Thank you so much for this!! Not to nitpick, but I actually think that the G#m7 is a G#m7b5! The b5 isn't in the guitar voicing, but I think it's implied by the word "eyelids" in the melody hanging on D natural.
My ear is at a place where I legitimately don’t know if I’m hearing some of these chords right so bare with me but I think I’m hearing the C major 7 to have two major 7s in there? Like the kinda chord where it’s root major 7 major 3rd then major 7 again (Pinky on 12th fret b string). Anyways thanks so much for this! Hopefully I won’t have to look up tutorials or tabs to get these chunes in the near future lol
Thank you tons for this tutorial!! I messed around with it on piano and this is what sounds good to me: (Bm6) | Abm7(b5) | Gmaj7 | C7(b5) | Bm9 | C#m7 | Cmaj7 | Gmaj7 | Three edits I considered: 1. The (b5) of the Abm7 falls in the B Dorian scale, and gives the chord more flavour. 2. The C7(b5), because again the (b5) of C (an F# note) falls in the B Dorian scale and its texture resolves nicely to Bm9. 2. For the last chord Gmaj7, I dropped the #11. It's too dissonant. And only for the sake of argument, if I did want to include that note, I'd call the chord a Gmaj7(b5). Note: this wouldn't change how one plays it on guitar using your tabs (which is how I've played it!).
wow! this is a great tutorial bro, you should keep doing it or do what you like ahaha but seriously good job man! maybe a outro with you playing the entire riff wouldn't be bad :) saludos desde chile!
I am just curious if you are influenced by Ted Greene because I saw your old videos in which you are playing fingerstyle and then you switched to an electric guitar. Ted used to play chord melodies on a Telecaster and you also used a not so common Bm9 voicing in the video that Ted used to use.
@@fasterfeather you can find his transcriptions along with a lot of lessons and didactic information about guitar on his website and you can also check out Tim Lerch, He makes tutorials of Ted Greene's arrangements and has similar kind of amazing content on his channel.
nice lesson bro, but i have a question: in the min 2:28 what's chords are used? i so confused, cuz i don't recognize the change of chords ua-cam.com/video/p46Tm9-7i7E/v-deo.html
Dude ur a life saver for a gig I got coming up, thank you!
Thank you so much for this!! Not to nitpick, but I actually think that the G#m7 is a G#m7b5! The b5 isn't in the guitar voicing, but I think it's implied by the word "eyelids" in the melody hanging on D natural.
I spent one hour on your lesson and a whole day having fun with it
Well explained, spot on and delightful personality make for a superb tutorial. Many thanks. (Love your quote in the description too)
Such a fuckin perfect song.
thank you so much! love that you also taught about fingering, how to travel between the notes & chords :)
My ear is at a place where I legitimately don’t know if I’m hearing some of these chords right so bare with me but I think I’m hearing the C major 7 to have two major 7s in there? Like the kinda chord where it’s root major 7 major 3rd then major 7 again (Pinky on 12th fret b string).
Anyways thanks so much for this! Hopefully I won’t have to look up tutorials or tabs to get these chunes in the near future lol
never seen that B-9 voicing. love it - thanks man
Yayyy thank you for sharing your music knowledge :) I love your teaching style
Thank you tons for this tutorial!! I messed around with it on piano and this is what sounds good to me:
(Bm6) | Abm7(b5) | Gmaj7 | C7(b5) |
Bm9 | C#m7 | Cmaj7 | Gmaj7 |
Three edits I considered:
1. The (b5) of the Abm7 falls in the B Dorian scale, and gives the chord more flavour.
2. The C7(b5), because again the (b5) of C (an F# note) falls in the B Dorian scale and its texture resolves nicely to Bm9.
2. For the last chord Gmaj7, I dropped the #11. It's too dissonant. And only for the sake of argument, if I did want to include that note, I'd call the chord a Gmaj7(b5).
Note: this wouldn't change how one plays it on guitar using your tabs (which is how I've played it!).
Great video. Thanks a lot brother
Yess, thankyou
Great vid
Thank you!
More lessons please I love your style be my teacher
Thank you!! 💜💜💜
Awesome 👍🏼 Subscribed as well.
Whew, thanks for this
LEGEND
Thank you! :) keep it up!
Thanks, for your first time it’s was pretty good. 👍🏾
Appreciate that! Its pretty awkward but ill get better
thanks man!
Bro, thank you!! Great explanation!
thank you for this learning rn!!
Thank you so much!!!
you're amazing!!!
Thanks mateee
very helpful! thanks mate :)
wow! this is a great tutorial bro, you should keep doing it or do what you like ahaha but seriously good job man! maybe a outro with you playing the entire riff wouldn't be bad :) saludos desde chile!
Love this! Cheers for the tutorial 🤙
Thank you so much :)
U are the best
jajaja lol esa mano como una onda xD love u gracias por hacer este tutorial
niiiiiiice one ! thx
Hooooo Jessss,
Thank you so much this is perfect!
This is great! What a tune! would you mind sharing the tab via google drive or such?
Thanks! I put the tab with no scrolling on my latest video if that helps
I like you
Cool! Can you do a tutorial or put the tabs up for the easier version?
Thanks!
Lmao this was awesome!!!!! Thank you
Could you write out the tab for the chord shapes?
why did you make the tabs flow backwards ...thanks for still doing this tho
Honestly i used a video making app and couldn't figure out how to make that stop. Wont be using that app going forward
I am just curious if you are influenced by Ted Greene because I saw your old videos in which you are playing fingerstyle and then you switched to an electric guitar. Ted used to play chord melodies on a Telecaster and you also used a not so common Bm9 voicing in the video that Ted used to use.
To answer your question, all coincidence as I am not familiar with Ted Greene but I'll check him out!
@@fasterfeather your world is going to change my man after checking him out.
@@fasterfeather did you check him out man?
@@shiv2033 YES. Really enjoy the voice leading. Technique like chet atkins too. Really want to learn a transcription of something he played.
@@fasterfeather you can find his transcriptions along with a lot of lessons and didactic information about guitar on his website and you can also check out Tim Lerch, He makes tutorials of Ted Greene's arrangements and has similar kind of amazing content on his channel.
6:51
si, suena mejor.. jaja es cierto. Bien explicado!
capoooo
nice lesson bro, but i have a question: in the min 2:28 what's chords are used? i so confused, cuz i don't recognize the change of chords
ua-cam.com/video/p46Tm9-7i7E/v-deo.html
At that part they loop the 2nd half of the progression i think B-9 - C#-7 - Cmaj7 - Gmaj7#11.
Thanks a lot for this video man !!!
Thank you!