We are deeply honored to hear this, thank you from the bottom of our hearts! ✧◝ʕ⁀▽⁀ʔʕ⁀▽⁀ʔ◜✧ This is the info that what we've always wanted to see since the dawn of YT, so it's wonderful to hear that others want and cherish the same thing as us!
Your playing is amazing ! so unique , this is the stuff I would love to play , would you mind sharing what type of chords and scales you would use for this kind of playing >
Thank you deeply for your appreciation! ʕ˵◕ᴥ◕˵ʔʕ˵◕ᴥ◕˵ʔ There's so much to talk about here, but we'll try to offer a few pointers: We actually go through many different scales throughout our demos, the song usually evolves along with the pedal settings. Phrigian, Dorian and Aeolian scales can serve as starting points. We rarely play major scales, and that's usually somewhere in the middle of the song for a momentary short relief. We like big chords for the varying timbre that the strings give followed by arpeggios to evolve from them. We often employ notes in unison on different strings (not hard to stretch especially if high up the neck). We often leave some strings ringing (open or even fretted) while we play runs higher up like a piano's melody and harmony ability. For bass, we almost always include a B0 (30.87Hz) in the intro, for players to hear how the deep bass is affected by the pedal being engaged. We never stick to a shape and a neck position for long, both because we like to develop the song and because people need to hear how the gear sounds in various frequencies. And please subscribe for more fluffy panda waltzing to come! ♬ฅʕ˵◠ᴥ◠˵ʔʕ˵◠ᴥ◠˵ʔฅ♬
@@PairofPandas thanks so much for such a detailed reply , I need to get my head around all that you wrote , i'm fairly new to guitar but this is the style of playing thats in my head but no one seems to be doing, reminds me of 70s krautrock or Italian prog .
@@VSM1975 Thank you very much! ʕ˵◠ᴥ◠˵ʔʕ˵◠ᴥ◠˵ʔ We really like having our own unique style, and playing our own thing. We just play what we like, and we never emulate genres, nor try to stick to their limitations. Genres just bog people down with limitations: if something fits your song, it doesn't matter whether the "genre accepts it". And as for inspiration for us, we mostly listen to 80's thrash and death, as well as newer instrumental metal and just well instrumented songs. But we never copy them or stick to what those artists do This is what we advise every player to do, both new and experienced: play freely, aim to improvise on the go, and just play what you like the most! And thank you so much for being here with us!
Simply the best channel I've ever encountered. The man puts the cycle rates on the page.
We are deeply honored to hear this, thank you from the bottom of our hearts! ✧◝ʕ⁀▽⁀ʔʕ⁀▽⁀ʔ◜✧
This is the info that what we've always wanted to see since the dawn of YT, so it's wonderful to hear that others want and cherish the same thing as us!
Love
Thank you! \ʕ。◠㉨◠。ʔʕ。◠㉨◠。ʔ/
Your playing is amazing ! so unique , this is the stuff I would love to play , would you mind sharing what type of chords and scales you would use for this kind of playing >
Thank you deeply for your appreciation! ʕ˵◕ᴥ◕˵ʔʕ˵◕ᴥ◕˵ʔ There's so much to talk about here, but we'll try to offer a few pointers:
We actually go through many different scales throughout our demos, the song usually evolves along with the pedal settings. Phrigian, Dorian and Aeolian scales can serve as starting points. We rarely play major scales, and that's usually somewhere in the middle of the song for a momentary short relief.
We like big chords for the varying timbre that the strings give followed by arpeggios to evolve from them. We often employ notes in unison on different strings (not hard to stretch especially if high up the neck). We often leave some strings ringing (open or even fretted) while we play runs higher up like a piano's melody and harmony ability. For bass, we almost always include a B0 (30.87Hz) in the intro, for players to hear how the deep bass is affected by the pedal being engaged. We never stick to a shape and a neck position for long, both because we like to develop the song and because people need to hear how the gear sounds in various frequencies.
And please subscribe for more fluffy panda waltzing to come! ♬ฅʕ˵◠ᴥ◠˵ʔʕ˵◠ᴥ◠˵ʔฅ♬
@@PairofPandas thanks so much for such a detailed reply , I need to get my head around all that you wrote , i'm fairly new to guitar but this is the style of playing thats in my head but no one seems to be doing, reminds me of 70s krautrock or Italian prog .
@@VSM1975 Thank you very much! ʕ˵◠ᴥ◠˵ʔʕ˵◠ᴥ◠˵ʔ We really like having our own unique style, and playing our own thing. We just play what we like, and we never emulate genres, nor try to stick to their limitations. Genres just bog people down with limitations: if something fits your song, it doesn't matter whether the "genre accepts it".
And as for inspiration for us, we mostly listen to 80's thrash and death, as well as newer instrumental metal and just well instrumented songs. But we never copy them or stick to what those artists do
This is what we advise every player to do, both new and experienced: play freely, aim to improvise on the go, and just play what you like the most! And thank you so much for being here with us!
✨👁️📳🧠✨
3rd Eye and Left Brain: they ARE magical! ฅʕ≧ᴥ≦ʔʕ≧ᴥ≦ʔฅ