Fantastic introduction to triads. I’ve been drilling M, m & dim triads alongside sus2, sus 4 & aug 3 note chords. It’s helped immensely with fretboard memorisation. Wish I’d done this years ago.
I love the way you teach, not too bogged down in theory, but technical enough that I’m able to connect the dots with the theory I’m learning. If that makes any sense Either way, thank you for the lesson!! 🙏
Thanks so much! Glad to hear that you found it useful. I do find that throwing too much theory around can be off putting for a lot of people. When I teach anything with theory attached to it I like to think of it as "practical theory", the theory just helps you understand the thing you're currently doing, rather than throwing all the theory on the table at once! This is how I've always taught people in lessons, videos and via my guitar courses, I find its much easier to digest that way.
Oh man, I can understand why that is frustrating. I wonder if there is a way to work on that... perhaps a hand position shift... OR.. maybe it'll work on a guitar with a thinner neck? Whenever I teach people to use their thumb the first chord I show them is a D/F# which is a regular D chord with the thumb playing the 2nd fret of the Low E. Perhaps starting with some easy thumb stretches might help your hand be able to get the thumb going?
I suck at triads. This info is extremely helpful ☺️
Hopefully this lesson helps you get past the barriers! Let me know what you're stuck on and I'll try to help :)
@@LeighFugeGuitar thank you, I appreciate it ☺️
Fantastic introduction to triads. I’ve been drilling M, m & dim triads alongside sus2, sus 4 & aug 3 note chords. It’s helped immensely with fretboard memorisation. Wish I’d done this years ago.
Thanks so much, glad you liked it! Yeah they're such a useful tool, and as you are finding out, you can use them all over the neck!
I love the way you teach, not too bogged down in theory, but technical enough that I’m able to connect the dots with the theory I’m learning.
If that makes any sense
Either way, thank you for the lesson!! 🙏
Thanks so much! Glad to hear that you found it useful. I do find that throwing too much theory around can be off putting for a lot of people. When I teach anything with theory attached to it I like to think of it as "practical theory", the theory just helps you understand the thing you're currently doing, rather than throwing all the theory on the table at once! This is how I've always taught people in lessons, videos and via my guitar courses, I find its much easier to digest that way.
Wish I could play with my thumb over the top but I'm. Missing the top of my 3rd finger so it won't stretch when I use my thumb. Bit frustrating
Oh man, I can understand why that is frustrating. I wonder if there is a way to work on that... perhaps a hand position shift... OR.. maybe it'll work on a guitar with a thinner neck?
Whenever I teach people to use their thumb the first chord I show them is a D/F# which is a regular D chord with the thumb playing the 2nd fret of the Low E.
Perhaps starting with some easy thumb stretches might help your hand be able to get the thumb going?
@@LeighFugeGuitar Cheers Leigh. I'll give that a go.
This really helped me out. Thanks a lot!
Thanks awesome, glad to hear it! Thanks so much for watching!
Great vid Leigh.
Thanks so much! Glad to hear you enjoyed it
Ah ha.. thank you!🙂👍
thanks for checking it out!