Dude I pulled it off the other day at the guitar center. I played stairway to heaven, smoke on the water, crazy train, one, and the tapping port to eruption. They made me by a PRS as penitence. LOL
Here’s what I think makes a great guitar player. Let’s give an example of Dimebag Darrell. What made him great is that he gave off what could be called “his own sound”. He sounded like no other guitarist and showed people that they can have any sound.
@@kalvsl not really his guitar skill was weak, sure his chord progressions were dark and sometimes spiritual. But he wouldn't come close on any list. Sure he's easily one of the best song writers. But guitarist is a bit of no no
I think Legacy and Influence is what makes a guitarist great. Innovation, or simply being a master in a style(s), is what makes a legend, on top of all of such in my humble opinion. Also, you sure you're not Rick Beato :D. Awesome work man!
Practice might not make perfect, but practice makes better. Eventually, better will be more than good enough. Practice, good practice, is everything. Only perfect practice makes perfect.
I agree that practicing with drums, or a metronome, is a great rhythm exercise. I wouldn't say that every great guitarist practices with a metronome, though, because I heard Josh Smith say that he never used a metronome. I don't think a metronome is essential to fix poor timing, however fixing poor timing is essential, for good playing. Playing along with records is a good way to get a good feel for rhythm, possibly even better than a metronome, because nobody likes the sterile sound of perfectly quantized playing.
I am inclined to agree with you. I prefer playing/recording to drum tracks and backing tracks as I can get a better feel for the song and what I can do with it.
This has got to be one of the best breakdowns of the ingredients to great playing I have ever seen. You said it simply, but didn't oversimplify it. That's a testament to your growing teaching skill too =)
Dude the drummer at the end is something else! Look at the speed right before he pimp slaps one of the symbols, The video was blurring he was playing so fast, damn that was good !
Finger tone can be improved immensely on an acoustic. I’ve played acoustic for years and it has improved my tone when crossing into the electric guitar world
You know when I first subscribed to you, I don’t remember you being that good. I mean you was always freaking good, but you must’ve unlocked beast mode or something because you’re freaking tearing it up dude. I need to start woodshedding man. You’re inspiring bro.
The most important thing in playing guitar or doing anything in life is to have fun because everyone’s a critic especially other guitarist. People can tell you a million ways that you did something wrong and they can recommend you a million different things that they think you should do that would make you sound better to them but what a lot of guitarist don’t realize is it’s not about them it’s about you and how playing the instrument makes you feel. You’re the one who bought the instrument so play it how you want to and do whatever you gotta do to make yourself happy while playing it. If that means that you want to shred then shred, if that means you want to go slow and melodic then go slow and melodic, it’s different strokes for different folks and people need to realize that and stop trying to force their taste on someone else and let them find their own style.
The ending advice transcends becoming a great guitarist it can be applied to many endeavors in life. I just bought a guitar after many years of thinking I just couldn't do it. Not only do I know now I can, I am glad I found your channel to further reinforce that sentiment! Thank you, you're the man!
Taking the time to spend your life learning the craft makes you great. You don’t have to be a virtuoso. Just be the best you can be. You improve every day.
Check out a guitar player called Jimi Hendrix. His timing was not metronomic. He did, however have a groove. Being very consistent in timing makes it easy for studios to piece together a final product. Staying in a groove, even if the tempo varies makes for a musically exciting performance. That is what a conductor in a symphony does, it keeps everyone on the same timing even as it varies. Being able to stay in time with a tempi is a necessary skill. Performance, particularly live performance, gets its energy from serving the music even if it means speeding up and slowing down. Hendrix is just one, a great one mind you, of many examples.
I came across your videos a few weeks ago and you have inspired me to finally learn guitar. I am 51yo and have bought and started learning guitar a few times over my life but something always seemed to screw it up be it work or family life. But I have really got the bug this time and have all the time in the world so I bought a cheap Donner guitar and amp pack off Ebay for now as from what I understand they are a very well made budget guitar. I signed up to your course last night and as soon as my guitar arrives I am getting stuck in. I will save for an Ibanez RGR221PA AQB Gio as I love that guitar and that should see me through for a while. So thanks for giving me the kick in the ass I needed to get stuck back into it Tyler and you keep shreddin man.
For young players. The first thing one might need is SUPPORT and encouragement from their family. If you can’t get a decent, playable instrument, and you can’t get lessons, and you can’t get they type of equipment one might need to learn (metronome/books/simple recording equipment or looping station) and finally it’s important to have a musical friend to help drive you to learn more, to push your boundaries. If one can’t get most of these things in the beginning, it’s gonna be much more difficult to learn or develop the main skills as you mentioned of Harmony, Melody, Rhythm and so fourth. One can drive themselves with a junk guitar that can’t be set up properly or intonated, with extreme high or low action, with no metronome, with minimal books. But it would take a TON of work. Really the same goes for an older beginner. Just have to support yourself or save and purchase your own gear. So many people are unable to ever even consider playing an instrument given the sheer cost of buying the instrument buying the lessons the toll it might take even on an older beginner on family time or school time… just a thought.
Ive played guitar for 4 years now and never have i ever experienced wrist pain till today, now seeing this on a video makes me feel easy knowing this is not something just wrong with me
I'm still a newbie, three years into learning guitar, I switched from visual arts at the ripe age of 72. I want to be really GOOD in twenty years... God willing. There is so much to Music; it never ends! But I like the pain, (I have arthritis, and had to have carpal tunnel surgery) no pun intended.
ALL your words ring true. I'm a couch guitar player but a gigging sax musician. I cannot tell you how true these words you spoke are. We listen to ourselves honestly. We hear constructive criticism honestly. We are blessed.
music 114 Me: how about you music theory guys give me an analysis of Jimi Hendrix's Woodstock performance of "The Star Spangled Banner"? Music theory guys: * sweats nervously *
The input jack on my guitar blew out this week so I've been playing unplugged all week. I couldn't agree more with the "unplugged" point, its really helped with "getting it right"
This is honestly one of if not THE best guitar-teaching video I've ever seen... Tyler know how to explains the guitar itself better than anyone on UA-cam. SUPER great job Also sorry if my English isn't good I'm French lol
If you ask me what makes a great player, I'd say taste. Listen to what you're saying with what you play, and yes, rhythm and syncopation are a very big part of that, as well as phrasing. Love these vids, keep em coming!
Tyler! Congrats - one of your BEST videos!!! So good and very well explained. Have fun at your summer camp, I bet you‘ll have a blast with that company - ENJOY! 👍🏼
More starting out guitarists need to hear this. I lost count how I have gotten those people who cram in every note they can into a riff but lost timing, or melody, tell me I suck because I just use music theory to be my road map to where and what to play. As for technique, I do strongly say to anyone I have ever taught spend a practice session making noise on your guitar. You might discover a sound or thing you did that you might want to use in your song, like Nirvana's song "Milk it" or Ozzy Osbourne's song "Crazy Train" both songs have more going on to it than you realize if you really listen.
After watching this video, I'm kind of having a crisis about my own guitar playing. I've been playing for 16 years, self-taught (too poor for lessons), blessed (and cursed) with perfect pitch, and can carry myself decently in most situations. It feels like I've bypassed the important fundamentals and in a sense, cheated my way as a guitarist. Not to say I'm amazing and I could be so much better but it's like I shouldn't be as good as I am. Maybe at the age of 30, itd be a good time to sit with a teacher and show them what all I've taught myself and see what else i can pick up.
Careful that self examination can lead to depression, just be honest with yourself about your skill level and be patient. Also compare yourself to other guitarists for inspiration but don't let frustrations that arise from that to guitapathy- the feeling that you will never get to the place they are. Just remember it's a journey of self discovery, even Segovia said on his deathbed that he had just scratched the surface of guitar playing. Keep rockin' guitar brethren!
Oh shit you got Dennis chambers? First time I heard and saw him was on the '92 Barcelona tape with he brecker Bros during a jazz band period in high school. That was one of those life changing moments
Great video, thank you! Timing of notes and breaks is also important, even with little flaws, like e.g. timing the pointe of a joke or effect words in speeches.
i would also say that, music it's very much a language, and you must talk a lot to develop a music personality, so i recommend improvisation over any chords and rhythms,,thats the only time when you realize what can't you express, and work on it...
Man, you broke me. I always believed i had the sexuality of a guitar hero and now you told me that IT DOESNT MATTERS! I'm so sad that I have to go back to the spider exercice and not the the vol 42 of "the extended Kama Sutra for aspiring rock legends".
As I was watching this very well made video, kudos Tyler! I kept thinking about something so I am going to run it by everyone here in the comments section. I think there are two professional guitarists that EVERY guitar player should look to as an example of what kind TO be and what kind NOT to be and here they are - The Professional guitarist everyone should try to be like: 1) Ace Frehley (Original KISS lead guitarist) . OK now I know immediately a bunch of you all laughed at that suggestion while a bunch probably said OK to. Hear me out on why I said Ace. I am NOT talking about a guitarist we should look to as far as his techniques and skill levels and various abilities and overall knowledge of music and the guitar. I am talking about his "attitude" towards playing guitar. Ace never had a guitar lesson, he cannot read guitar music and he himself has said, "I don't even really know how to play the thing, I just play it like I feel it.". That should be how we all look towards the guitar, how we feel it!! It doesn't matter if you can sweep pick until the cows come home, if you can't feel it, if it isn't moving you, it's not worth a damn! So, by ALL guitarists adopting to his mindset of just a pure love for the instrument and using that as the catalyst to further our knowledge of the instrument, I think it would make us all better guitarists. The Professional whose attitude about the guitar everyone should NOT try to be like: 2) Ace Frehley (Original KISS lead guitarist) Aha! See why I chose Ace? lol, while I love his attitude about playing the guitar, I hate his attitude about LEARNING and further educating our self on the instrument. He has been making music professionally for about 50 years now, and his skill set level has not changed much in all that time!! Ace cannot even use a pedal board!! He never messed with one while in KISS, lol imagine trying to hit a pedal switch in those boots!! In the 80's he had to use some pedals while making an album and he couldn't do it, his guitar tech had to operate his pedals for him while he was playing and recording!! Now of course Ace's overall skills have improved since he began 50 years ago, but he never took the time to learn that many new things, I doubt he can sweep pick, then again as fast as he can go up and down the strings with just regular up/down picking maybe he doesn't need to lol. He does finger tap but he uses his pick instead of his finger, KISS Alive 2 came out before Van Halen 1 and Ace is tapping on that album BEFORE EVH shocked the world!! lol. Ace has admitted that he doesn't even really know how to play the guitar, meaning he has no clue about theory or many different techniques, he just plays the scales and by feel and uses the same techniques over and over. So, any thoughts? Tyler?
Rhythm has been something that was foreign to me for a long time, i didn't understand how to apply it on my guitar, i just knew i had to hit the right note at the right fret and that's that.
nah, it's always a new guitar that makes you better
You are terribly correct , the more guitar you own the better of a player you are
Haha that's what i say too
You're partially correct, but true greatness comes from pedals.
@@stickysyrupfingers7676 MY LORD
You sir, are an enabler. I cannot abide by your wisdom because there is no such thing as BROKE-R.
I personally say it comes down to 3 elements:
1. Intimate knowledge of the instrument
2. Innate sense of music and sound
3. Ability to serve the song
Nothing said about dedication though? I feel like that's many players' downfall.
Dave Santini dedication? I don’t think that has anything to do with being great
I see your a fan of David Gilmour from this
@@unconventionalguitarist9129 sarcasm?
I'd love to stick all the super shredders in a room with Dave Gilmour so they could learn what feel and emotion are.
If you can do the "chicky chicky" part in "Smells like teen spirit " correctly, you're great.
😂😂 I love how everyone knows EXACTLY what you mean lmaooo
Rick Sanchezito in between the first f and b flat, there are only three of them
Yesss
GuitarGuy it gives me energy everytime I get it down pact
KingRichTv same
In my opinion, that great guitar player, is he who can express what words can’t...
Shots fired boom
This!
Finally someone hit it
WTF why lil wayne is not im the thumbnail?? He's like black hendrix.
and also Nick Jonas such a legend way better than Gilmore.
*thinks of Steavie Ts video on lil Wayne*
Hendrix is black
@@asti2062 it's a joke
@@VI-fq5do oh ok my bad
Being able to play the entire Stairway To Heaven in Guitar Center
Easy. I just ell them I am playing Spirit and that shuts them up.
Dude I pulled it off the other day at the guitar center. I played stairway to heaven, smoke on the water, crazy train, one, and the tapping port to eruption. They made me by a PRS as penitence. LOL
@@BanjoBezzy lmao
Upgrading from a squire to a prs wish me luck.
✌✌✌
Congrats!!
Here’s what I think makes a great guitar player. Let’s give an example of Dimebag Darrell. What made him great is that he gave off what could be called “his own sound”. He sounded like no other guitarist and showed people that they can have any sound.
other examples:Adam jones,kurt cobain,tom morello
@@jaguarflieger disagree with kurt cobain.
@@Dante-xf1mu he is unique until some people copied his sound
@@kalvsl not really his guitar skill was weak, sure his chord progressions were dark and sometimes spiritual. But he wouldn't come close on any list. Sure he's easily one of the best song writers. But guitarist is a bit of no no
@@tomclarkson1257 i didn't say that he's good. I said uniqueness of the sound of the guitar itself the tone.
The mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell
Preach!
The Crux of the biscuit is the apostrophe
What makes a guitar player great: Sick Toans
Hell yes!
Metal zoan, boss katana and butterscotch tele for best toans, ok?
T0anZ
Being able to play guitar
Don't listen to this guy, all you really need is butterscotch tele and boss katana.
Best tone, ok?
You are using hack bro
jambo handricks is not as good as tyler leeson
Jizz 3 too
Nah, put at least fifteen Boss Metal Zones on your board and you're instantly a rock god.
I think Legacy and Influence is what makes a guitarist great. Innovation, or simply being a master in a style(s), is what makes a legend, on top of all of such in my humble opinion.
Also, you sure you're not Rick Beato :D. Awesome work man!
Making the players around you feel good and comfortable.
1 word for making a guitar players great: pratice
Ah yes, as we all know pratice makes perfect
What is pratice?
Pratice make pefect 😂😂
I am only playing for about 8 months but i practice 5 hours a day and i can already play the back in black solo. So yeah practice is everything
Practice might not make perfect, but practice makes better. Eventually, better will be more than good enough. Practice, good practice, is everything. Only perfect practice makes perfect.
Being born at the right place, at the right time, and being prepared when the opportunity comes.
Being born in the 60s in San Francisco is the way to get good at guitar
I agree that practicing with drums, or a metronome, is a great rhythm exercise. I wouldn't say that every great guitarist practices with a metronome, though, because I heard Josh Smith say that he never used a metronome. I don't think a metronome is essential to fix poor timing, however fixing poor timing is essential, for good playing. Playing along with records is a good way to get a good feel for rhythm, possibly even better than a metronome, because nobody likes the sterile sound of perfectly quantized playing.
A good tip I heard is you want the metronome sound like it’s grooving
backing tracks can help a great deal as well
I am inclined to agree with you. I prefer playing/recording to drum tracks and backing tracks as I can get a better feel for the song and what I can do with it.
This has got to be one of the best breakdowns of the ingredients to great playing I have ever seen. You said it simply, but didn't oversimplify it. That's a testament to your growing teaching skill too =)
I love your videos every time in the morning that I wake up I just watch your videos over and over again
You're absolutely right man.
That chord you let ring out @3.23 was great
Dude the drummer at the end is something else! Look at the speed right before he pimp slaps one of the symbols, The video was blurring he was playing so fast, damn that was good !
This is one of the best and most complete videos to the related topic put there
Damn that solo of comfortably numb always gives me goosebumps....
Finger tone can be improved immensely on an acoustic. I’ve played acoustic for years and it has improved my tone when crossing into the electric guitar world
Me: clicks the link for the virtual guitar camp
*sees price *
*Clicks off *
I feel like $100 isn’t a bad price dude do you know how much time and effort Tyler probably put into this?
@@cookieman876 yeah, but I can't afford it
Cant remember but i assume its like a month subscription and for $100 going on anytime its better value then getting private lessons
I’m still getting my partscaster parts.
JJ Dryer Synyster Gates school is free
I’m a student at berklee and you’re videos helped me get in. you’re videos are also what are gonna help me try and shake the rock scene.
You know when I first subscribed to you, I don’t remember you being that good. I mean you was always freaking good, but you must’ve unlocked beast mode or something because you’re freaking tearing it up dude. I need to start woodshedding man. You’re inspiring bro.
Bro I just can't express how much I appreciate your vids and your perspective
The most important thing in playing guitar or doing anything in life is to have fun because everyone’s a critic especially other guitarist. People can tell you a million ways that you did something wrong and they can recommend you a million different things that they think you should do that would make you sound better to them but what a lot of guitarist don’t realize is it’s not about them it’s about you and how playing the instrument makes you feel. You’re the one who bought the instrument so play it how you want to and do whatever you gotta do to make yourself happy while playing it. If that means that you want to shred then shred, if that means you want to go slow and melodic then go slow and melodic, it’s different strokes for different folks and people need to realize that and stop trying to force their taste on someone else and let them find their own style.
Brand new video means that this is gonna be a pretty good day.👍
It's evening here in germany...
Oof, well then it's a good day/evening/night. There...all fixed now.🤣👍
Creativity and how one is able to connecte with the audience.
Is it just me or does James Hatfield check every one of those boxes?
Great stuff as always, Tyler
If all else fails you can head down to the cross roads.
This is like the best motivational video I've watched this year!
The ending advice transcends becoming a great guitarist it can be applied to many endeavors in life. I just bought a guitar after many years of thinking I just couldn't do it. Not only do I know now I can, I am glad I found your channel to further reinforce that sentiment! Thank you, you're the man!
Taking the time to spend your life learning the craft makes you great. You don’t have to be a virtuoso. Just be the best you can be. You improve every day.
Check out a guitar player called Jimi Hendrix. His timing was not metronomic. He did, however have a groove. Being very consistent in timing makes it easy for studios to piece together a final product. Staying in a groove, even if the tempo varies makes for a musically exciting performance. That is what a conductor in a symphony does, it keeps everyone on the same timing even as it varies. Being able to stay in time with a tempi is a necessary skill. Performance, particularly live performance, gets its energy from serving the music even if it means speeding up and slowing down. Hendrix is just one, a great one mind you, of many examples.
I came across your videos a few weeks ago and you have inspired me to finally learn guitar. I am 51yo and have bought and started learning guitar a few times over my life but something always seemed to screw it up be it work or family life. But I have really got the bug this time and have all the time in the world so I bought a cheap Donner guitar and amp pack off Ebay for now as from what I understand they are a very well made budget guitar. I signed up to your course last night and as soon as my guitar arrives I am getting stuck in. I will save for an Ibanez RGR221PA AQB Gio as I love that guitar and that should see me through for a while. So thanks for giving me the kick in the ass I needed to get stuck back into it Tyler and you keep shreddin man.
For young players. The first thing one might need is SUPPORT and encouragement from their family. If you can’t get a decent, playable instrument, and you can’t get lessons, and you can’t get they type of equipment one might need to learn (metronome/books/simple recording equipment or looping station) and finally it’s important to have a musical friend to help drive you to learn more, to push your boundaries. If one can’t get most of these things in the beginning, it’s gonna be much more difficult to learn or develop the main skills as you mentioned of Harmony, Melody, Rhythm and so fourth. One can drive themselves with a junk guitar that can’t be set up properly or intonated, with extreme high or low action, with no metronome, with minimal books. But it would take a TON of work. Really the same goes for an older beginner. Just have to support yourself or save and purchase your own gear. So many people are unable to ever even consider playing an instrument given the sheer cost of buying the instrument buying the lessons the toll it might take even on an older beginner on family time or school time… just a thought.
That comfortably numb part gave me SHIVERS.
you OPENED my eyes
Ive played guitar for 4 years now and never have i ever experienced wrist pain till today, now seeing this on a video makes me feel easy knowing this is not something just wrong with me
Wow man you’re great. Can’t wait for the guitar camp 🤘
I'm still a newbie, three years into learning guitar, I switched from visual arts at the ripe age of 72. I want to be really GOOD in twenty years... God willing. There is so much to Music; it never ends! But I like the pain, (I have arthritis, and had to have carpal tunnel surgery) no pun intended.
Im a bass player and I took some inspiration from these guitar tips and now Im gonna actually go and practice bye
Don felder of the eagles is criminally underrated
0:11 I do man, I hope to be at your level some day.
ALL your words ring true. I'm a couch guitar player but a gigging sax musician. I cannot tell you how true these words you spoke are. We listen to ourselves honestly. We hear constructive criticism honestly. We are blessed.
I fucking love your channel man
you’re such a great mentor im obsessed with your videos!
Music theory: were finally gonna get talked about
“Sad music theory noises”
I'm guessing these noises are in a minor key... because music theory says minor keys are sad, amirite? 😉
music 114
Me: how about you music theory guys give me an analysis of Jimi Hendrix's Woodstock performance of "The Star Spangled Banner"?
Music theory guys: * sweats nervously *
Dude, that Comfortably Numb solo was spot on and basically perfect
The input jack on my guitar blew out this week so I've been playing unplugged all week. I couldn't agree more with the "unplugged" point, its really helped with "getting it right"
This is honestly one of if not THE best guitar-teaching video I've ever seen... Tyler know how to explains the guitar itself better than anyone on UA-cam. SUPER great job
Also sorry if my English isn't good I'm French lol
This really made me look at my guitar playing in a different light man. Thanks! Very humbling introspect.
What makes a guitar player great is that they have a passion for what they do and want to keep improving it
Tyler: Crystal clear, HD video - 2020
Dennis: I'm sending you a video from 1998
Prince 💜
Basketball & guitar in one video? My day just got a whole lot better!
by far your best video
You ARE a great guitarist
this was really encouraging and motivational
Love that he has a Cinders Overdrive! One of the best value for money pedals out there!
The way you inspire❤
Insightful and great value. Got me self evaluating…… thanks - truly appreciated Rob
In my opinion is the edge “the” great guitarist, everyone who listened to more then one U2 song knows. Everything from this video fits spot on to him.
Man, you're a LEGEND!!!!
If you ask me what makes a great player, I'd say taste. Listen to what you're saying with what you play, and yes, rhythm and syncopation are a very big part of that, as well as phrasing. Love these vids, keep em coming!
I have watched multiple of your videos, i feel obligated to hit the red button.
One of your greatest video yet buddy! I apply a lot of your information of music to my band every week. Thank you and keep up the great work!
perfect tuning
Tyler! Congrats - one of your BEST videos!!! So good and very well explained.
Have fun at your summer camp, I bet you‘ll have a blast with that company - ENJOY! 👍🏼
Growth mindset +10! Very insightful Tyler, nice work!
More starting out guitarists need to hear this. I lost count how I have gotten those people who cram in every note they can into a riff but lost timing, or melody, tell me I suck because I just use music theory to be my road map to where and what to play. As for technique, I do strongly say to anyone I have ever taught spend a practice session making noise on your guitar. You might discover a sound or thing you did that you might want to use in your song, like Nirvana's song "Milk it" or Ozzy Osbourne's song "Crazy Train" both songs have more going on to it than you realize if you really listen.
great video, Tyler!
After watching this video, I'm kind of having a crisis about my own guitar playing. I've been playing for 16 years, self-taught (too poor for lessons), blessed (and cursed) with perfect pitch, and can carry myself decently in most situations. It feels like I've bypassed the important fundamentals and in a sense, cheated my way as a guitarist. Not to say I'm amazing and I could be so much better but it's like I shouldn't be as good as I am. Maybe at the age of 30, itd be a good time to sit with a teacher and show them what all I've taught myself and see what else i can pick up.
Great vid, great words. Thanx for sharing! And by the way, nice production too.
Interesting to see the progress over the years 🤟🏻🤩
Have a great day!
Careful that self examination can lead to depression, just be honest with yourself about your skill level and be patient. Also compare yourself to other guitarists for inspiration but don't let frustrations that arise from that to guitapathy- the feeling that you will never get to the place they are. Just remember it's a journey of self discovery, even Segovia said on his deathbed that he had just scratched the surface of guitar playing. Keep rockin' guitar brethren!
There's some amazing stuff in this video. I'm going to watch again and wallow in self improvement.
Cool video. I love the way you dissect subjects. You're a great teacher man.
Comopsition, whether its something completely new or a mastery of pre-existing techniques in any given style, its all about the riffs bro
Nice PRS, had one of those.
This was so freaking inspiring! Just thank you man, I will watch this alot!
Love is win. Thanks for tips
Well done.
Great video lesson Tyler, as much a lesson on mental strength and awareness as on musical technique, terrific, thank you. 👍❤️
Ha! I have that same shirt. Austin Guitar House. Anyhow, great video as always.
Thank you!
This video was extremely well made and was brilliant. Thank you
Oh shit you got Dennis chambers? First time I heard and saw him was on the '92 Barcelona tape with he brecker Bros during a jazz band period in high school. That was one of those life changing moments
Great video, thank you!
Timing of notes and breaks is also important, even with little flaws, like e.g. timing the pointe of a joke or effect words in speeches.
Can't wait until I have the time to watch this video later...
He’s right it’s all about rhythm
i would also say that, music it's very much a language, and you must talk a lot to develop a music personality, so i recommend improvisation over any chords and rhythms,,thats the only time when you realize what can't you express, and work on it...
What Hendrix had was technique, feel, phrasing, emotion expressed in phenomenal compositional and improvisational creativity.
Man, you broke me. I always believed i had the sexuality of a guitar hero and now you told me that IT DOESNT MATTERS!
I'm so sad that I have to go back to the spider exercice and not the the vol 42 of "the extended Kama Sutra for aspiring rock legends".
As I was watching this very well made video, kudos Tyler! I kept thinking about something so I am going to run it by everyone here in the comments section. I think there are two professional guitarists that EVERY guitar player should look to as an example of what kind TO be and what kind NOT to be and here they are -
The Professional guitarist everyone should try to be like:
1) Ace Frehley (Original KISS lead guitarist) . OK now I know immediately a bunch of you all laughed at that suggestion while a bunch probably said OK to. Hear me out on why I said Ace. I am NOT talking about a guitarist we should look to as far as his techniques and skill levels and various abilities and overall knowledge of music and the guitar. I am talking about his "attitude" towards playing guitar. Ace never had a guitar lesson, he cannot read guitar music and he himself has said, "I don't even really know how to play the thing, I just play it like I feel it.". That should be how we all look towards the guitar, how we feel it!! It doesn't matter if you can sweep pick until the cows come home, if you can't feel it, if it isn't moving you, it's not worth a damn! So, by ALL guitarists adopting to his mindset of just a pure love for the instrument and using that as the catalyst to further our knowledge of the instrument, I think it would make us all better guitarists.
The Professional whose attitude about the guitar everyone should NOT try to be like:
2) Ace Frehley (Original KISS lead guitarist) Aha! See why I chose Ace? lol, while I love his attitude about playing the guitar, I hate his attitude about LEARNING and further educating our self on the instrument. He has been making music professionally for about 50 years now, and his skill set level has not changed much in all that time!! Ace cannot even use a pedal board!! He never messed with one while in KISS, lol imagine trying to hit a pedal switch in those boots!! In the 80's he had to use some pedals while making an album and he couldn't do it, his guitar tech had to operate his pedals for him while he was playing and recording!! Now of course Ace's overall skills have improved since he began 50 years ago, but he never took the time to learn that many new things, I doubt he can sweep pick, then again as fast as he can go up and down the strings with just regular up/down picking maybe he doesn't need to lol. He does finger tap but he uses his pick instead of his finger, KISS Alive 2 came out before Van Halen 1 and Ace is tapping on that album BEFORE EVH shocked the world!! lol. Ace has admitted that he doesn't even really know how to play the guitar, meaning he has no clue about theory or many different techniques, he just plays the scales and by feel and uses the same techniques over and over.
So, any thoughts? Tyler?
Rhythm has been something that was foreign to me for a long time, i didn't understand how to apply it on my guitar, i just knew i had to hit the right note at the right fret and that's that.
Very good content. Well put together . thank you for your hard work. you deserve the recognition. God bless rock on. subscribed.