very excellent. the 6th string position, lower 9th string and lower 8th string (among other things) I have them on different levers of course, but unfortunately on the same knee. I'll figure out a workaround this.
Merci Lionel c'est pas tous les jours de voir un tuto de ce niveau moi c'est ta main droite qui m’obsède et même après avoir vu ton tuto sur le pick bloking 🤣 👏👏👏
Another question if you would be so kind. I've been working on your positions and string possibilities and I find them very useful and very interesting. I can memorize these string and pedal combinations and fret positions with practice and time. What I'm struck by is what your thought process was in coming up/determining these fret positions and string/pedal combinations. What led you to some of these fret positions? How did you analyze this come up with them? Also, I realize a 2-5-1 is a very "jazz" sounding progression and the foundation of a lot of stuff in jazz, swing, and pop music. I noticed you didn't include any of the fret positions that would yield notes in the Emaj scale using the knee lever that raises your E's to F. Would appreciate your whatever you're willing to share. Thanks much! This tutorial has really been valuable to me! Oh............one more question..............do you have a similar tutorial for doing this on C6th? :)
Thank you for this tutorial. Would these positions work if the chord progression were something like 1144 5511? Or any other progression one could envision in the key of E major?
Most likely. I will check that out properly during the next few days. I have to have my steel in the front of me and right now I am on my couch. But for exemple the E scale has a D # but not in the A scale. The positions would work but not necessarily all the notes. My tutorial was mainly for a 2/5/1 progression.
You're a super talented musician! If I may ask a question about some of the library music you composed for Kosinus, how were you approached by them for albums like "Pacific Cocktails" and how was the experience composing for them? :)
Thanks for the compliment. As far as library music, Kosinus just asked me to compose an album in that style of music. When the album Is finished they take care of it, name the tunes and make sure that most of the professionals know about it. Then if you are lucky they use it for commercial, movies etc… I have been working for Kosinus for 20 years now and composed a lot of different styles of projects from punk to swing and rock to country etc.,, I can compose on a lot of different styles of music. Pacific cocktails has been used a lot. I think it’s being used right now on hulu tv commercial.
@@lionelwendling2984 While library music is geared towards a professional audience, there's actually quite a thriving community of folks who collect library music albums to listen and share with each other. I'm also one of those people. I actually interviewed the famous Gerhard Narholz, who runs the Sonoton library music company in Germany since 1965 (full video can be found in my channel). Him and I agreed that the sheer creativity and love put into library tracks, especially during the 20th century, is more apparent due to differences in how its run when compared to a standard record label. I suppose what I'm trying to say is, library music is a fascinating type of music that even individuals enjoy :-) Your music in Pacific Cocktails I first heard in the video game, Fallout 76, which uses it for an event. Your work is fantastic!
@@ana-esthesiac I am familiar with video games. Do you have by any chance a sample of it using my music. Funny but it seems like you know more about what happened to my music than I do…
@@lionelwendling2984 I can't seem to find a video on UA-cam that has the music playing. People usually disable music in Fallout videos specifically because of the heavy use of licensed music, which UA-cam flags. ua-cam.com/video/d5zOtmYWrlo/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/HUh2w4XMf2U/v-deo.html However, the two tracks Fallout 76 uses are these two, Kiri Tiki and Tiki Bar! They play at a camp on an in-game gramophone object, funnily enough! The camp is owned by a character in the game, and he just has some casual Hawaiian music playing while he cooks for the camp :P
Fantastic lesson. Great pockets! The rhythm, nuance and dynamics you use are what makes it great and you have Great tone! We want more! 😜
One of the best tutorials I have ever stumbled upon, thank you so much, this was very helpful.
Wow- I’ve been needing something like this. Thanks for posting. Great playing!
This is really great stuff! Super helpful to my learning!
Thanks for sharing this!
That’s incredibly good sir. Thankyou for sharing
Wow, some wicked links. Thanks for sharing this.
Great, Lionel...
Super instruction Lionel! Thank you! Some new positions for me!!!
This will help you ............. thank you.
Super! Thank you.
Great,I see it the same way.sam from Australia.
Thank you!
very excellent. the 6th string position, lower 9th string and lower 8th string (among other things) I have them on different levers of course, but unfortunately on the same knee. I'll figure out a workaround this.
Fabulous !!! Thank you so much for posting. How do you warmup C6? 😎 Beautiful tutorial!!
Great!
Merci Lionel c'est pas tous les jours de voir un tuto de ce niveau moi c'est ta main droite qui m’obsède et même après avoir vu ton tuto sur le pick bloking 🤣 👏👏👏
Another question if you would be so kind. I've been working on your positions and string possibilities and I find them very useful and very interesting. I can memorize these string and pedal combinations and fret positions with practice and time. What I'm struck by is what your thought process was in coming up/determining these fret positions and string/pedal combinations. What led you to some of these fret positions? How did you analyze this come up with them? Also, I realize a 2-5-1 is a very "jazz" sounding progression and the foundation of a lot of stuff in jazz, swing, and pop music. I noticed you didn't include any of the fret positions that would yield notes in the Emaj scale using the knee lever that raises your E's to F. Would appreciate your whatever you're willing to share. Thanks much! This tutorial has really been valuable to me! Oh............one more question..............do you have a similar tutorial for doing this on C6th? :)
Thank you for this tutorial. Would these positions work if the chord progression were something like 1144 5511? Or any other progression one could envision in the key of E major?
Most likely. I will check that out properly during the next few days. I have to have my steel in the front of me and right now I am on my couch. But for exemple the E scale has a D # but not in the A scale. The positions would work but not necessarily all the notes. My tutorial was mainly for a 2/5/1 progression.
You're a super talented musician! If I may ask a question about some of the library music you composed for Kosinus, how were you approached by them for albums like "Pacific Cocktails" and how was the experience composing for them? :)
Thanks for the compliment.
As far as library music, Kosinus just asked me to compose an album in that style of music. When the album
Is finished they take care of it, name the tunes and make sure that most of the professionals know about it. Then if you are lucky they use it for commercial, movies etc… I have been working for Kosinus for 20 years now and composed a lot of different styles of projects from punk to swing and rock to country etc.,, I can compose on a lot of different styles of music.
Pacific cocktails has been used a lot. I think it’s being used right now on hulu tv commercial.
@@lionelwendling2984 While library music is geared towards a professional audience, there's actually quite a thriving community of folks who collect library music albums to listen and share with each other.
I'm also one of those people. I actually interviewed the famous Gerhard Narholz, who runs the Sonoton library music company in Germany since 1965 (full video can be found in my channel). Him and I agreed that the sheer creativity and love put into library tracks, especially during the 20th century, is more apparent due to differences in how its run when compared to a standard record label. I suppose what I'm trying to say is, library music is a fascinating type of music that even individuals enjoy :-)
Your music in Pacific Cocktails I first heard in the video game, Fallout 76, which uses it for an event. Your work is fantastic!
@@ana-esthesiac I am familiar with video games. Do you have by any chance a sample of it using my music. Funny but it seems like you know more about what happened to my music than I do…
@@lionelwendling2984 I can't seem to find a video on UA-cam that has the music playing. People usually disable music in Fallout videos specifically because of the heavy use of licensed music, which UA-cam flags.
ua-cam.com/video/d5zOtmYWrlo/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/HUh2w4XMf2U/v-deo.html
However, the two tracks Fallout 76 uses are these two, Kiri Tiki and Tiki Bar! They play at a camp on an in-game gramophone object, funnily enough! The camp is owned by a character in the game, and he just has some casual Hawaiian music playing while he cooks for the camp :P
I meant that I am not familiar with video games. Anyway thanks for your research.
Thank-You for sharing this knowledge.What is the name of that scale you use?
Just a regular E major scale
bien mais 1'45 de baratin comme les U.S.
amitiés