Wednesday, September 20, 2006

An old christian song

I dont remember the name of the song. But i revamped it. This is the main melody and i added a new ending to it.

9 comments:

~HeLeN~ said...

I'm pretty sure it's "I Love You Lord"

Andrew Michael Jacobs said...

Jason,

these are worth checking out for their intense quality - but mostly the first one is extreme skill and very beautiful on ukulele. the second one is just fun.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L8oxlPoZNbU&mode=related&search=

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjA5faZF1A8&mode=related&search=

Andy

Andrew Michael Jacobs said...

Jason,

your song gets good at about 48 seconds through.

bah buh bah baauh. buh buh.
-thats for you helen.

Isaiah Eyre said...

Do you dig Eric Johnson?

RespectMyAuthorita said...

dont even know who he is

Isaiah Eyre said...

Bummer... you'd probably dig some of his stuff. Check out his albums Ah Via Musicom and Tones. Listen to it all, because some of it's better than others and if you don't like the first song you hear, just go to the next one.

Andrew Michael Jacobs said...

jason, how have you not heard of eric johnson? he did "cliffs of dover" one of the cleanest solos ever recorded.

RespectMyAuthorita said...

Listened to a bunch of it. Hes definitely got skill. Just boring stuff tho. He sounds like hes the guy who makes all those wailing guitar solo elevator tunes. Not much soul or originality. I can pin a lot of it to joe satriani ripped off, or carlos santana ripped. kinda weird mix. didnt do much for me. Not very hard either.

Isaiah Eyre said...

Eh, I guess he's not everyone's style. I don't think it's fair to say he writes 'elevator music,' but yeah, a lot of it is just solid playing and producing, with some good tune building and solos, which I dig. He went on tour with Satriani and Steve Vai, so I'm sure he's influenced esp. by Satriani. Some of his acoustic stuff is really good as well. His newest album was kind lame IMO - not like his older stuff. My favorites of his are probably 'Righteous' and 'Trademark'. Not what I'd call hard, but to each his own.