At 4:08 I say Gdim 7 when it should be G#dim7. Sorry for the confusion Get the TAB and Track working-class-guitar.teachable.com/courses/best-of-corey-s-youtube/lectures/45239489 Get 40% off The Arpeggio Handbook for Blues Guitar working-class-guitar.teachable.com/p/arpeggio-handbook-for-blues-guitar?coupon_code=EBOOK40&product_id=4255093
Corey, I have to say that at Complete Blues Volume 2 the "Modern Minor Blues" lesson on Working Class Guitar is absolutely out of this world, very tasty and fun to learn! I really appreciate your artistic approach in your lessons, simple and sophisticated at the same time. Every time when I hit the wall with my practice just visit your website for inspiration and in 10 minutes I find something amazing that can be added to my limited repertoire. Thank you! :)
Corey, This is a really great tip for breaking down and incorporating cool diminished notes into the solo. Looking forward to more of your tips. Thanks and continued success!!
100%. Super helpful as always. These videos are the best way to truly learn these unique techniques. Short and sweet. Plus you always have a way of making complicated techniques super easy to understand. Thanks again for your content you provide 🙏🙏🙏
Great video Corey and great topic. Hopefully you'll make even more videos and continue to develop some options for advanced Blues playing using flat-9, diminished etc.. that was very helpful.
Really great lesson. Just sitting here noodling after watching this and already that diminished tonality, has been added to my own vocabulary. A simple lick is often a great Rosetta stone for people like me who've been hearing the "language" for decades but never really bothered to learn it.
Hey Corey, I know this is a little off subject but could you present a video or lesson on your Working Class Guitar site on how to play lead licks over a fast-moving chord progression?
Just got the interactive. eBook...Just what I need. Arpeggios were and are always HARD for me. I can see, by running quickly thru your book and skimming a few videos this is going to help tremendously. One more point, as a long time video editor I have to commend you on how clear you managed to get all the videos....WELL DONE!! I am NOT coming out of the box until I go thru this course and feel extremely comfortable playing with you jam track...will keep ya posted.
Thank you for posting this fantastic lesson incorporating the diminished scale Corey! The major/minor blues licks you play are very sweet, and the diminished licks you demo are So Cool and fun to play! Thanks also for generously making the tab and b. track available! If you're not already, plse consider putting together a blues lead course using these same types of ideas and licks with different feels, like, Shuffle (yes!) Straight feel, Minor blues similar to your Albert King 3-string lesson track, Slow 6/8 blues, etc. Thanks Again👍
love your style! I ran across "getting started-add a dash of diminished " 2 years ago. you were in A showing how to use diminished run to get from I to IV cord. you started on the minor 3rd and went up(m3-b5-bb6-Root) . i thought I had it till this lesson where you sharp the root to get started which leads to the Major third of A ..... so its all a half step up from where i learned from your earlier lesson? see my confusion??
CC, Great job of instruction here. You have a great "Nack" for giving us (that subscribe and follow your teachings) & those with the fretboard & theory fundamentals enough to grab hold and understand where this fits into the blues progressions. For me, you did a great job teaching and getting us curious guitarist to seek out this sound in music. Thanks again.
Corey, is it accurate that a diminished chord could resolve to any chord with a note a half step away from any note in diminished chord. I've been playing with this and can find a lot of ways to make this work though some are definitely better than others. Thanks so much for all the great content here and on your Working Class site!
Holy smokes!! You just lit up the bulbs in my mind like christmas! I hate when “jazz” scales are used untastefully. So I tend to avoid the super “academic” stuff, despite actually having a working knowledge of it. THIS. Using the altered scales as a “pull” to the next chord. That’s what I was missing. I couldn’t figure out, do I play them over the I, the IV, the V? All of them! Any of them! As long as its in context to the next chord (usually a V/whatever). Thank you thank you thank you
The 9 of G is A, so a flat 9 is G#. The fact that you're coming from a C chord to a G chord (G is the 5 of C) means that this is a good time to use the flat 9. Did that make sense?
@@timchalmers1700I think it’s going from a G chord to a C chord. The altered G7 arp incorporates the flat 9(G#) one bar before the 4 chord(C). That flat 9 resolves down a half step to G(V of C) when the 4 chord comes into play. That’s my understanding.
Corey, I have also heard you can play a #diminished IV chord or arpeggio in bar 6 leading back to the I in bar 7. That doesn't seem to be a "functioning dominant". Can you explain the theory behind that move? Is it just all the chromatic tone resolutions it creates?
I just came across this lesson and had exactly the same thought as you. The move he didn't explain for the #IVdim to I was the 'Common Tone Diminished 7th resolution'. The #IV dim has actually got the root note (common tone) of the I chord you are going to. You might want to look that up theory wise, but thats the name of it. That one, and the Functioning Secondary Dominant Dim 7 resolution are main two I've found guitarists using as methods. Hope that helps...over a year later.
At 4:08 I say Gdim 7 when it should be G#dim7. Sorry for the confusion
Get the TAB and Track
working-class-guitar.teachable.com/courses/best-of-corey-s-youtube/lectures/45239489
Get 40% off The Arpeggio Handbook for Blues Guitar
working-class-guitar.teachable.com/p/arpeggio-handbook-for-blues-guitar?coupon_code=EBOOK40&product_id=4255093
I am trying to sign after I click the link and it asks me to log in to my account. When I do, I see the lesson, but I can't open it.
@@johnmooney3105hey John please email this to support@workingclassguitar.com and we’ll get you sorted out
Just found you recently, been playing for 60 years and always get something from the videos. Thanks!!
Thx so much, Roger!
That diminished scale injection was so smooth i almost didnt even notice it!
Blues on Corey! Thanks for another great lesson.
I am a monthly subscriber to Coery's website and this program is a steal and full of great instructions,
Appreciate that more than you know!
Corey, I have to say that at Complete Blues Volume 2 the "Modern Minor Blues" lesson on Working Class Guitar is absolutely out of this world, very tasty and fun to learn! I really appreciate your artistic approach in your lessons, simple and sophisticated at the same time. Every time when I hit the wall with my practice just visit your website for inspiration and in 10 minutes I find something amazing that can be added to my limited repertoire. Thank you! :)
Great lesson!
Great lesson! Thank you so much for sharing it with us!
My pleasure!
Corey is amazingly talented and can truly teach you guitar
Corey...you are by far my favorite online teacher...I always learn a ton from you...currently going through your 50 blues rhythm course....it's great!
Thanks so much, Ron!
Corey,
This is a really great tip for breaking down and incorporating cool diminished notes into the solo. Looking forward to more of your tips. Thanks and continued success!!
Love your lessons. FANTASTIC! Thanks sooo much.
Very helpfull as always, and totally digestible, many thanks for these little pieces that go to making a bigger picture available.
You're very welcome!
Great lesson
Diminished is the best. I like to start a diminished off a dominant chord tone.
Cool stuff! I was expecting an Em at 2:45, maybe 'cuz I just learned "Dream" off DSOTM
excellent. you are becoming my fav teacher. Jim, Sacramento, CA
Wow, thank you!
100%. Super helpful as always. These videos are the best way to truly learn these unique techniques. Short and sweet. Plus you always have a way of making complicated techniques super easy to understand. Thanks again for your content you provide 🙏🙏🙏
Thanks so much, Corey. It's great how you give us something we can immediately apply. Like you say just adding a new spice.
that's the plan!
So useful. Thanks
You're welcome!
Really nice CC!
Really great lesson Corey.
Great lesson as always Corey. Thank you so much!
Really great lesson, thanks Corey!
Great video Corey and great topic. Hopefully you'll make even more videos and continue to develop some options for advanced Blues playing using flat-9, diminished etc.. that was very helpful.
Thanks, will do!
Thank You so Much
Really great lesson. Just sitting here noodling after watching this and already that diminished tonality, has been added to my own vocabulary. A simple lick is often a great Rosetta stone for people like me who've been hearing the "language" for decades but never really bothered to learn it.
Hey Corey, I know this is a little off subject but could you present a video or lesson on your Working Class Guitar site on how to play lead licks over a fast-moving chord progression?
Just got the interactive. eBook...Just what I need. Arpeggios were and are always HARD for me. I can see, by running quickly thru your book and skimming a few videos this is going to help tremendously. One more point, as a long time video editor I have to commend you on how clear you managed to get all the videos....WELL DONE!!
I am NOT coming out of the box until I go thru this course and feel extremely comfortable playing with you jam track...will keep ya posted.
Hey thx so much! Appreciate the comments on the videos. It’s challenging but, I think I figured it out. Best of luck!
Thank you for posting this fantastic lesson incorporating the diminished scale Corey! The major/minor blues licks you play are very sweet, and the diminished licks you demo are So Cool and fun to play! Thanks also for generously making the tab and b. track available! If you're not already, plse consider putting together a blues lead course using these same types of ideas and licks with different feels, like, Shuffle (yes!) Straight feel, Minor blues similar to your Albert King 3-string lesson track, Slow 6/8 blues, etc. Thanks Again👍
Hello Corey and all!
good stuff
love your style! I ran across "getting started-add a dash of diminished " 2 years ago. you were in A showing how to use diminished run to get from I to IV cord. you started on the minor 3rd and went up(m3-b5-bb6-Root) . i thought I had it till this lesson where you sharp the root to get started which leads to the Major third of A ..... so its all a half step up from where i learned from your earlier lesson? see my confusion??
Nice!
CC, Great job of instruction here. You have a great "Nack" for giving us (that subscribe and follow your teachings) & those with the fretboard & theory fundamentals enough to grab hold and understand where this fits into the blues progressions. For me, you did a great job teaching and getting us curious guitarist to seek out this sound in music. Thanks again.
Thx DD!
Corey, is it accurate that a diminished chord could resolve to any chord with a note a half step away from any note in diminished chord. I've been playing with this and can find a lot of ways to make this work though some are definitely better than others. Thanks so much for all the great content here and on your Working Class site!
Holy smokes!! You just lit up the bulbs in my mind like christmas!
I hate when “jazz” scales are used untastefully. So I tend to avoid the super “academic” stuff, despite actually having a working knowledge of it.
THIS. Using the altered scales as a “pull” to the next chord. That’s what I was missing. I couldn’t figure out, do I play them over the I, the IV, the V?
All of them! Any of them! As long as its in context to the next chord (usually a V/whatever).
Thank you thank you thank you
How did you get a flat 9 (G#) from a C7 (at 3:35)?
The 9 of G is A, so a flat 9 is G#. The fact that you're coming from a C chord to a G chord (G is the 5 of C) means that this is a good time to use the flat 9. Did that make sense?
@@timchalmers1700I think it’s going from a G chord to a C chord. The altered G7 arp incorporates the flat 9(G#) one bar before the 4 chord(C). That flat 9 resolves down a half step to G(V of C) when the 4 chord comes into play. That’s my understanding.
@@TotallyGuitarded Very interesting. Definitely one of those music theory mind twisters.
Corey, I have also heard you can play a #diminished IV chord or arpeggio in bar 6 leading back to the I in bar 7. That doesn't seem to be a "functioning dominant". Can you explain the theory behind that move? Is it just all the chromatic tone resolutions it creates?
I just came across this lesson and had exactly the same thought as you. The move he didn't explain for the #IVdim to I was the 'Common Tone Diminished 7th resolution'. The #IV dim has actually got the root note (common tone) of the I chord you are going to. You might want to look that up theory wise, but thats the name of it. That one, and the Functioning Secondary Dominant Dim 7 resolution are main two I've found guitarists using as methods. Hope that helps...over a year later.
Just realized, In Memory of Elizabeth Reed, uses a diminished arpeggio as a set up. The brothers have got it goin on!
Diminished is easy to launch into but hard to land!
well said!
what strings do you use on that casino?
D'Addario 11s
Very tasty, add a little sophistication to your riffs.
Hey!!!! I go Willy-Nilly EVERYWHERE!! :)
😂😂
Apologies for the guitar ignorance, is that a Casino?
Indeed it is!
This is not terribly clear
Your hair is not Diminishing!!
See what I did 🤓
It’s augmenting!