The Secret to Playing Chords ANYWHERE on the Fretboard Without Moving your Hand Position
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- Опубліковано 1 жов 2024
- The 4 Fret Zone is The Secret to playing chords anywhere on the Fretboard. With this simple method, you can play any chord progression anywhere on the fretboard without moving your hand's playing position using the CAGED guitar system!
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Hey Sam! I purchased the pdf a little while ago but couldn't get the download to work. Is there anywhere I can go for support to fix? Thanks!
you should receive an email confirmation followed by another email with a download link (the 2nd email can take a few minutes to arrive) to test everything is working, I just went through the checkout process myself and had no issues receiving both emails and downloading the poster! could you confirm if you received 2 emails? also check your junk mail incase it ended up there!
@@Samjamguitar definitely got both emails including the pdf download. However anytime I downloaded it and tried to view it, it would only open as a tiny compressed thumbnail. Tried opening in different browsers and adobe acrobat but the same prob. Happy to send a screenshot if needed
Drop me an email samjamguitar@hotmail.com and I will get a copy sent to you direct👌
Keep your hand in the same place and move the guitar!
🤣... I like it!
If only they could build a machine to do this automatically
This changed everything for me. I’m 9 yrs old and a complete beginner . Thank you
Awesome! 9 years old? Keep it up and you will be great!
You are tremendously lucky to have encountered that guide in the very beginning of your guitar journey:)
@@Samjamguitar I'm 3 years old
😂
Honestly one of the simplest, well made, and to the point caged guides on yt I've seen so far
Thanks! It's much appreciated 👌
This is how to apply CAGED chords!
Thank you for broadening the horizons of the blues guitar students in the people's key!! This is a very useful idea.
Glad you like it!
your explanation is as smooth as your voice, well done !
Thanks a lot!
I think a 4-fret zone is useful by allowing you to play several chords in that zone without needing to look at the fretboard.
The 4 fret zone idea is GOLD. I have always built my triads trying to stay on the same set of strings or hand position. This method makes it even easier and faster on the fly!
Glad to help!
Thank you so much from this subscriber! I've just been trying this with the Chuck Wayne chord system, more sophisticated chords! So far, so good. How did I miss this easier way? The movement in the chords is smooth, with no dramatic leaps; the voice leading is pleasant and emminently musical. I've been trying a similar idea, but I like yours better - It's just more useful and simple is usually better.
Glad I could help!
Thanks for sharing how you can play all your guitar chord progression in any 4 frets box position by finding the root note.
Glad it was helpful!
Fantastic video, man!👏🏻Your videos helped me A LOT to better understand and conceptualize the fretboard and guitar playing in general!🙏🏻
Please, never stop making these awesome tutorials, you really have a way how to quickly yet easily explain rather challenging concepts! Ty so much👍🏻
Thanks, glad to help!
Great video!
Some 4 fret positions might require a shift if you wish to do full voicings. For instance if one of your 4 fret groupings shift up one or two frets from the previous one.
Pls, make a video about how to stop noodling during the solos!!!
Know which chords are playing. Know each note of each chord.
Know your fretboard.
Learn triads.
Learn scales and patterns.
Finally. Then "play the changes" as the chords change in the chord progresion while throwing techniques in to embelish the notes. And your good to go 😂
@@MGM261 perfect
You can also do this to produce any scale, arpeggio ect... I normally use 5 fret limits for that.
Is also great for changing scales in one are of the fretboard and for learning to play over chord chnages in one area too
correct!
Can you explain how to use it for scale or arpeggio or too complicated?
@@dry509 Sure! So the idea is that within any five fret limit there are the 12 chromatic notes. So theoretically you should be able to play any scale, chord, arpeggio, mode ect... within that area.
So say so you wanted to make all of your major scales, for example. You actually don't need any scale diagrams from the internet or a book or whatever. You can make them all yourself, as long as you know the notes in that major scale.
Give it a go, in the first five frets, try to make a F major scale, then a F# major scale, G major scale ect... If you don't know what notes make up them scales then of course search that up for the time being, but once you eventually know how to make the notes in any scale you can basically get whatever shape you want.
@@joegriffithsmusic Great. Thanks for the explanation.
@@dry509 All good
Hiya Sam I love how you make everything so simple… please can you also help with three remaining strings GBE
Realizing that E and A form chords are played when the roots on n the E and A string was crazy, but noticing the C and G ARE THEIR RELATIVES really took things over the edge here.
It's great when the pieces all start coming together👌
What?
The E shape shares the same root as the G shape. The A shape shares the same root as the C shape.
Is there any lesson for minor chords too, or even mixing both minor and major chords?
I would recommend watching my CAGED guitar playlist!! The 2nd video covers minor chords. After learning the 5 minor shapes you will be able to mix them using the same logic from this lesson👌
Great voice and articulation!
I fall asleep like a baby in first 2 minutes 👍😉👍
Sleep tight.
Absolutely amazing as usual, your way of explaining is astonishing
Thank you very much!
Your videos are unreal bro so helpful I think I can speak for everyone here that you are an excellent teacher . and the time it took to edit all these examples is amazing so only one question bro where do u live so I can pop round with my lowden and get some lessons😀😀I wish there was a teacher like you close to we’re I live in Ireland 🇮🇪., anyway thanks so much .. I’m learning all the major scale caged postions I know the shapes but I’m having trouble moving from key to key it’s a little confusing., but it’s going to take a few months to study the positions properly but your videos are so educational and helpful.. cheers Brian Ireland 🇮🇪🎸🎸🎸
Thanks! It really is appreciated! I'm actually based in Scotland, so closer than you think!!
That was such a good lesson thank you so much I really think it's the best explanation I've seen for the caged system teaching and learning by exploration rather than by rote love it😊
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed it👍
Amazing!!! I’m a noob, i learned 4 things from this 6 min video!!
Some obvious but connected things c shape and g shape new to me
Happy to help!
Great lesson, looking forward to more intermediate lessons
More to come!
Earliest I’ve ever been
Nice! Thanks for Watching!
@@Samjamguitar thanks for the awesome content
No Probs! Glad you are enjoying the Lessons!
your ex disagrees
This gave me the same feeling I got when I learned how to ride a bike. Thank you so much❤
Happy to hear that!
La Bamba
So many of your videos wind up on my "favorite guitar lessons" playlist and this one is no different! Great video! This is extremely useful!
Wow, thanks! glad you are enjoying them!
incredible video, even more so since i finally understand the caged system now
Great Thanks! be sure to watch the CAGED playlist linked at the end of this video (and in the description) to dive deeper into the CAGED system!
I like to watch this channel when I can't have my guitar around to practice, you know..work on music theory a lil. But all I can think of watching this video is 'I need my guitar ASAP' . When I became a legendary guitarist this channel will be on my Oscar speech 😂
Incredibly helpful ! Thank you for sharing !
Thanks for watching!
It’s so very important to limit complexity when learning the fretboard! You do a wonderful job at it
Thanks!
Expertly explained
Thanks!
So… learn your triads
Yes. This practice cements all triad positions. Good point.
Just the best can make complicated things so simple. Love this channel.
Thanks 👌
your vids are amazingly insightful👏👏👏
Thankyou!!
cool application of the caged system
Thanks!
Mind blown!
I love how his concepts remain simple and overpowered.
Cheers!
That's brilliant. Genuinely simple but yet complex.
Cheers!
Your D chords in open position are shifted one fret up. Eb/D I guess? 😁
🤣 Well spotted!! Eb/D it is then!!
wow
Very caged
very CAGED indeed!
Pure gold
Awesome.
Thank you! Cheers!
so cool. thanks. gonna practice this.
Have fun!
Excellent, Sam. Thanks.
My pleasure!
❤❤❤❤
👍👌👍👌
Amazing lessons. Best simplified guitar tutorials i have seen on youtube by an absolute mile. Well done and thanks
Wow, thanks!
Third
👌👌👌
What a great video
Glad you enjoyed it
Great video, bravo Samjam
Many thanks!
This is life changing for me! thanks so much.
Love these videos 👍👍👍
More to come!
Thanks!
No problem!
It seems that you arrange the chord righthand correct me if i am wrong the way you display graphic thank you
This is the standard way that the fretboard is displayed👌
Useful.
Cheers 👌
@@Samjamguitar Favorite quote: “It’s unfortunately all too easy to learn to play things on the guitar in a mechanical manner without really understanding what you’re doing.” Roger Edison “Jazz Rhythm Guitar”.
technically this is all very practical, as one can keep their fret hand from moving up or down. However, many of these barre positions are uncomfortable depending on the individual fret-hand technique one uses. Not everyone plays the same way. They're also impractical, because when we barre a chord up the neck we don't actually play all the strings., just those that accommodate the notes or chord sounds we want
All the shapes of CAGED are comfortable to play with enough practice! I use them all daily! But you are also correct that many of the shapes are more useful when broken down into easier/smaller shapes ( I elude to this within this video when playing the G shape and in much more detail within my CAGED series) but this is entirely upto the player and the context👍
@@Samjamguitar no, they aren't all comfortable to play, and it's not a question of practice either. I've been playing guitar for forty-something yrs. Makes no difference what you personally use daily. You don't play guitar for anyone but yourself. Most skilled players over time develop their own way of fingering chord shapes in a variety of ways that are both comfortable for their style of playing, and practically effortless for them to produce. This has nothing to do with producing "easier/smaller shapes". It does, however, have much to do with accessing certain chord voicings
Easier shapes/ different chord voicings are both perfectly valid reasons to adjust any of the CAGED shapes. I would definitely still argue that these shapes are all quite common and can be played comfortably by anyone with time and practice! Much the same as many guitarist when they learn to overcome a simple barre chord, which at the time seems uncomfortable and almost impossible, but with practice becomes as effortless as any open chord. And I know this because I have taught guitarists of varying abilities from young kids to adults for many many years that have all been able to play these shapes comfortably with practise.
@@Samjamguitar aside from my first introduction to chord shapes, somewhere back in the early 80's, I dropped the CAGED system in order to have a more comprehensive understanding of chord construction: triads, slash, comping, min, aug, dim, 4,6,7,9th, sus, etc.. Besides, I early on favored using my thumb to fret the 6th string up and down the neck, so CAGED just became limited and impractical
I would say that a good knowledge of many systems, from the intervallic building blocks of chords to CAGED helps form a well rounded view of the fretboard and music in general, how much you use from any system and for what purpose is completely upto the player... no right or wrong. That I why I choose to show many methods of approaching the fretboard on my channel (this includes a very comprehensive lesson on chord construction) and not just CAGED.... this way the viewers can learn what they want and apply it how they choose.
@0:11 ... your D chord is wrong.
Yup Graphic slip up👌
They're ALL the "E" form chord - but the 2nd string is tuned a half-tone low - hence the apparent A. Move ANY I chord down a string (up in pitch), and you're playing the IV chord (again noting the 1st and 2nd string tuned a half-tone low). Move that IV chord up two frets (full tone), and you're playing the V. Everywhere. Always.
I think you may have missed the point of the lesson. You described one of the very first examples in the video that most people would try using standard barre shapes while moving this around the neck to play in different keys.
Lots of uncomfortable positions. The methodology is cool but I can’t see myself using barre chords when I can choose another voicing. I don’t mind moving positions - I play metal.
early
👌👌👌 thanks for watching!
I'm gay and this video saved my life