@@CrucialGuitar but it would be great if you left them there :) put a track with diagrams out and put a link to it in the description of this track and see how many people choose the one with diagrams over this one.
this is so great for helping me practice- i have one question- on your chart on the left side you have all the notes which compose each chord, and on the right side you only select on of each note for the arpeggio. Are all these notes equal?- for example should I be targeting the arpeggios on the right side more, or the notes which compose the chords in general? thanks!!
Great question! The notes in the left diagram are the notes that make up each chord. For example, A, C#, E, and G on the left diagram Make up the A7 chord when strummed (right diagram). For improvisation target the notes within the chord. But they are the same. The arpeggio just means the notes of a chord are played in succession versus strummed. Hope that helps! Cheers.
Hello hello, I'm a suppa begginer in this, so I have a question that will probably sound stupid to some folks haha ....Why are you playing C# ?? isn't that the 4b? Thank you.
Excellent now I can REALLY practice my A7th and Dth argeggios and then slide into the Blues scale!!! WOW 10/10
This was fun to play along with!
Glad you enjoyed it.
Straight feel- cool!!
0:00 for hints
yes this is great just start playing guitar
I just saw this comment and I hope you are still playing. What's the skinny?
Muy bueno poner los arpegios, faltaria el conectarlos , gracIas !!!!
+jc10000 Bienvenido gracias por el comentario!
Why from 1:00 to the end has no hints?
It is so we do not to become to dependent on the visual aid :)
Nice track, but why didn't you leave the diagrams up?
The diagrams are a guide for improv. Memorization of the arpeggios should be the goal.
@@CrucialGuitar but it would be great if you left them there :) put a track with diagrams out and put a link to it in the description of this track and see how many people choose the one with diagrams over this one.
Thanks for the feedback! That’s a good idea it would be best to have both options to choose from.
@@MusicianGreg The more help you use, the more help you need
Dont take the arpeggios away. Now I cannot continue on with it.
There’s a link for same video with arpeggios on screen all the way through. Check the description.
this is so great for helping me practice- i have one question- on your chart on the left side you have all the notes which compose each chord, and on the right side you only select on of each note for the arpeggio. Are all these notes equal?- for example should I be targeting the arpeggios on the right side more, or the notes which compose the chords in general? thanks!!
Great question! The notes in the left diagram are the notes that make up each chord. For example, A, C#, E, and G on the left diagram Make up the A7 chord when strummed (right diagram). For improvisation target the notes within the chord. But they are the same. The arpeggio just means the notes of a chord are played in succession versus strummed. Hope that helps! Cheers.
@@CrucialGuitar This certainly helped! cheers!
meeeeeee 222222222 thks
Hello hello, I'm a suppa begginer in this, so I have a question that will probably sound stupid to some folks haha ....Why are you playing C# ?? isn't that the 4b? Thank you.
Hi The C# is part of the A7 chord. Any part of the chord is a good choice while improvising. 4B is D# 2B is C# 😊🎸
They’re are no basic questions! Everyone was a beginner- great job asking!
curiousnomad Thanks !
Loved this until the diagrams went away...
Thanks for the honest feedback. I had a few requests. I’ll upload this video with diagrams all the way through. 🎸👍
DEMOCRACY V.S. DONALD YOU CHOOSE