Great Lesson, man¡¡¡ I´m gonna teach this technic to my students...It is very practical and stimulating...Thank you¡¡¡ So, I´m going to subscribe right now¡¡
Hello Brent. Thanks for watching! Actually, using the String Fragment System you can learn to move any trick to any pentatonic shape, because they are all made of the same string fragments. Here's a lesson from the String Blog on this: string.systems/blog/sfs-pentatonics1
Thanks for this Prokopis .... your normal brilliant standard!! I hope you and your family are well ..... Nice to see the subscribers double in the last 6 months ..... do you think we can get it to 3K by Christmas?
Awesome easy to understand video. I know the 5 minor pentatonic patterns and am working on my speed, but I did not know where to bend and where not to bend so thank you. I guess it's anywhere were you have only 2 semitones between whole notes and a 1/2 between the blues notes. Does this rule apply on the other 4 patterns?
@@Effectivemusicpractice Thanks again! Can you do a semitone bend anywhere on the fretboard where you are doing it from the flatted 3rd in the minor pentatonic scale. Hope I asked this right...
@@retiredguyadventures6211 Yes. - The b3 bends up to the 4 (whole step bend) - The b7 bends up to the 1 (whole step bend) - The 4 bends up to the blue note (half step bend) or to the 5 (whole step bend).
Amazing lesson! Never thought about systematically approaching the bending places before
Thanks you! I have the tendency to approach everything systematically. Maybe that's why I enjoy teaching so much :-)
Great lesson on an important subject, that is neglected by many teachers on You Tube.
Great Lesson, man¡¡¡ I´m gonna teach this technic to my students...It is very practical and stimulating...Thank you¡¡¡
So, I´m going to subscribe right now¡¡
great tutorial!
Brilliant. The real tip is for me is using the 4th pentatonic Note.
You are an incredible guitar teacher. Simply brilliant !
Thanks for watching and for the kind words Toby 😀👍
I feel after seeing this that I should be able to do this exercise with most shapes up and down the neck
That ware super helpful! Thanks for the lesson. Are you planning on doing the other Pentatonic shapes with the same idea?
Hello Brent. Thanks for watching! Actually, using the String Fragment System you can learn to move any trick to any pentatonic shape, because they are all made of the same string fragments. Here's a lesson from the String Blog on this:
string.systems/blog/sfs-pentatonics1
Thanks for this Prokopis .... your normal brilliant standard!!
I hope you and your family are well .....
Nice to see the subscribers double in the last 6 months ..... do you think we can get it to 3K by Christmas?
Thanks Phil! Yes, I'm happy to report that more and more people are discovering EMP :-)
great lessons ! Need more views !
I couldn't agree more :-) Thanks for watching!
Ευχαριστούμε
😀👍
Awesome easy to understand video. I know the 5 minor pentatonic patterns and am working on my speed, but I did not know where to bend and where not to bend so thank you. I guess it's anywhere were you have only 2 semitones between whole notes and a 1/2 between the blues notes. Does this rule apply on the other 4 patterns?
Thanks for watching! Yes, this applies to all positions (and also in other types of scales).
@@Effectivemusicpractice Thanks again! Can you do a semitone bend anywhere on the fretboard where you are doing it from the flatted 3rd in the minor pentatonic scale. Hope I asked this right...
@@retiredguyadventures6211 Yes.
- The b3 bends up to the 4 (whole step bend)
- The b7 bends up to the 1 (whole step bend)
- The 4 bends up to the blue note (half step bend) or to the 5 (whole step bend).
That Godin looks BEAUTIFUL! What is the exact model? Thanks for the lesson! :)
You're welcome. It's a Godin Montreal, the original model which they don't make anymore. I hear the new ones are great too.
12??????
Shorter string guitars are harder to bend take a les Paul vs a strat to prove this