I find Joe to be incredibly humble, gracious In complementing others, and passionate about his craft. The man has busted his ass to accomplish what he has achieved. Another thing, Joe is an incredibly clean “live” guitarist. You rarely hear him hit an off note.
@jobaci
11 ай бұрын
Hard to find a star as humble , real, endless talent and just a regular guy.
@timwilliams5159
11 ай бұрын
Run across your music for the first time in 2022 after cancer surgery. Could not do anything but rest but Im now a big fan. Your music lifted me up brought a smile in my heart and I could not get up and jam but what I could Move was moving. I'm well now doing great enjoying your music everyday. And I'm moving and jaming . what a fantastic gift you been bless with. Just 69 yrs blues loving man ! !
@rustymacneil3227
11 ай бұрын
Love ya Joe!!! Not just a collector, historian, uses them as they were meant to be used!!
@johndlugosz201
11 ай бұрын
Thank you Joe! If anyone deserves all of the historical treasures in guitars it should be you for all of your hard work and love for music…
@largeeng
11 ай бұрын
I had a strange thought at the end of that, I would love to see Joe roll on stage at a small club or juke joint with that big cigar blowing smoke, wearing an old grubby sweatshirt, bottle of jack on the floor, let a few profanities fly before rocking out lol, I don't think it will happen but if it does I hope it gets posted on here haha
@winndell
11 ай бұрын
I love joe and he has really inspired my guitar playing, I think I could have done a better job interviewing him....! Side note: I won a Slash Les Paul from Joe's guitar give away years ago. Very generous guy...
@sammyflinn5706
11 ай бұрын
I think joe is an outstanding decent genuine person who works hard as given his whole life to music. I think listening to joe is educational and a inspiration. I have seen him live and man what a performance. I don't like people with negative thoughts and remarks if you have nothing nice to say then don't say it .people like these should do there homework first and they would realise how wrong they are .thankyou for all your music joe and what you have done in the guitar community and most of all thankyou for your kindness towards others in all you do .keeping the blues alive
@sanoj1969
11 ай бұрын
Agree totally ❤ saw him here in Sweden this spring. Fantastic artist, guitarist, singer and great job to pass the blues further up the road ❤👍
@christine_goettske
11 ай бұрын
Nice to hear Joe share his great knowledge and passion and how it is important to be true to yourself. I am a relatively new fan and I am very happy to have discovered this man, his huge talent and dedication which I admire very much💯🔥❤💕
@mikevincent7836
11 ай бұрын
I like Joe he's one of my favorite's good player , good guy , great advice and he's real !!
@TREVORJB101
11 ай бұрын
Man, I would be happy with just 1 Strat from the early-mid 60's... let alone over 500 vintage guitars..what a blessing.
@patgilliam6138
11 ай бұрын
Now knowing that Joe likes cigars makes me an even bigger fan.
@carlosdeno
11 ай бұрын
Saw Joe at Nottingham Rock City UK a very very long time ago, when very few people knew who he was. One of his plectrums is in my collection from that night, just any ordinary pick, not personalized. Great interview Joe is a amazing musician and a lovely man. 🤘
@TigerPalmer
11 ай бұрын
Joe should make an album that’s recorded with only his Epiphone signature models and the vinyl edition included whenever a customer buys one of his Epiphones.
@christianmani1730
11 ай бұрын
That is an amazing idea. Along with behind the scenes video of him recording with his Epis. Epiphone sales would go nuts.
@Skkyyyyyyyyyyy
3 ай бұрын
I hate to break it to you… The Epiphone album would sound exactly like his current albums. It’s not the gear, it’s the player. Joe could make a Hello Kitty guitar sound incredible.
@jamesbrassfield7498
6 ай бұрын
Joe is a great player. One of the best around. He's also a hell of a collector. I greatly enjoy your music Joe and good look with your collection. From one collector to another a toast my friend.
@forddriver8827
11 ай бұрын
You deserve everything your hardwork has provided.
@litemetal
11 ай бұрын
“I blew up the low powered one “ (!!) 🎉🎉 gotta love that.
@aldito7586
10 ай бұрын
-You know what I like about this dude? - Everything!
@LynzeGenX
9 ай бұрын
I am a kid from the 70s and Joe was a treasure to find. I had become cynical about music and longed for the music that is imprinted on me very young. I just happened to click on "Redemption" as it scrolled across top of my YT because I listen to the music I love from the past so Joe's music kicked the algorithm I'm sure for my taste in music. My heart leaped and I was excited and have felt so fortunate to find someone that hit home just like "Frampton Comes Alive" did. I'm so thankful for Joe's vaste catalog I love it so much and it's so vast! I've seen him twice and I will see him in February. My only gripe is I only discovered him a few years ago and I would have followed his whole career if I had. ❤
@ebeep
11 ай бұрын
Great interviewer. Kind, considerate, professional, and let the interviewee answer questions uninterrupted.
@what1864
11 ай бұрын
this is a great no bullshitt interview , one of the best i've seen , think some of the folks below are pissed they waisted there money on classic gear thinking it would make em better musicans and that just is not the case ...
@nickpatsios407
11 ай бұрын
I first saw Joe open for a blues band in ybor city Florida for $8 a ticket and he was playing a Eric Clapton signature Strat He worked hard to get where he is at today and earned every bit of it
@user-km3xu7gn4k
10 ай бұрын
Such talent so grateful for his talent.
@janniechamness1076
11 ай бұрын
Thank you JOE FOR PUTTING TRUE INTO GUITAR PLAYING. YOU ARE INSPIRING AND TRUE TO THE BONE!! YOU ARE THE GREATEST !! ❤❤❤❤
@Johngonefishin
11 ай бұрын
Joes "Skinner Burst" is 9-1951...in the 80's I owned 9-1952, great guitar but ended up selling it to Norm, who always paid the most for good stuff.
@Kathy.Thorne
11 ай бұрын
Joe always hits the nail on the head, just be yourself and have fun, be the first, be the best or be different x
@tommyhamilton2107
7 ай бұрын
Nice to hear the have fun comment, nice one Joe🏴🎸🤟🏻
@ConcertGrande
Ай бұрын
I love the musician Bonamassa and seeing him smoke a “puro” is classy! I could offer him a Cuban "Robaina" cigar...he would be happy. In France we are waiting for a concert and I will travel wherever he is to offer him one!
@FransvandenBergeMuziekschuur
11 ай бұрын
I love Joe's storytelling. I am hoping on a Christmas geek edition.
@edpetrikk2027
11 ай бұрын
I first heard Joe when he played in Bloodline …and I was super impressed ..still am
@flyonwall360
11 ай бұрын
Same here. I saw them play at Fireworks Over Central NY at Vernon Downs. They opened up for 38 Special and Cheep Trick. It was a great show.
@user-is8oq9ss3e
10 ай бұрын
Hello Joe, I have seen you 1 time and you blew me away with your perfection of the Blues and you're #1
@AvACyberSecurity
11 ай бұрын
I love this guy! Just humble while being honest about success. Not many do that and the ones that do, you can usually spit the bull!@#$
@Bluedragon003
10 ай бұрын
Hey Joe and Joe's team, you guys should really really think about maybe Joe and Mike (Hickey, apologies for any sp errors) sitting down together to co-author a book... "The Guitar nerds complete guide to vintage gear", just a book talking about some of the differences (without giving away those "trade" secrets😉) between REAL vintage gear, guitars, amps, pedals etc.. and newer gear. Not to bash on anything but merely for all us nerds out there. I would bet it would sell pretty darn good, heck I'd even pay a little extra for a copy signed by Joe and Mike! Just a thought. Thanks for everything you and your team DO do for the blues!
@Johnsormani
11 ай бұрын
Regarding the amp modeler issue: it’s a great solution for recording demos, or playing with headphones at night. Sure it’s nice to plug into an amp on 11 but you can’t always do that. Before the Kemper I never could get a satisfying practice amp sound for a low volume setting. Now I just profile my favorite amps at full volume and be happy. Using an amp modeler live is something else though , especially is you are looking to get the pressure of a Marshall stack at full volume
@123uzuz
11 ай бұрын
Joe smoking a fat stogie! I love this guy 😊
@bks252
11 ай бұрын
Just have fun. My favorite thing he said in the whole video. We get so wrapped around the axel about all the bs and forget about the thing that got us all started, having fun!
@michaelciriaco-pd1rg
11 ай бұрын
im not joe's biggest fan but i certainly enjoy his music, knowledge, gear geekness like me but the best thing is this dude is just damn cool - stay awesome joe
@jedishaw6771
11 ай бұрын
Love the cigar! He's an amazing musician! Best gig I've ever been too! Leeds In the UK back in May the whole band where totally amazing!! Can't quite believe I saw Reese wynans as well!
@mariek6993
11 ай бұрын
joe's awesome... wished he'd get more commercial success. yeah i get why commercial radio won't play him... they should. he's the real deal and he gives a legitimacy to music that the industry always needs....
@bobbiejeanbarnett675
11 ай бұрын
that was a cool, laid back interview. great job, thanks for the share👍🍷
@Allen-tm9xn
11 ай бұрын
The only thing I see in vintage guitars and amps it's keeping them so the younger generation can see what musicians that brought forth the music played on and used, it is actually getting ridiculous some of the prices for these instruments has got way out of hand I'm 72 and I played on most of the instruments like Joe has, to me they're just a guitar if you can't play it then it's still just a guitar I love Joe and he's a great musician but the world of guitars has went insane !
@youreatoilet
11 ай бұрын
This guy gets too much unwarranted hate, and I'm not even a fan of his music! Seems like a great dude
@bobbys4327
11 ай бұрын
The better one plays and becomes more famous, and owns a bunch of stuff, the more the haters show up. One word, jealousy.
@fukhue8226
11 ай бұрын
I have 1 $550 Telecaster! Bought in 1998 and still playing it today.
@fuzzybutkus8970
7 ай бұрын
Love Joe even more after his “Nerdvile” You can tell he is guitar 100% all the time. He’s almost savant like.
@althewhite9756
11 ай бұрын
My favorite artist, in any genre! Just down to earth, genuine, I'd love to have a Cognac with him and talk about music and guitars.
@flyonwall360
11 ай бұрын
I remember walking into Big Apple Music, and they were talking about "Lenny's kid" and how Carmin really couldn't show him anything else. I think Joe 10 or 11. I knew so many good guitar players in the Utica area. I'm glad to see that Joe was able to succeed without having to play weddings. Joe would have loved 4 Acres. So many good guitarists try to do great cover songs. Joe Cocker knew how to play cover tunes. Joe has learned that the only way to cover a cover tunes is to play your way.
@litemetal
11 ай бұрын
Thank you Joe ! I’m having fun (!!) and putting my own spin on it. A guy I have played with doesn’t understand making a cover a bit of your own, but you can only do you , and I can only do me . Very simple ,very common sense. 😅
@sharkman4928
10 ай бұрын
Great interview!!!!! I LOVE Joe....he is a real down to Earth guy!
@geraldponce8336
11 ай бұрын
I'm the kind of guy who could build a fugazi. But I won't. Because there is 75 years of evolution to a telecaster that I like. I.e. compound radius', locking tuners, modern block saddle brass bridges, etc etc. Am realizing fairly quickly that I could build a vintage quality guitar that sounds pretty close to the original. Minus the aging. Which is gonna happen anyways 20-30 years from now. Are they worth anything? No. Would I sell em? No. (I might give one away to a friend) Am I happy? Yes. Think I sort of understand JB. Grew up to a used guitar store family, loves vintage guitars, and is passionate about playing em and talented enough to make a living at it. Good for him. Same time his is just a regular guy. We are all what we put our energy into. I'm just getting back into music after a half of lifetime skateboarding, marriage, divorce, kids, semi pro baseball for 20 years, feeding myself being a jack of all trades. Unfortunately, I have rythmic dyslexia so it is highly unlikely I'll be able to play professionally, but I am learning in just a few years that I can sure can build a hell of a guitar and enjoy playing em for personal enjoyment . Eventually, we are all going to die all his guitars will go back into circulation and even mine will end up in someone's hands 😂. Everyone will be who made this parts caster scratching their head. Hell someone might steal my guitars and I'll just build even better ones. Till I get arthritis in the hands and can't do it anymore. That just isn't me. Would rather build a nice mix of modern and vintage and try to advance it in some way.
@user-km3xu7gn4k
10 ай бұрын
Joe worked for every accolade and award he gets. Hes a real talent!!@
@BasilHayden
11 ай бұрын
Joe giving honest answers on tube-less amps, and he's right a real amp needs less tweaks :) Also, playing guitar shoud be fun.
@riittahatinen4579
11 ай бұрын
Great interview JOE❤ You are the best ever my Love🥰 Take care and be well my Master😍👍😘
@gerardmahalak3334
11 ай бұрын
Blues and cigars go together well.
@MikeJBlues
11 ай бұрын
Congratulations on your survival and a 2nd cut ! Love the first one !
@jwright8838
11 ай бұрын
I like the comment on modelers. However, remember that mics, preamps, EQs, compressors have to be tweaked as well. :)
@RockJawRicky
11 ай бұрын
Awesome guy. I have a friend who insists on learning note for note. We get into a big discussion every time and I tell him he's not ABC or XYZ nor am I. Joe is right on. Improvise but keep the flavor.
@stratjed
11 ай бұрын
Odd, watching little Joe Bonamassa the guitar wonder kid from down the road, act like an old man. Surreal, but not surprising if you come from upstate NY. You grow up fast here. You're still a kid Joe.
@SDPickups
10 ай бұрын
There is a really good reason to not let your vintage PAF equipped guitars sit around for months or years. This is something nobody really knows about and is not public knowledge. Vintage PAF's "go to sleep," if they are not played fairly often. I've heard some guys say they bought a vintage PAF set and hated them, played them for fifteen minutes and got rid of them quick. Big mistake. In my business I restore vintage PAF's and do authentications for those who aren't sure if theirs are the real deal or not. I don't charge for this service. It can be tricky sometimes to know if they're real deal. Seymour Duncan made an attempt to duplicate the old PAF's around 1978 or so. He used real butyrate bobbins and had those made for his business, the magnet wire was good plain enamel which was still decent wire in '78. He bought the baseplates directly from Gibson, so they have the "L" tool marks. The alnico magnet was sand cast as well. He also had silk screen PAF decals made with the right inks. But on very close examination, if you know your stuff, the decals look to "iffy," and even though they can give the green UV color with an ultraviolet flashlight, they had too much clear decal around the black ink rectangle. The bobbins look real, more real than ANY of the stuff for sale now. It looks real until you look at the BOTTOM of the bobbins, where it al falls apart, because there are four "dots" in the plastic that are injection mold feeder connections. The slug tops are also very strange looking with no clear circular lathe cutting marks. Some of the pole screws were "thread cutters" where the ends taper down to the bottom. So, authenticating PAF's, I had them in my shop from every year they were made. About half of them were completely dead coils, or one dead coil, so I had to rewind those with my auto travers to copy the exact wiring pattern on all vintage PAF's except for a rare few real early '57's. So, digressing here.....so some of these owners pulled them out of parts drawers, played them once and declared they were "BAD PAF's." Which is just not true. When you first play old neglected PAF's, they will sound dark and a bit lifeless. If you play them for two MONTHS, they will bloom open like angel wings, and sound fantastic. The reason why, is there such a thing as "burn-in" that HIFI audio guys know about, but guitar players don't. I've personally experienced "asleep PAF's" with several PAF vintage sets. Guys would send them to me saying there's something wrong, they don't sound good, can you fix them? So I put them in my guitar, play them every day and they "wake up," after at least a month, and sound great. This "voodoo" thing with "burn-in" also happens to every new PAF replica I make, and I warn my customers to play them for at least 6 weeks until they stabilize. They ALL sound dark until played-IN. If I make a replica using vintage magnet wire, then it takes two FULL MONTHS for them to totally open up. There's another side of this, in that if you change one of your pots, or one of your capacitors, you won't hear the actual changes happen until about 3 days. Change anything in your harness and you have to play for 3 days to hear that change, what it actually DOES, and you have to play before this happens. The way I even discovered this weirdness, is during the earlier part of my 20 years reverse-engineering old PAF's, I made a LOT of prototype buckers to test my theories and materials. One year, I made a set, played it, and it sounded muffled and just BAD. I threw my guitar in the closet and said I'm done with this crap, something doesn't work and don't know what it is. Two weeks later I felt like playing and took the guitar out of the closet and started playing. It sounded amazing. A lightbulb went off in my head and I realized that any changes or prototype versions I made, that I should play the darn things for weeks before making final decisions on "pass, or go" decisions. And realized I had probably ran myself in circles for not knowing this phenomenom. I regularly play all my guitars to keep things in shape so I can listen to how my work ages over the years. A few of them did not age well and removed them from the list. I could keep writing here because there others things that are critical, like some PAF's have incredibly ROTTED braided shield wire. The rotting of the cotton insulation and massive oxidation of the braid wire can really up the capacitance enough to dumb down the pickup's sound. I had a PAF set both 7.3K ohms, which would mean they would be incredibly shrill at that reading. Instead they were very warm PAF's. I unsoldered the lead and did a frequency test with them on and off, and the difference was huge. With new leads they would have been real sparkly and open sounding.
@willudallmusic
9 ай бұрын
54 strat for 4k wow! great interview :)
@susanaskjem9623
10 ай бұрын
You’re totally awesome, Joe and your music is amazing!❤🎉☮️💋🥰☯️
@mybluesguitar
11 ай бұрын
Great video. Really enjoyed it. Good questions and Joe comes across as a very nice guy.
@mitarrguitars
11 ай бұрын
Fantastic and honest interview, well done. UG.
@vikiryan822
11 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing your passion. 🎸❤️🎸❤️
@vikiryan822
11 ай бұрын
He has a gift of looking into the camera and it's like he's talking directly to you. He is so down to earth 🌍❤️🎸🎵
@ryangunwitch-black
10 ай бұрын
I would love to hang out with Joe on the regular.
@chuckbluz
11 ай бұрын
Joe, you should really try a Quilter Mach3 - class D, fully analog, great voicing and tons of power. Designed by Pat Quilter of QSC.
@glenkepic3208
11 ай бұрын
Great offering. Joe B is great. Rather prolific, shall we say. Sometimes burnt but still a fan (B O JH got donated,,,,missed with me).
@moshemem7525
11 ай бұрын
More power to you Joe, dear brother
@craighermle7727
11 ай бұрын
Interesting comment regarding Carfax: I was very interested in a preowned car that was on a dealer's website. I called the dealership and wanted to see it that day. The response was, "It's in our body shop". That comment itself was interesting. I know for a fact the car was purchased by the dealer knowing it had been in an accident. I got a call a few days later from the dealer saying the car was "ready" for sale. I drove it, liked i,t and asked to see the carfax. I did, and the accident that I knew the car had wasn't reported, I didn't buy the car because I couldn't try any of the car's history. Just because someone says something is or is not doesn't make it so.
@babagadoush1
11 ай бұрын
Good interview and questions
@mikehoehn1475
11 ай бұрын
Jb is a realist. Excellent
@privateer0561
10 ай бұрын
I would ask Joe what's the use of having 15 'Bursts if he has a favorite and there isn't possibly enough time to enjoy them all, much less the rest of his collection. I guess he had a great use for at least a portion of his collection when making the blues album when he could actually lay hands on genuine period rigs to recreate the tones of the times in question.
@ethanhitchcock5431
Ай бұрын
Joe should write a song called ' The Aspartame Blues '....very dangerous stuff , thanks to the late great Donald Rumsfeld !
@user-km3xu7gn4k
6 ай бұрын
Great talent love his music
@michaelragan5799
11 ай бұрын
Well said Joe...all of it....honest at right
@Chadass80
11 ай бұрын
If you can't afford a vintage guitar, it's probably because the humble Joe is sitting on them.
@jmmyky
11 ай бұрын
Joe has 15 of the 1959 Les Paul’s 😳 No wonder why I have trouble finding one for sale 😂
@andrewtate8303
10 ай бұрын
😮
@alphadogstudio
11 ай бұрын
Q: " I want to ask you about your favorite guitar the 59 LP" A: "Which one? You know I have 15!" Joe is a hard guy to like, sometimes.
@ghostdriver7558
11 ай бұрын
To be fair I think he gets a rough deal from a lot of folks and I think sometimes he is justified in a little bite back occasionally.
@rickjason215
11 ай бұрын
At least he uses them. Most people keep them locked up. Norman of Norman’s Rare Guitars had all his best guitars locked up in a warehouse for like 30 years. Nobody got to use them.
@stevenheath741
11 ай бұрын
He’s just the Caretaker as we all are…and he does use em so they are not on his Merchant banker wall as so many are..
@ianbrown7089
11 ай бұрын
I saw Joe the first time at the Calgary blues festival and met him twice. Once at Clapton's crossroads Chicago and at the Baked Potato in LA. Both times he was a gentleman and friendly guy. I thin I've seen most if the World's best guitarist and Joe rides at the top. His dedication and knowledge of guitars speaks volumes of his personality.
@babagadoush1
11 ай бұрын
Love this dude
@jeremythornton433
11 ай бұрын
Great video but I really wish the volume was much more consistent.
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