*Join our Patreon lessons group free for seven days* www.patreon.com/guitarlessonsvancouver. The book *Guitar Soloing Like A Pro is available from Amazon* details at www.bluemorris.com/shop
Friend of mine couldn’t bar his cords when he first started playing, so he played inversions without the E root, but eventually realized he could thumb the top string. He got so much better that I had to start playing drums to be in a band with him. Never knew those were called inversions or that triads were called triads. For a lot of self taught players that stuff is just logically stumbled upon without knowing the terms. It’s nice to hear them explained clearly.
Man dude, you're an awesome teacher! simple methods that other teachers complicate just to confuse students to bait and switch them to the paywall. You give great information with fully formed thoughts, and then state acall for action. Great content and your channel should take off like a rocket! A sincere thank you!
I want to encourage all players to learn this stuff. However, don't get discouraged if this takes a LONG time. I have been working on fluidly moving through the 5 major and 5 minor shapes across the fretboard and learning all my triad shapes for the last 7 months. I am finally seeing the light at the end of the tunnel but still have a ways to go. Next, I need to add 7th chords and triads. FYI, I practice for an hour 6-7 days a week. Don't be surprised or discouraged if this takes a year. Just keep going. Like anything else, progress takes hard work. Thanks Blue. Every time I watch one of your videos, I learn something. FYI, I bought your soloing book but haven't started yet.
@@ssm445 First I assume you are familiar with the CAGED system. If not, watch some videos on that first. That will help a lot. I go through the 5 shapes for each key starting as close to fret 1 as I can(where the whole shape fits on the fretboard) and I go up and down the fretboard, (at least to fret 12 and back) Keep in mind that sometimes the C shape is the first one that fits, sometimes A(then you play AGEDC), sometimes, G(play GEDCA), etc.I do this for all 12 keys in the order of the circle of 4th's(It's just the circle of 5th's in the other direction. The 4th's just progress nicely up the fretboard.) I then I pick a common chord progression like a 1,4,5 (for instance G,C,D, but choose a different one every day). I start with G major and play that shape as close to fret 1 as I can that the whole shape fits, then the C major shape that fits in that same 4-5 fret area, then, D major shape that fits in the same area. Then I move over to the next G shape and do the same thing going through the chord progression while staying in the same area of the fretboard. I do this for all 5 G,C,D shapes. As I got better, I also played the chord within each shape and all the triads within each shape. You pretty quickly see how the scales, chords and triads fit together. When I got comfortable withe the major chords/shapes, I added in the minor. The minor shapes are the same as the major shapes, just moved over one shape although the root notes are in different places. So learning the minor doesn't take anywhere near as much time as major.This will make sense when you start doing it. I hope that helps. This routine has really helped me understand everything but as I said, it takes time and effort. I sometimes take a day or two break, to learn a song or solo to break things up but I'm not stopping what I am doing until I can do everything effortlessly. I have already made significant progress. If you have questions about what I wrote, reply and I will try to clarify. Blue, any comments on what I am doing?
What is the difference between the Major vs. Minor shapes? Are you talking 7 note major vs. 5 note penta, or major and minor penta which are the same shape- you just shift so your pinky is on the root. Same notes but root will be in a different spot. It is the relative minor you can play when it is major. It does not work the opposite way, if it is minor, you can never play a major scale.
Great lesson! I would add, learn the Caged system. it will take a year or so get it down good, at least a good year… But once you start getting it down, it opens up the entire fret board and you can navigate freely!
You asked for it Blue: Another landmark could be: the BC EF half stop conurbation (nice, eh) is at several locations on the fretboard, laid out as a perfect 4 note square on 2 strings. Know those boxes, and you are off to the full step D G and A located in close reference above and below these 4 note boxes! (WAIT - Shouldnt i be copyrighting this stuff) naw....there you have it the full C scale on each location. Go from there for the other keys.
I've been really getting into the CAGED system.This lesson is a see the light moment. Im clearly a decent Intermediate player. This easy system... The refetence points system really makes sense. Thanks Great teacher. Clear and logical
Great thanks! It's such a useful system I still use it myself today. Lots more lesson videos on the channel and our Patreon group if you haven't already check that out: www.patreon.com/guitarlessonsvancouver
Man this is SO helpful! Connecting knowledge in the guitar and coming clear about the real thinking process going on while your playing live, with no BS. We guitarrists have an amazing instrument that allows us to move using shapes, and doing things musically so AFTER that we start learning theory from the use of that. I love the way you showed us all of this. Subscribed and shared this video with friends! Thanks A LOT!
Thanks for the great video. Really useful info presented well. I’m not sure now how I learned to remember where chords are in the first place but definitely learning and recognising the 3 string triad shapes on EBG and BGD are really useful. These mini chords are used regularly in guitar music. Learning the change of shape with a progression like a I IV V e.g. G C and D on the EBG strings all along the neck is really useful and helpful to progress. Then you see the sequence of shape change becomes a pattern itself that is easy to remember. Do same for BGD and they become recognisable in all sorts songs rhythm and lead guitar parts.
This is definitely the kind of stuff we need! So many people learning guitar are always struggling with...should I learn scales...pentatonic...caged...etc...including myself. We need something all in one basket to understand. Thank you so much ❤❤❤❤❤
I love the straight forward explanation. I memorized the fretboard i learned the 5 caged pentatonic scales the major scales ive been playing guitar since the 80's. This is Gold. Triads inversions modes its a lot to tackle. But this allows me to comp, with out hours and hours of practice. Great tutorial im gonna watch it 25 times. Thank you love the Nashville Tele
Recently discovered your channel and just wanted to say thank you for all your content. I was stuck in a guitar rut for awhile and your videos really gave me a new understanding of the fretboard. Best guitar UA-cam channel out there. You’re the best man
I’m gonna give this a go. I have spent the last 6 months navigating the Fretboard using intervals & it has improved my playing ten fold. Maybe this is the final step that brings it all together? Thanks for the concept!👍
Just learn the whole fretboard. It is soo worth it. And you got plenty of time to learn it. I mean, you gonna play guitar for the rest of your life. So you just have to overcome your lazyness.
Another excellent video blue. Teaching us to fish, rather than giving us a fish etc. I'm so in agreement that getting those E and A notes memorised opens up the fretboard so much more to try to put these ideas into practice..
Brilliant , you are brilliant to explain the most usefull concepts. that's far more easier than how most of the people teach the caged system, in reality in that way it's easy to get lost and missing the connection with scales. Understand pratically, visually triads it's far more easier, thank you for that! I now really can connect everything really well with your simpler system and how to look at the freatboard
Thanks Blue, Great summary that helps to carry on improving! Theory is great and necessary to understand and progress but as you say several times... when playing, and that's what really makes fun, it flows much better if you just have clear landmarks to know where you are and what to do with theese concepts and shapes that work well to make it all simpler...
Great explanation. I teach guitar but have very little knowledge such as this, so will refer students to it. I learned mostly from a couple of tab books and picking out tunes so I struggle with lead playing but this will help a lot, thanks
Thank you, glad to hear it. I use this method in several videos. As a teacher yourself, you might be interested in this video which briefly outlines my method for teaching students who want to solo: ua-cam.com/video/42ojThKZqAI/v-deo.html
Blue, every video you make is helpful, even though I'm an intermediate player. I use those same landmarks all the time. The more I learn "complicated" passages, the more dexterity I develop...and the more shapes I remember relative to each other... ...using landmarks! (Like chords or triads with licks & dbl-stops.) Thanks for continuing to do these videos! Keep up the excellent fun! 👌 👍 🤪
This is great! Ive been using these approaches, but your explanation helps articulate it and tie them together. Man, this approach helps keep I IV V strumming songs more interesting. On Neon Moon, I use an A inversion to simulate the sweet sound of a pedal steel, which my band doesn't have. Also, it helps provide an alternative to what the other guitarist is playing. That way, the band has a wider, fuller sound without duplicating the sound of one position. Thanks.
My original intention was I wanted to be able to find the 5 basic chord types with a root on the 5th and on the 6th string: major, minor, dominant 7, diminished and half-diminished. So I memorised the ‘landmarks’. Jazz was and is my primary interest, and if the chart says F#m7b5, well, you can’t spend time working that out! Simple, and very effective. 😀
Good lesson , …joe b said , if you have to think, you’re already to far behind, anything. You don’t think when you get on a bike and ride, the guitar has to be like that , you just play from knowing and knowing from playing all the time. But I like they way you taught the breakdown of how and the application.
I think that describes the way it feels to play guitar only after years of study. Playing guitar is far more complex than riding a bike. Thanks for watching and commenting!
You can associate scale shapes with triad and arpeggio shapes. For example, think "whenever I have this arpeggio or triad, it is connected to this pentatonic shape." We do this kind of work on our Patreon group. See the "Six Steps" series: www.patreon.com/posts/six-steps-shape-92676762
Blue my man you are a most excellent guitar teacher! You have a way of turning lightbulbs on in my head and after starting to finally get serious about guitar in my 40's about idk 7 years ago I have learned thats not easy. Lots of mindless noodling if Im not focused on a task. Thank you, I highly recommend your patreon page! I would love to see you do a deep dive on Yellow Leadbetter by Pearl Jam!!!
I totally agree but I’d like to add knowing the notes on the b string as well. This was a game changer for me as it allowed me to easily visualize all the D and C shaped chords. So if you know the notes on the low E and A strings, you also know the notes on the high E string. Just adding the notes on the B string really opened up the fretboard for me.
There are shortcuts yes, but the best thing to do is memorize every note on your fretboard and all the notes in major,minor, and pentatonic and blues scales .
True. The best way to do that is to memorize one key at a time. E.g., start with C, E, G Then D... and so on. If you jam in a certain key long enough and use a real time tuner, like a Peterson Strobo, you can visually see what notes you are hitting in near real time. Very useful during the changes. I play quietly until I map out the changes- then you hit them with more confidence and land on the right note as needed. I don't track every change- I think it sounds better to mess around in the scale, but at important times, land on the right note. Doing it too often, at least to me is boring and sounds too clinical. I am able to do it- especially when playing jazz, but most of the time, and especially in blues, I like to have fun and mix it up. I rarely miss the turn-around though.
UGH! Last thing I needed was another badass guitar channel! Glad I found you. I learned CAGED system and arpeggios before i could ever play. Now I'm ready to learn to put it all together. I was determined to know the fret board before I ever learned to play. Weird, but maybe it will pay off.
I didn't realize I was using landmarks on the 1,2 (and 6) strings to find stuff until you organized it in my mind. adding the scales was a light bulb moment for me though.
loved this lesson. Here's an idea for a future lesson. I'd love to see a lesson if possible to show me the 3rd , 5th and 7th degrees in the "Funny B" shape and the shape 3 "Triple stack". You have done already for the the easy shape. Thanks
I'm a patron, I have the book. With some of us with no talent (yes, that's a thing), and the memory capacity of a gnat, still years of frustration. But we keep plugging away.
"How a guitarist's mind works" or "Inside the guitarist's mind" could be good subtitles for this (awesome) lesson. (Both a little ripe for satire, I realize, but that's alright.) Levelling up!
It looks easy when someone else does it. But the video has stopped and you have to remember what you need to do, that’s a different game. Don’t be ashamed to watch the video a dozen of times before you’re starting to get it.
Thank you! Most of my videos are recorded through the UA Dream 65 pedal. Basically a Fender Deluxe. With reverb, short tape delay, and some compression after the recording.
I mean that both of those are C chords. One is an inversion of the other. Not necessarily that it cones next. Just that it's a variation, or inversion, of the first. Hope that helps. 🙂
When I was a judo teacher the new people asked me, why can you fight with everybody so easily. I said: I also did not learn it in a few weeks. It took me 7 years to feel comfortable with the basics. It is the same with guitar 🤭
Not really. Only seems that way because you are not used to doing it. I am not too bright and can do it. It just has to click, then you will realize this is quite simple. Music is a language. You speak and write English which is far more complex. Notes and letters and chords are words that make up phrases. Listen more than you speak (play) and you will appear more interesting. When you speak, make it count.
this is really not all that earthshattering, it's just another way to negotiate the fretboard. One still has to learn all of this over time just like they have to learn anything, with lots of practice and repetition
Thanks! You are right it's not a beginner lesson. It does combine a bunch of lessons from my channel, which are more step by step. Hope to see you here again.
Whatever gets you the answer the quickest is good. My students have all found this method faster especially since memorizing the entire fretboard is a little daunting. That being said, in the long run, I do recommend we memorize it all. That opens up more things that can be quicker to find, like triads with roots on the B string.
It may seem like it but that’s not the case, most of this lesson is based on moveable patterns but takes some getting your head around it. A series of light bulb moments will go off in your head when it clicks, hang in there. Good to watch other guitar teachers teaching the same concepts so that you hear this stuff explained in different ways that usually works for me.
My knowledge of theory is emphatically not advanced and I understand this pretty well. root note, 3rd/5th intervals are foundational music theory concepts and stuff like the pentatonic shapes is foundational guitar theory stuff.
Simple. 7 notes in the Major Scale. DO Re Mi Fa So La Ti and back to DO (octave-8th is again 1 and starts over- e.g., Open E note top string is same at fret 12 top string, only one octave higher in pitch.) That's it. When they refer to numbers, like a chord triad is a ROOT, 3rd and 5th, it means that C is the 1 (or root), E is the 3rd...why? C, D, E. What is 5? G. Because C, D, E, F, G. That is the notes of that chord. Dead simple. Everything in music for the most part is based around this dead simple concept. Now you own it for the rest of your life. If a chord PROGRESSION is say a I, IV, V...what does that mean? Look at your scale...C chord, F chord and G chord. Note, the key of C does not have any sharps or flats which is why I used it. Those are easy to learn too. Get a teacher who will walk you through the dead simple musical alphabet. They use a simple formula to determine scales using degrees of the scale. Same goes with modes...but it is ALL based around the dead simple MAJOR SCALE. I hope this helped. Now you know more than 98% of all beginners.
@@doodoo871well said !!! And like the other commenter in here said , lights will come on …. It tool me ten years to connect the dots like this video explains …. Im a d d and very hungry for the “ big picture “ …. My first guitar teacher wasted a couple years not showing me this concept
You can slow down the video on UA-cam if you want to see the musical examples slower -- there's video speed in the settings. Also, we have tabs for the videos on our Patreon www.patreon.com/guitarlessonsvancouver
*Join our Patreon lessons group free for seven days* www.patreon.com/guitarlessonsvancouver. The book *Guitar Soloing Like A Pro is available from Amazon* details at www.bluemorris.com/shop
this is all so cool stuff,very helpfull,easy to understand,thanx. from Spain
@@rolfjanssen Great to hear thank you! Lots more lessons like it on the channel here :)
Friend of mine couldn’t bar his cords when he first started playing, so he played inversions without the E root, but eventually realized he could thumb the top string. He got so much better that I had to start playing drums to be in a band with him. Never knew those were called inversions or that triads were called triads. For a lot of self taught players that stuff is just logically stumbled upon without knowing the terms. It’s nice to hear them explained clearly.
That's an interesting way around the bar chords. Probably not the first to do that. Thanks for watching and commenting 😀
Man dude, you're an awesome teacher! simple methods that other teachers complicate just to confuse students to bait and switch them to the paywall. You give great information with fully formed thoughts, and then state acall for action. Great content and your channel should take off like a rocket! A sincere thank you!
Thank you that's great to hear! 👍🎸
So COOL , U REALLY MAKE EVERYTHING SO SIMPLE & EASY TO UNDERSTAND. THANK U AGAIN.
Thank you! Glad it's helping!
I want to encourage all players to learn this stuff. However, don't get discouraged if this takes a LONG time. I have been working on fluidly moving through the 5 major and 5 minor shapes across the fretboard and learning all my triad shapes for the last 7 months. I am finally seeing the light at the end of the tunnel but still have a ways to go. Next, I need to add 7th chords and triads. FYI, I practice for an hour 6-7 days a week. Don't be surprised or discouraged if this takes a year. Just keep going. Like anything else, progress takes hard work. Thanks Blue. Every time I watch one of your videos, I learn something. FYI, I bought your soloing book but haven't started yet.
Thank you for the great comment! And for getting the book 😎👍
Truth
Do you have practice routine suggestions for it?
@@ssm445 First I assume you are familiar with the CAGED system. If not, watch some videos on that first. That will help a lot. I go through the 5 shapes for each key starting as close to fret 1 as I can(where the whole shape fits on the fretboard) and I go up and down the fretboard, (at least to fret 12 and back) Keep in mind that sometimes the C shape is the first one that fits, sometimes A(then you play AGEDC), sometimes, G(play GEDCA), etc.I do this for all 12 keys in the order of the circle of 4th's(It's just the circle of 5th's in the other direction. The 4th's just progress nicely up the fretboard.) I then I pick a common chord progression like a 1,4,5 (for instance G,C,D, but choose a different one every day). I start with G major and play that shape as close to fret 1 as I can that the whole shape fits, then the C major shape that fits in that same 4-5 fret area, then, D major shape that fits in the same area. Then I move over to the next G shape and do the same thing going through the chord progression while staying in the same area of the fretboard. I do this for all 5 G,C,D shapes. As I got better, I also played the chord within each shape and all the triads within each shape. You pretty quickly see how the scales, chords and triads fit together. When I got comfortable withe the major chords/shapes, I added in the minor. The minor shapes are the same as the major shapes, just moved over one shape although the root notes are in different places. So learning the minor doesn't take anywhere near as much time as major.This will make sense when you start doing it. I hope that helps. This routine has really helped me understand everything but as I said, it takes time and effort. I sometimes take a day or two break, to learn a song or solo to break things up but I'm not stopping what I am doing until I can do everything effortlessly. I have already made significant progress. If you have questions about what I wrote, reply and I will try to clarify. Blue, any comments on what I am doing?
What is the difference between the Major vs. Minor shapes? Are you talking 7 note major vs. 5 note penta, or major and minor penta which are the same shape- you just shift so your pinky is on the root. Same notes but root will be in a different spot. It is the relative minor you can play when it is major. It does not work the opposite way, if it is minor, you can never play a major scale.
Great lesson! I would add, learn the Caged system. it will take a year or so get it down good, at least a good year… But once you start getting it down, it opens up the entire fret board and you can navigate freely!
Need to learn that...and all the notes on the board.
You asked for it Blue: Another landmark could be: the BC EF half stop conurbation (nice, eh) is at several locations on the fretboard, laid out as a perfect 4 note square on 2 strings. Know those boxes, and you are off to the full step D G and A located in close reference above and below these 4 note boxes! (WAIT - Shouldnt i be copyrighting this stuff) naw....there you have it the full C scale on each location. Go from there for the other keys.
Thanks the videos. You fill a really nice niche on the web between song lessons and hard core theory. I really enjoy these!
Great to hear thank you! More coming soon!
Thanks Bluemorris. Simple and straight forward teaching. Love your approach.
Thank you very much!
I've been really getting into the CAGED system.This lesson is a see the light moment.
Im clearly a decent
Intermediate player. This easy system... The refetence points system really makes sense.
Thanks Great teacher. Clear and logical
Great thanks! It's such a useful system I still use it myself today. Lots more lesson videos on the channel and our Patreon group if you haven't already check that out: www.patreon.com/guitarlessonsvancouver
This is a fantastic video. It simplified all the musical concepts discussed and made them more functionally available for me! Thanks!!!!
Thank you! Lots more guitar lessons like this on the channel and our Patreon www.patreon.com/guitarlessonsvancouver
Man this is SO helpful! Connecting knowledge in the guitar and coming clear about the real thinking process going on while your playing live, with no BS. We guitarrists have an amazing instrument that allows us to move using shapes, and doing things musically so AFTER that we start learning theory from the use of that. I love the way you showed us all of this. Subscribed and shared this video with friends! Thanks A LOT!
Wonderful thanks for sharing out the video! Lots more guitar lesson videos coming to the channel and Patreon www.patreon.com/guitarlessonsvancouver
You would love True Fire too. I signed up- very high quality site with amazing teachers...like this guy. He is very good too.
Thanks for the great video. Really useful info presented well. I’m not sure now how I learned to remember where chords are in the first place but definitely learning and recognising the 3 string triad shapes on EBG and BGD are really useful. These mini chords are used regularly in guitar music. Learning the change of shape with a progression like a I IV V e.g. G C and D on the EBG strings all along the neck is really useful and helpful to progress. Then you see the sequence of shape change becomes a pattern itself that is easy to remember. Do same for BGD and they become recognisable in all sorts songs rhythm and lead guitar parts.
This is definitely the kind of stuff we need! So many people learning guitar are always struggling with...should I learn scales...pentatonic...caged...etc...including myself. We need something all in one basket to understand. Thank you so much ❤❤❤❤❤
Thank you! More like it coming to the channel 👍
best guitar lesson in my entire life, thank you so much !!
Wow, thanks! Lots more lessons on the channel and on our Patreon www.patreon.com/guitarlessonsvancouver
Do True Fire and you can get this type of content 24/7
I love the straight forward explanation. I memorized the fretboard i learned the 5 caged pentatonic scales the major scales ive been playing guitar since the 80's. This is Gold. Triads inversions modes its a lot to tackle. But this allows me to comp, with out hours and hours of practice. Great tutorial im gonna watch it 25 times. Thank you love the Nashville Tele
Great to hear thank you! Lots more lessons on the channel and more coming soon!
Recently discovered your channel and just wanted to say thank you for all your content. I was stuck in a guitar rut for awhile and your videos really gave me a new understanding of the fretboard. Best guitar UA-cam channel out there. You’re the best man
Great to hear! Thank you! More coming.
Every word you speak is gold dust ...
Great to hear thanks! Lots more guitar lesson videos on our channel and Patreon www.patreon.com/guitarlessonsvancouver
I’m gonna give this a go. I have spent the last 6 months navigating the Fretboard using intervals & it has improved my playing ten fold. Maybe this is the final step that brings it all together? Thanks for the concept!👍
Just learn the whole fretboard. It is soo worth it. And you got plenty of time to learn it. I mean, you gonna play guitar for the rest of your life. So you just have to overcome your lazyness.
This help me ALOT!!! Thanks! Your Awesome!
Glad to hear it! Thank you!
Dude.. such a cool lesson.
Pretty close to my level of understanding.
I'll watch over this one a few times. Loved it. And your delivery 🤠
Where were you when I took guitar lessons for for years. Awesome job!
This is gold. Thanks!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Another excellent video blue. Teaching us to fish, rather than giving us a fish etc.
I'm so in agreement that getting those E and A notes memorised opens up the fretboard so much more to try to put these ideas into practice..
Thank you again! 😎
Brilliant , you are brilliant to explain the most usefull concepts. that's far more easier than how most of the people teach the caged system, in reality in that way it's easy to get lost and missing the connection with scales. Understand pratically, visually triads it's far more easier, thank you for that!
I now really can connect everything really well with your simpler system and how to look at the freatboard
Thank you very much! Glad it's been helpful for you. Lots more coming :)
@@GuitarLessonsVancouver you are welcome! I like how you are teaching and I found your method to give names for geometries or whatever is brilliant!
Buddy, this is gold. Good job.
Thank you very much! More coming soon!
Thanks Blue, Great summary that helps to carry on improving! Theory is great and necessary to understand and progress but as you say several times... when playing, and that's what really makes fun, it flows much better if you just have clear landmarks to know where you are and what to do with theese concepts and shapes that work well to make it all simpler...
Thank you! Much appreciated!
Gracias x tu aporte Blue!! Otro gran video!!!
Thank you for your support José!!!!
excellent lesson i have learnt so much thank you
This is the kind of video we really love!!! Thank you so much
Great to hear thank you. More like it coming 😀
Great explanation. I teach guitar but have very little knowledge such as this, so will refer students to it. I learned mostly from a couple of tab books and picking out tunes so I struggle with lead playing but this will help a lot, thanks
Thank you, glad to hear it. I use this method in several videos. As a teacher yourself, you might be interested in this video which briefly outlines my method for teaching students who want to solo: ua-cam.com/video/42ojThKZqAI/v-deo.html
Blue, every video you make is helpful, even though I'm an intermediate player.
I use those same landmarks all the time.
The more I learn "complicated" passages, the more dexterity I develop...and the more shapes I remember relative to each other...
...using landmarks!
(Like chords or triads with licks & dbl-stops.)
Thanks for continuing to do these videos!
Keep up the excellent fun!
👌 👍 🤪
Thank you! I appreciate you watching these videos and commenting. More coming!
Great explanation and concepts. Simple and useful.
Thank you! Lots more guitar lessons on the channel!
You are an awesome teacher.
Thank you! 😃
This is absolutely essential!! Can't thank you enough for this lesson, man. Break through moments
Great to hear thank you! Lots more guitar lessons like it on the channel!
It sounds so beautiful
Thank you for saying 👍🎸
Great lesson. I have been getting such valuable knowledge from your videos. Thank you so much.
Glad to hear it, thank you!
Without doubt excellence
Thank you! Lots more lessons on the channel and our Patreon www.patreon.com/guitarlessonsvancouver
Fantastic lesson - thank you
Thanks for watching and commenting!
You're the best!!!! Love Saturday lessons
Great to see you here in the comments. Thanks for your support!
This is great! Ive been using these approaches, but your explanation helps articulate it and tie them together. Man, this approach helps keep I IV V strumming songs more interesting. On Neon Moon, I use an A inversion to simulate the sweet sound of a pedal steel, which my band doesn't have.
Also, it helps provide an alternative to what the other guitarist is playing. That way, the band has a wider, fuller sound without duplicating the sound of one position. Thanks.
Cool sounds like you are really putting these ideas to use. Well done!
My original intention was I wanted to be able to find the 5 basic chord types with a root on the 5th and on the 6th string: major, minor, dominant 7, diminished and half-diminished. So I memorised the ‘landmarks’. Jazz was and is my primary interest, and if the chart says F#m7b5, well, you can’t spend time working that out! Simple, and very effective. 😀
Thank you! Glad the video helped. Lots more lessons on this channel coming :)
Thank you
Thank you! Lots more lessons coming :)
Nice lesson!! This help me to think different
Glad to hear it, thank you!!
Good lesson , …joe b said , if you have to think, you’re already to far behind, anything. You don’t think when you get on a bike and ride, the guitar has to be like that , you just play from knowing and knowing from playing all the time. But I like they way you taught the breakdown of how and the application.
I think that describes the way it feels to play guitar only after years of study. Playing guitar is far more complex than riding a bike. Thanks for watching and commenting!
Do you used CAGED? When you play the inversions...how do you know which pentatonic position goes along with it?
You can associate scale shapes with triad and arpeggio shapes. For example, think "whenever I have this arpeggio or triad, it is connected to this pentatonic shape." We do this kind of work on our Patreon group. See the "Six Steps" series: www.patreon.com/posts/six-steps-shape-92676762
@@GuitarLessonsVancouver Thanks. Good tip!
I been using your e and A method for minor pentatonic scales.
Awesome well done!
Everything workable goes back to the Fred Sokolow Road maps in which I have a full library. Nice video sir thanks
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it. I've never read those Sokolow books but I have heard good things about them.
Blue my man you are a most excellent guitar teacher! You have a way of turning lightbulbs on in my head and after starting to finally get serious about guitar in my 40's about idk 7 years ago I have learned thats not easy. Lots of mindless noodling if Im not focused on a task. Thank you, I highly recommend your patreon page! I would love to see you do a deep dive on Yellow Leadbetter by Pearl Jam!!!
Thank you very much! Yellow Ledbetter is a good idea. I'll put that on the list. See you on Patreon 👍🎸
Great video. Thumbs up, indeed!
Thanks for watching and commenting! Lots more lessons on the channel :)
I totally agree but I’d like to add knowing the notes on the b string as well. This was a game changer for me as it allowed me to easily visualize all the D and C shaped chords. So if you know the notes on the low E and A strings, you also know the notes on the high E string. Just adding the notes on the B string really opened up the fretboard for me.
I agree, the notes on the B string can give us some good triad shapes :)
Learn ALL the notes.
Love the way you describe each step , makes life SOOOO easy .kiss method
Thanks a lot 😊
Fantastic as always😊
Thank you for your support 😎🎸
There are shortcuts yes, but the best thing to do is memorize every note on your fretboard and all the notes in major,minor, and pentatonic and blues scales .
True. The best way to do that is to memorize one key at a time. E.g., start with C, E, G Then D... and so on. If you jam in a certain key long enough and use a real time tuner, like a Peterson Strobo, you can visually see what notes you are hitting in near real time. Very useful during the changes. I play quietly until I map out the changes- then you hit them with more confidence and land on the right note as needed. I don't track every change- I think it sounds better to mess around in the scale, but at important times, land on the right note. Doing it too often, at least to me is boring and sounds too clinical. I am able to do it- especially when playing jazz, but most of the time, and especially in blues, I like to have fun and mix it up. I rarely miss the turn-around though.
Love that Tele.
Thank you! It's a unique tele but very handy to have that extra pickup for sure.
@@GuitarLessonsVancouverThe first solid body electric guitar. I have a squier Tele, do you know how they came up the name of Telecaster ?
UGH! Last thing I needed was another badass guitar channel! Glad I found you. I learned CAGED system and arpeggios before i could ever play. Now I'm ready to learn to put it all together. I was determined to know the fret board before I ever learned to play. Weird, but maybe it will pay off.
Happy to have you here! Lots more lessons on the channel and more coming :)
@@GuitarLessonsVancouver listened to you all day while I worked. Love the channel. Damn good content!
@@stevenmonte7397 Thank you!!!
I didn't realize I was using landmarks on the 1,2 (and 6) strings to find stuff until you organized it in my mind. adding the scales was a light bulb moment for me though.
Awesome, glad that helped! It's such an efficient system. I still think of the fretboard in these ways today.
The best system without doubt
Thank you!
Cool guitar bro
loved this lesson. Here's an idea for a future lesson. I'd love to see a lesson if possible to show me the 3rd , 5th and 7th degrees in the "Funny B" shape and the shape 3 "Triple stack". You have done already for the the easy shape. Thanks
Good idea thank you! Target notes on shape 3 is a good idea. I'll add that to my list.
Thanks 🙏
Thanks for watching 🎸
I'm a patron, I have the book. With some of us with no talent (yes, that's a thing), and the memory capacity of a gnat, still years of frustration. But we keep plugging away.
Thanks for your support! You can do it!
Love it.👍
Thank you! Cheers!
Good stuff thank you
Thanks for watching. Lots more guitar lessons on the channel 👍
I've been working on that lick. Having fun with it. Is it rock?
Nice looking Tele.
Thank you! American Professional Nashville Telecaster
"How a guitarist's mind works" or "Inside the guitarist's mind" could be good subtitles for this (awesome) lesson. (Both a little ripe for satire, I realize, but that's alright.) Levelling up!
Thank you! Much appreciated!
It looks easy when someone else does it. But the video has stopped and you have to remember what you need to do, that’s a different game. Don’t be ashamed to watch the video a dozen of times before you’re starting to get it.
Thanks! Indeed there is a lot covered in this video. Thanks for watching 😎👍
Your guitar sounds great, how do you get that tone?
Thank you! Most of my videos are recorded through the UA Dream 65 pedal. Basically a Fender Deluxe. With reverb, short tape delay, and some compression after the recording.
Like your Maui Shirt & most the lessons
Thank you! I love Maui. Wish I could go there evert year.
Isn’t the C/G inversion actually just an “F” shape chord?
Every “E” shaped Bar Chord can be made into an ”F” shape on the same frets no?
I still didn’t get the double stop bit 🙁
FYI At the end of the video 14:35 you have an Arrow pointing to blank space (No video link for "cool" links... )
Oops thank you. Fixed now. Must have forgotten to add the licks video: ua-cam.com/video/yBaFXm9kek8/v-deo.htmlsi=izrdAdoYR2Ub5Yzr
@@GuitarLessonsVancouver P.S Love your content! EXTREAMLY helpful!
@@djbny2la thank you very much!!
I dont get what he means at 4:40. How does us knowing the first chord mean we'll know the other chord?
I mean that both of those are C chords. One is an inversion of the other. Not necessarily that it cones next. Just that it's a variation, or inversion, of the first. Hope that helps. 🙂
When I was a judo teacher the new people asked me, why can you fight with everybody so easily. I said: I also did not learn it in a few weeks. It took me 7 years to feel comfortable with the basics. It is the same with guitar 🤭
True it takes a lot of time and practice. But so worth it!
Really complex.
Not really. Only seems that way because you are not used to doing it. I am not too bright and can do it. It just has to click, then you will realize this is quite simple. Music is a language. You speak and write English which is far more complex. Notes and letters and chords are words that make up phrases. Listen more than you speak (play) and you will appear more interesting. When you speak, make it count.
@@MOAB-UT Ok thanks. I'll take another look.
good
Thanks for watching and commenting! Lots more lessons coming here to the channel!
What model tele is that?
It's an American Professional Nasville Telecaster. They don't make many of these. Strat pickup in the middle.
this is really not all that earthshattering, it's just another way to negotiate the fretboard. One still has to learn all of this over time just like they have to learn anything, with lots of practice and repetition
Quiz-fact:
What Fender Telecaster has 3 pick-ups?
Nashville. I have one :)
Sounds good but way more simplified explanations broken down into many leasons to be beginner friendly?
Thanks! You are right it's not a beginner lesson. It does combine a bunch of lessons from my channel, which are more step by step. Hope to see you here again.
How is this concept different from simply knowing your scales and triads in all positions? This takes years to be fluent at.
Whatever gets you the answer the quickest is good. My students have all found this method faster especially since memorizing the entire fretboard is a little daunting. That being said, in the long run, I do recommend we memorize it all. That opens up more things that can be quicker to find, like triads with roots on the B string.
The reason they can't navigate is because they don't know the major scale
This is Still completely not understandable to someone who doesn’t have an advanced understanding of music theory.
It may seem like it but that’s not the case, most of this lesson is based on moveable patterns but takes some getting your head around it. A series of light bulb moments will go off in your head when it clicks, hang in there. Good to watch other guitar teachers teaching the same concepts so that you hear this stuff explained in different ways that usually works for me.
My knowledge of theory is emphatically not advanced and I understand this pretty well. root note, 3rd/5th intervals are foundational music theory concepts and stuff like the pentatonic shapes is foundational guitar theory stuff.
Simple. 7 notes in the Major Scale. DO Re Mi Fa So La Ti and back to DO (octave-8th is again 1 and starts over- e.g., Open E note top string is same at fret 12 top string, only one octave higher in pitch.) That's it.
When they refer to numbers, like a chord triad is a ROOT, 3rd and 5th, it means that C is the 1 (or root), E is the 3rd...why? C, D, E. What is 5? G. Because C, D, E, F, G. That is the notes of that chord. Dead simple. Everything in music for the most part is based around this dead simple concept. Now you own it for the rest of your life. If a chord PROGRESSION is say a I, IV, V...what does that mean? Look at your scale...C chord, F chord and G chord. Note, the key of C does not have any sharps or flats which is why I used it. Those are easy to learn too. Get a teacher who will walk you through the dead simple musical alphabet. They use a simple formula to determine scales using degrees of the scale. Same goes with modes...but it is ALL based around the dead simple MAJOR SCALE.
I hope this helped. Now you know more than 98% of all beginners.
Learn the caged system, then learn the scale shapes around the caged system. Most powerful thing you can do.
@@doodoo871well said !!! And like the other commenter in here said , lights will come on …. It tool me ten years to connect the dots like this video explains …. Im a d d and very hungry for the “ big picture “ …. My first guitar teacher wasted a couple years not showing me this concept
Not bad, but cut some of the talking out😮
You go to fast !
You can slow down the video on UA-cam if you want to see the musical examples slower -- there's video speed in the settings. Also, we have tabs for the videos on our Patreon www.patreon.com/guitarlessonsvancouver
simplify your lessons , too much excess talking
Great !
Thanks for watching 🎸