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Rock & Pop Baritone in Rock

Outro of 'Walk on the Wild Side', of course....
 
Depends what you think of as "rock".

I love this one chorus baritone solo in the middle of a Mac Rebennack record (later known as Dr John).

Bari solo starts at about 1:19 and is perfectly formed and performed.


Rhys
 
Los Lobos' stuff uses a lot of Baritone....Steve Berlin.
 
I like to play the riffing and pumping bari. The "walking bari".

No Morphine!?
I like Morphine and Dana Colley.. Very good. But that's not what I try to play.

Baritone in rock? This is the first one that sprang to mind.
Good but but I´m not clever enough to play bari like this.

Outro of 'Walk on the Wild Side', of course....
Also good but that's more a solo. I don't listen to Lou Reed anymore. Went to concert in Copenhagen back -74 or -75. Soo bad ..... He went on stage one hour delayed and just played for a short time.

Depends what you think of as "rock".
Rock is wide concept. A good sample of "Rock bari".
 
This has some good baritone on- as well as being a cracking piece of music...
 
More alternative than rock I guess ( don't you hate pigeonholes ? )...
" Morphine "...what a great band !! Three piece I think b.s. bass .dr.
Sorry I still can't get my head around this pad to offer a link ..
 
The other great source of rock/pop baritone solos was the 1960s output of Phil Spector.. The Ronettes etc. I'm on a PC with on speakers so can't give specific tracks but the default solo instrument on most of those classic girl group tracks was a simple but nicely melodic burst of bari...
And then there's This- sort of Metallica with Baritone sax- Willamette, by Willamette
 
Steve Douglas (bari) on the Spector sessions and Mike Terry on Motown sessions. Steve is also famous for his tenor work on so many sessions.
 

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