Thanks for watching the ultimate selective picking primer with Tosin Abasi!!! Now head over to his channels and get to work on some of those sick etudes he wrote!
Hey ben cool lesson , i noticed you were using small pick strokes .. but when u try to change to a new string it gets stuck in-between ... i guess u have to use swiping if using small strokes .
Uncle Ben, nice to see that you also give rather unknown guitarists the chance to share their knowledge on your channel. That's what a real stepdad does.
Ya know, I've watched this video honestly several times now, & I must say. This has to be one of the most inspiring technique videos I've seen. It's pretty rare when someone makes not only such a relevant video, but also making it just as entertaining as it is informative. This isn't just exercises, it's VERY useful info on how exactly to use this technique and really apply it to your own style, your own chords and your own favorite scales and songs rather than just copying Tosin, it's really a good break down. Usually breakdowns that are in depth enough to make the point are hard to follow because their either super boring or have zero visual aids. You may not have the visual aids, but it hardly matters because this is just done so well & to-the-point. Thank you, & Bravo to this one.
Man, being a drummer for 20 years before finally deciding to tackle difficult guitar techniques has basically been a cheat code for this stuff. I found this to come pretty natural
playing this Petrucci warmup for 20 years now and it is still in my daily routine. I recommend this to every beginner. It will take your alternate picking and your left/right hand sync to another level
Actually I think you did a fantastic job explaining and executing this technique. You actually made some insights into how to practice it that I hadn’t thought of. Thanks for having me on!🤘🏿 🌴🦜🌸🌞
Jokes on you I'm stealing part for and joining tool. Thanks so much for doing this yall! Also shoutout for my two fav teachers joining forces, was wanting some more specific selective picking help so this is awesome! Stay cool
Ok so my right hand is in the taint, Missy Elliot is flipping and reversing it and the open G stiring is getting hammered on till it comes thru the hamburgers.....I got this!
Soooooo that’s something I’ve stumbled upon in the past and I’m glad someone, Tosin especially, is the one to coin it and use it effectively and not like some dude teaching himself how to play guitar for his own self gratification and sanity. Thanks y’all!
Anyone that doesn't know much about this guy needs to listen to the first Animals as Leaders album from beginning to end. It's incredible! You're welcome.
A well thought out step by step tutorial on how to begin studying this technique. Lots of other ‘tutorials’ are just guys showing off, but this is both shredding and explanation. Thanks!
Caught a glance at this technique last year and already coming up with new rhythm ideas.This video is just excellent.I still need to work on my legato,this is a huge push towards that.Endless possibilities with an electric guitar, seriously.It never ends.
It’s surreal to see somebody besides Tosin to pull this stuff! 😂 It had to be Uncle Ben though, I would trust him to break down any insane guitar-related madness! 🥰
What a gift to have Ben spotlight this style for us. Going to start today with a simple pattern because percussionating on the electric will ascend my kundalini. Serious.THX Ben
I wanted to play along with all of your exercises, so I got the pleasure of hearing "very smoothly over a beat" at 16:44 as I played that pattern over and over again probably 30 times
Repeating notes on the guitar is probably one of those things you don't see happening as much as other instruments. His tech with the pedal tone is basically making a flamenco approach work with a pick almost. I remember when I first starting learning flying in a blue dream, I was like ohhhhh you can play a lick like (1)5-7-(1)7-9-(1)9-10 without out the need to double pick, you just start each repeat with finger 1.
The thing that helped initially with selective picking was thinking of it as playing a guitar like a piano; your left hand plays the low end, the right hand plays the high end. Your mileage with this mindset will vary, but it helped me a ton.
Last time I was this excited for an episode was Saturday morning cartoons in the 90’s. Super cool to see Ben and Tosin collaborating. 2 awesome dudes with incredible talent. The guitar community is so amazing!
What the frikn heck , Ben ?! I've been playing and learning for about 35 years. And I feel like I just recently became solid with Economy Picking. Now I'm seeing this video and I'm trying like hell to not trash my Les Paul. A lot of you Guitarists out there , Ben , are just ridiculously good.
Hmm, Today is quickly turning into a "Selective Picking" kind a day. There's enough top-notch info in this vid to turn it into a "Selective Picking" kind of life! Thanks, Tosin & Ben
Wow, It's really awesome to see Tosin in this video. I just finished watching part 1 and 2 of your thump video from like 7 years ago and it was such a helpful way to learn that technique. It's really awesome to see how far you've come with this UA-cam stuff since then. I've watched quite a few "UA-cam Guitar Lesson" Creators but your videos seen to just click with me. I get a lot out of them and I can't wait to check out more. Definitely subbed, gonna go get on your patreon too because this is some really helpful stuff. Thanks Uncle Ben, I really appreciate all the help I've gotten from your videos.
This is crazy good ! I have practiced legato playing , using fret hand hammers and pulls combined with some picking , and that’s cool , but this technique opens up possibilities of a more vertical playing in addition to the open string , and the variation of timing , I really like this whole idea , however it is simply obvious that it would take years to get good enough at this to incorporate it in my playing , but great stuff ! Opens up many new ideas in my mind
Wow!!!!!! Thank you so much for bringing him here!!! Now I'm gonna spend some years watching this video and practising it!!! I hope you bring some more guests!!!!
I'm so glad there's a name for this technique I've been using for years. I used to just think it was cheating to sound faster. Tosin is definitely using it to it's fullest!
Very interesting video. Enjoyed the insight. This video just set me back 10 years as a guitarist. I have learned that Ben has a definite second career to fall back on in the event that he ever falls out of his chair landing in such an unusual way to tweak his back rendering both of his arms paralyzed. Temporarily. A Comedian ...Ben you are hilarious....I think it's largely in the delivery. You know,..like great phrasing and tone.
Wow. This is how I built my personal picking style from the beginning, but with all the tutorials out there about alternate picking this, hybrid and sweep picking that, I started to second guess myself after a while given my affinity for legato techniques heavy with 'cold hammers' and 'left hand leading' (definitely appreciate the terminology here!) when I began to develop my voice 20 years ago. All these years later, I'm pretty thrilled and almost feel a sense of vindication and legitimacy having these techniques endorsed by a titan of the modern virtuosic guitar scene! Nice demonstration, and great video overall! A couple things I picked up through my travels: a) Just like hammer-ons, this technique sounds awesome when blended with pull-offs to both open and fretted strings alike. b) Another awesome thing I found by accident is that over certain positions, when combining the cold hammers and pulls with tapping, you can utilize the same picking hand's edge usually reserved for palm muting to break the iron rule of avoiding contact with the strings by lightly resting on the harmonic nodes on the upper half of the neck to produce some super interesting harmonic effects that have a unique sort of muted, almost robotic or chippy suggestion of tonality. If you have your guitar in your lap, then I have an example you can try to mess around with: My personal favorite example I found was with a repeating pattern of descending quintuplets based on the Am pentatonic shape from barring your left index on the 5th fret of the top 3 strings. It takes on an additional modal character from starting with a tap on the 1st string-10th fret, and ending with the D on the 3rd string-7th fret. Altogether the pattern is thus: t10 p5 /h8 p5 /h7; t=tap, p=pull off, /h=cold hammer on the next string down - rinse and repeat. While you're repeating this pattern, the natural sort of claw shape your right hand takes from being anchored in place for the tap with either or both your pinky and thumb on the side(s) of the neck will drape the corner of the muting edge and the butt of your palm to hover above the 15th~17th-ish fret. If you do it right, you should end up with an A from that 2s-8f hammered harmonic tone, sounding a major 2nd HIGHER than the initial 1s-10f tap's G (I'm going from memory here on the notes so I'm not 100% sure it's a G & A, but it is certainly a whole step interval), and each hammer/pull on the way down WILL produce notes in varying degrees of loudness and staccato, with the 10 and the 8 being loudest and capable of ringing out the most (I prefer to accent the 8). You'll probably have to mess around for a bit to get the palm positioned just right, because I think its success arises from allowing your palm to relax and follow the general curvature of the fretting pattern, so it's *just* slightly closer to the bridge on the 1st string than it is on the 3rd. Now I know this explanation may appear rather dense, but I promise if you follow along carefully and methodically, you should end with success. If you feel like you're struggling to make the stretch from the tap to the harmonic nodes, you can experiment with transposing the pattern up and down to fit your hand size. This is just where I found the most success in what eventually became a reliably reproducible outcome. It also is at least semi reliable that open string pull-offs will also produce a harmonic tone in this position over any transpositions. If anyone decides to give this a try, please let me know if you got any results and if there are any questions I can answer to help you along!
Hey Ben , a long time ago I met a guitar player who sounded like Van Halen ( actually he sounded like more than just that , but he could play anything Van Halen could play , and he sounded just like him ) but to my point , he started giving me some lessons , not much because he was an active player and didn’t have the time to teach , but but as a favor to a co worker of mine he just gave me a few lessons , and basically I was supposed to take it from there , but he was in another way an unusual player because ( and I would like to know if you ever heard of anything like this ) you see , this guy used alternate picking only , he told me that it takes a much longer time to perfect that way , but it was worth it , what he did was get to the point where anything he played he practiced starting with an upstroke , and a downstroke , for example any scale pattern he could play equally as well starting on either pick direction , and keep strict alternate picking almost exclusively , and he played lightning fast as well , I witnessed him do this and I payed careful attention , as it turns out , I did not follow his method as I found it too hard to do , and I determined that it would take too long for me to master this approach , also I think this guitarist did put out some instructional cassette tapes and booklets on this method , but I don’t think they sold too well and I can’t find any mention of them anywhere now , I think he called it : mechanics of metal , in fact , I’m sure that was the name , I even had some of the tapes long ago , did you ever hear of it , and even so , can you conceive of the idea being viable ? Using only alternate picking , and playing anything , every lick , scale , sequence , etc , starting with either a down or upstroke , and being equally proficient either way ? What do you think ? Thank you !
Lots for this ol dog to chew on. Also dug the fashion tips and the weapons grade more goodlier language abuse. As always, thanks for taking the time to put these together!
I love that you're still managing to bring up that grunge pedal in every video. It's hilarious because I had that piece of shit way back in high school, for some reason.
My goodness! I'd have never thought, that this is so tough! Losing. And there is even one more Patreon video about this left... My hands seem to make things more difficultier because of their shape. Palm muting 6 strings at the same time while keeping the right ones "unmuted" enough to produce that hammer from nowhere... Puuuuhhhh.... Really hard, uncle Ben! At least, very unusual. Deepest respect for these demonstrations! Awesome, man! :)
cool...have already been doing harmonies and rythmic patterns using the muted hammer on's etc.and tapping notes..but just that little spark of adding an open note or just let your mind wander and opened the door and yet another tool in the old tool box...thanks as always bro
Thanks for watching the ultimate selective picking primer with Tosin Abasi!!! Now head over to his channels and get to work on some of those sick etudes he wrote!
Link to his channels? I can find them, but was expecting to find them in the description or in the pinned comment.
Hey ben cool lesson , i noticed you were using small pick strokes .. but when u try to change to a new string it gets stuck in-between ... i guess u have to use swiping if using small strokes .
@@prawtism ua-cam.com/users/AbasiConcepts
You should dissect some Nile riffs
@@prawtism lĺi
Uncle Ben, nice to see that you also give rather unknown guitarists the chance to share their knowledge on your channel. That's what a real stepdad does.
"Unknown"...
Ok then...
@@afonsotopa9164 Irony off ;)
Hahahaha
Sadly, it's not a joke for a lot of my classic rocker / 80's metal friends. "Who is that guy? That sounds weird."
Afonso Topa yup, was unknown to me. But now thanks to Uncle Ben, I’ve been introduced. 👍
plugging your buddie's go fund me for fighting cancer is the most wholesome thing i've seen a youtuber do
Haha thanks man. Cancer sucks!!!
That Tosin guy is pretty good. He should start a band or something. Build some guitars, too. Why not. 😆
Or even revolutionize picking.....
like and reply if your gullible
guitar steve - r/woosh
@@guitarsteve940 lmao
Wow
The Lethal Weapon reboot cast we didn’t know we needed.. Plentiful of value this video has, yes. Thanks, Tosin and Uncle Ben!
HA!!!!
Im too old for this s**t!
dude id watch that
First Bill Kelliher now Tosin Abasi, this channel is too good, we don't deserve it.
Now we need a video of Ben and Brent Hinds smoking weed and playing guitar banjo style for 30 minutes.
Instantly shidded my pants upon the sight of the notification. Insane this isn't behind a pay wall
dude, I've been practicing this technique the whole day, and it is sooo addicting, i freaking love it!
I’m so glad you got Tosin on. He has always awed me with his playing so it’s great to see him breaking down some techniques.
I know you did this because it's my birthday today. Thank you, uncle ben!
Happy birthday, nephew!!!
Because he's that type of guy. 👍🏾
Can we just take a moment to appreciate the coordinated shirts?
We’re basically twins
@@BenEller I mean. Obviously.
I like Ben Eller because he teaches me things about my guitar that I didn’t know before. Things like my guitar has a taint!
Thanks Uncle Ben!
Ya know, I've watched this video honestly several times now, & I must say. This has to be one of the most inspiring technique videos I've seen. It's pretty rare when someone makes not only such a relevant video, but also making it just as entertaining as it is informative. This isn't just exercises, it's VERY useful info on how exactly to use this technique and really apply it to your own style, your own chords and your own favorite scales and songs rather than just copying Tosin, it's really a good break down. Usually breakdowns that are in depth enough to make the point are hard to follow because their either super boring or have zero visual aids. You may not have the visual aids, but it hardly matters because this is just done so well & to-the-point. Thank you, & Bravo to this one.
The "make sure to take your DOD grunge pedal...and throw it in the trash" always makes your videos better.
32 seconds in and there’s already a John Petrucci warmup.
Selective picking gives me Adam Jones vibes
I LOVE ADAM JONES ONE OF MY TOP 5
@Noah Wood Yeah man I've tried to get through Rock Discipline so many times bro caught it right away!
Man, being a drummer for 20 years before finally deciding to tackle difficult guitar techniques has basically been a cheat code for this stuff. I found this to come pretty natural
playing this Petrucci warmup for 20 years now and it is still in my daily routine.
I recommend this to every beginner. It will take your alternate picking and your left/right hand sync to another level
It's a real relief to know I'm not the ONLY guitar player in the world who holds their pick weirdly, Tosin is with me lol
Uncle ben, i dont wanna be disrespectful or nothin to you, but Tosin was just on another level. Then again, none of us could hope to compare anyway.
Just trying to keep up!!
Actually I think you did a fantastic job explaining and executing this technique. You actually made some insights into how to practice it that I hadn’t thought of. Thanks for having me on!🤘🏿 🌴🦜🌸🌞
Jokes on you I'm stealing part for and joining tool. Thanks so much for doing this yall! Also shoutout for my two fav teachers joining forces, was wanting some more specific selective picking help so this is awesome! Stay cool
Ok so my right hand is in the taint, Missy Elliot is flipping and reversing it and the open G stiring is getting hammered on till it comes thru the hamburgers.....I got this!
Flipping and reversing a cold hammer to the taint
If I had nickel every time I heard that...
Smell my finger 👈🏻
Soooooo that’s something I’ve stumbled upon in the past and I’m glad someone, Tosin especially, is the one to coin it and use it effectively and not like some dude teaching himself how to play guitar for his own self gratification and sanity. Thanks y’all!
Some people r such great musicians that they can’t make a song someone just wants to listen to
The DOD Grunge pedal gag gets me every damn time. lol
if it is anything like selective hearing i should be good at this.
Anyone that doesn't know much about this guy needs to listen to the first Animals as Leaders album from beginning to end. It's incredible! You're welcome.
great vid uncle ben & papa tosin!
A well thought out step by step tutorial on how to begin studying this technique. Lots of other ‘tutorials’ are just guys showing off, but this is both shredding and explanation. Thanks!
THAT OLD PETRUCCI ARPEGGIO EXERCISE. Man that brought back some harsh practice memories from when I was a shredi knight in training
Caught a glance at this technique last year and already coming up with new rhythm ideas.This video is just excellent.I still need to work on my legato,this is a huge push towards that.Endless possibilities with an electric guitar, seriously.It never ends.
The "guitar taint" bit got me. Well done uncle Ben.
It’s surreal to see somebody besides Tosin to pull this stuff! 😂
It had to be Uncle Ben though, I would trust him to break down any insane guitar-related madness! 🥰
What a gift to have Ben spotlight this style for us. Going to start today with a simple pattern because percussionating on the electric will ascend my kundalini. Serious.THX Ben
I wanted to play along with all of your exercises, so I got the pleasure of hearing "very smoothly over a beat" at 16:44 as I played that pattern over and over again probably 30 times
Repeating notes on the guitar is probably one of those things you don't see happening as much as other instruments. His tech with the pedal tone is basically making a flamenco approach work with a pick almost. I remember when I first starting learning flying in a blue dream, I was like ohhhhh you can play a lick like (1)5-7-(1)7-9-(1)9-10 without out the need to double pick, you just start each repeat with finger 1.
An unexpected continuation of your "Thumping" video lesson from 2013. I'm all here for it.
First Bill Killiher now Tosin Abasi. Man, you bring the best together, Uncle Ben! 💜
The thing that helped initially with selective picking was thinking of it as playing a guitar like a piano; your left hand plays the low end, the right hand plays the high end. Your mileage with this mindset will vary, but it helped me a ton.
Thank you guys for making this kind of knowledge more accessible to mortals.
Last time I was this excited for an episode was Saturday morning cartoons in the 90’s. Super cool to see Ben and Tosin collaborating. 2 awesome dudes with incredible talent. The guitar community is so amazing!
Dude I swear to God. I have never understood a lesson more than this one..ty!!
What the frikn heck , Ben ?!
I've been playing and learning for about 35 years. And I feel like I just recently became solid with Economy Picking. Now I'm seeing this video and I'm trying like hell to not trash my Les Paul. A lot of you Guitarists out there , Ben , are just ridiculously good.
Heeey, it's the right angle thumb person :D
(jk, love Tosin, he's a beast on guitar)
He's got the craziest hitchhiker's thumb I've ever seen
My thumbs do that too, am I as good as tosin yet?
His picking technique looks like a car wreck
Hmm, Today is quickly turning into a "Selective Picking" kind a day.
There's enough top-notch info in this vid to turn it into a "Selective Picking" kind of life!
Thanks, Tosin & Ben
Wow Uncle Ben, what a treat! You're so good to your nieces and nephews! I love that Tele style guitar that Tobin created!
The solo of extremes peacemaker die is exactly that! Of course nuno already did it
My favorite lesson of yours, thank teaching this new technique. Definitely going to use in my playing
I couldn’t have asked for a better collab!
Thank you Uncle Tosin and Uncle Ben!
The collab of the century!
I have been working on this for the past few months im so glad you made this video
Oh, oh ok I thought selective picking was when band security would hand out backstage passes to certain "selected" concert-goers, ala VH.
Hahahahahaha wow
Lol
Not sure what's more amazing, Tosin's playing or the fact that he does it in an office chair with arms...
Wow, It's really awesome to see Tosin in this video. I just finished watching part 1 and 2 of your thump video from like 7 years ago and it was such a helpful way to learn that technique. It's really awesome to see how far you've come with this UA-cam stuff since then. I've watched quite a few "UA-cam Guitar Lesson" Creators but your videos seen to just click with me. I get a lot out of them and I can't wait to check out more. Definitely subbed, gonna go get on your patreon too because this is some really helpful stuff. Thanks Uncle Ben, I really appreciate all the help I've gotten from your videos.
Thanks a bunch, dude!
@@BenEller thank you, man! You really are a great teacher. The way you explain things makes it very easy to follow. Very glad I found this channel.
This is crazy good ! I have practiced legato playing , using fret hand hammers and pulls combined with some picking , and that’s cool , but this technique opens up possibilities of a more vertical playing in addition to the open string , and the variation of timing , I really like this whole idea , however it is simply obvious that it would take years to get good enough at this to incorporate it in my playing , but great stuff ! Opens up many new ideas in my mind
Well better start now :b
Thanks so much Ben for this great video helped me finish my new song!!!
Wow!!!!!! Thank you so much for bringing him here!!! Now I'm gonna spend some years watching this video and practising it!!! I hope you bring some more guests!!!!
Wow Ben, this content is over the top. I mean, REALLY. This is gold. Keep'em coming please!
really love your hawaiian shirt uncle ben, its so snazzy.
Thank u
Yessss i was hoping you'd have a video on this! And the toasty feature is frickin sick!!
How did this only get 40k views in a month? This is one of your coolest videos!!!
Tosin is a guitar beast, seriously
4:51 Ben is the 1st guitar teacher ever to utilize the word "taint" in his lessons. BRAVO!!!!!!! *throwing roses*
Bless you for helping the fight against cancer ✨✨😎😇🙌
Thanks for this video! I've started working on this and it feels like I have to unlearn everything I thought I knew about playing the guitar.
I'm so glad there's a name for this technique I've been using for years. I used to just think it was cheating to sound faster. Tosin is definitely using it to it's fullest!
Thanks as always for keeping guitar practice fun!
How did I know you were going to say “taint of the guitar”? Stepdad superpowers, that’s how.
Very interesting video. Enjoyed the insight. This video just set me back 10 years as a guitarist.
I have learned that Ben has a definite second career to fall back on in the event that he ever falls out of his chair landing in such an unusual way to tweak his back rendering both of his arms paralyzed. Temporarily.
A Comedian ...Ben you are hilarious....I think it's largely in the delivery. You know,..like great phrasing and tone.
Wow. This is how I built my personal picking style from the beginning, but with all the tutorials out there about alternate picking this, hybrid and sweep picking that, I started to second guess myself after a while given my affinity for legato techniques heavy with 'cold hammers' and 'left hand leading' (definitely appreciate the terminology here!) when I began to develop my voice 20 years ago. All these years later, I'm pretty thrilled and almost feel a sense of vindication and legitimacy having these techniques endorsed by a titan of the modern virtuosic guitar scene! Nice demonstration, and great video overall!
A couple things I picked up through my travels: a) Just like hammer-ons, this technique sounds awesome when blended with pull-offs to both open and fretted strings alike. b) Another awesome thing I found by accident is that over certain positions, when combining the cold hammers and pulls with tapping, you can utilize the same picking hand's edge usually reserved for palm muting to break the iron rule of avoiding contact with the strings by lightly resting on the harmonic nodes on the upper half of the neck to produce some super interesting harmonic effects that have a unique sort of muted, almost robotic or chippy suggestion of tonality. If you have your guitar in your lap, then I have an example you can try to mess around with:
My personal favorite example I found was with a repeating pattern of descending quintuplets based on the Am pentatonic shape from barring your left index on the 5th fret of the top 3 strings. It takes on an additional modal character from starting with a tap on the 1st string-10th fret, and ending with the D on the 3rd string-7th fret. Altogether the pattern is thus:
t10 p5 /h8 p5 /h7; t=tap, p=pull off, /h=cold hammer on the next string down - rinse and repeat. While you're repeating this pattern, the natural sort of claw shape your right hand takes from being anchored in place for the tap with either or both your pinky and thumb on the side(s) of the neck will drape the corner of the muting edge and the butt of your palm to hover above the 15th~17th-ish fret. If you do it right, you should end up with an A from that 2s-8f hammered harmonic tone, sounding a major 2nd HIGHER than the initial 1s-10f tap's G (I'm going from memory here on the notes so I'm not 100% sure it's a G & A, but it is certainly a whole step interval), and each hammer/pull on the way down WILL produce notes in varying degrees of loudness and staccato, with the 10 and the 8 being loudest and capable of ringing out the most (I prefer to accent the 8). You'll probably have to mess around for a bit to get the palm positioned just right, because I think its success arises from allowing your palm to relax and follow the general curvature of the fretting pattern, so it's *just* slightly closer to the bridge on the 1st string than it is on the 3rd.
Now I know this explanation may appear rather dense, but I promise if you follow along carefully and methodically, you should end with success. If you feel like you're struggling to make the stretch from the tap to the harmonic nodes, you can experiment with transposing the pattern up and down to fit your hand size. This is just where I found the most success in what eventually became a reliably reproducible outcome. It also is at least semi reliable that open string pull-offs will also produce a harmonic tone in this position over any transpositions.
If anyone decides to give this a try, please let me know if you got any results and if there are any questions I can answer to help you along!
This is very useful for violin too
Good gravy, good thing its a long weekend to get this going.
Hey Ben , a long time ago I met a guitar player who sounded like Van Halen ( actually he sounded like more than just that , but he could play anything Van Halen could play , and he sounded just like him ) but to my point , he started giving me some lessons , not much because he was an active player and didn’t have the time to teach , but but as a favor to a co worker of mine he just gave me a few lessons , and basically I was supposed to take it from there , but he was in another way an unusual player because ( and I would like to know if you ever heard of anything like this ) you see , this guy used alternate picking only , he told me that it takes a much longer time to perfect that way , but it was worth it , what he did was get to the point where anything he played he practiced starting with an upstroke , and a downstroke , for example any scale pattern he could play equally as well starting on either pick direction , and keep strict alternate picking almost exclusively , and he played lightning fast as well , I witnessed him do this and I payed careful attention , as it turns out , I did not follow his method as I found it too hard to do , and I determined that it would take too long for me to master this approach , also I think this guitarist did put out some instructional cassette tapes and booklets on this method , but I don’t think they sold too well and I can’t find any mention of them anywhere now , I think he called it : mechanics of metal , in fact , I’m sure that was the name , I even had some of the tapes long ago , did you ever hear of it , and even so , can you conceive of the idea being viable ? Using only alternate picking , and playing anything , every lick , scale , sequence , etc , starting with either a down or upstroke , and being equally proficient either way ? What do you think ? Thank you !
I can't wait to dig into some of this, this weekend. 👍✨
that "An Infinite Regression" reference at 10:03 is so cheeky. i see you Uncle Ben 😉
The tutorial makes me think I could actually do this.. we will see. Thanks for the lesson!
Master level gold right there!!! Holy crap!!!
Lots for this ol dog to chew on. Also dug the fashion tips and the weapons grade more goodlier language abuse. As always, thanks for taking the time to put these together!
I love that you're still managing to bring up that grunge pedal in every video. It's hilarious because I had that piece of shit way back in high school, for some reason.
My goodness! I'd have never thought, that this is so tough! Losing. And there is even one more Patreon video about this left... My hands seem to make things more difficultier because of their shape. Palm muting 6 strings at the same time while keeping the right ones "unmuted" enough to produce that hammer from nowhere... Puuuuhhhh.... Really hard, uncle Ben! At least, very unusual. Deepest respect for these demonstrations! Awesome, man! :)
I saw both of these guys in GTA: Vice City.
Great and insipiring lesson! I am now looking forward to hearing some selective picking with the DOD Grunge Pedal activated.
Love this video, thanks Ben and Tosin! I should have watched this before I entered the DSP contest:) Awesome stuff:) \m/!
cool...have already been doing harmonies and rythmic patterns using the muted hammer on's etc.and tapping notes..but just that little spark of adding an open note or just let your mind wander and opened the door and yet another tool in the old tool box...thanks as always bro
Great lesson Ben! ..and Tosin!
thanks for breaking it down even more. i get it but this helps even more.
Total absolute kickassery. :D Flipping it and reversing it!
Thanks fellas! Ben, you crack me up more betterer.
Such talent.
Well done.
"Just the way your dad likes it. Hard and fast" bwhahahahaaaaa.
Some wicked cool licks came out of this
Uncle Ben and Tosin I love you guya keep up the good work. Killer duo :)
Lol 8:32 missy Elliot style, flipping and reversing. Dude, I love you.
That's crazy. My terrible normal playing was selective picking this whole time!
Tosin Abasi playing a six string guitar, wow!
I am way in love with all of this.
Another great lesson... thanx shred meisters...great insight into Tosin's style...
What a great video and subject!
The lesson I didn't know I needed!
Damn, you really nailed it with this video!
Great stuff, thanks to you both!