This is great, Korey... now, do this all over again showing your picking hand!! (jk). Although, it would be nice to know how you are getting the fluidity between strings, etc. Economy Picking? Hybrid? It looked like it was all pick? Maybe Up/down?? Nevertheless, it's wonderful how you show how each shape builds or falls into another pretty easily. Great work!!
@@Sammywhat I use economy picking pretty exclusively, which is essentially alternate picking but continuing the picking motion to the next string. There’s a lot of hybrid picking as well, especially for country and jazz
Hey Korey, I am liking the content and trying to practice this a bit each day. I'm just wondering why you decided to access the initial third - E for example, on the A string as opposed to grabbing it on the D string 2nd fret? Thank you for the great lessons.
@@mbshark33024 hello! That’s so all five shapes are based off of each other. If I would’ve placed it on the D string, we would’ve got a different fingering and I wanted to keep it consistent.
Another fantastic lesson! After getting the patterns down solid, do you vary the rhythm like playing in triplets? My first goal is to get to the 15 min straight, which will be challenging enough. Thank you!
Hi Korey. Excellent lesson as usual. But I don't understand why the long stretch to the 7th, when it's just down one on the next string? I'm not studying music...hope it's not a dumb question.
Hi! All these shapes are based on each other and it’s the easiest to visualize for a first set. There are actually 49 diatonic arpeggio fingerings (7 in each of the 7 major scale patterns) and the goal is to learn them all - and you might find a shape that is easier to play there.
Excellent lesson Korey . Much appreciated 💯💪👍
Glad it was helpful!
This is great, Korey... now, do this all over again showing your picking hand!! (jk). Although, it would be nice to know how you are getting the fluidity between strings, etc. Economy Picking? Hybrid? It looked like it was all pick? Maybe Up/down?? Nevertheless, it's wonderful how you show how each shape builds or falls into another pretty easily. Great work!!
@@Sammywhat I use economy picking pretty exclusively, which is essentially alternate picking but continuing the picking motion to the next string.
There’s a lot of hybrid picking as well, especially for country and jazz
@@KoreyHicksGuitar Thank you, sir! I really appreciate the info! I really enjoy the way you play that lovely Tele!! Great stuff!!
Love it Korey! Thanks a lot!
@@MaestroLoL You bet!
"...phone rings? Don't answer it." !!!! 😁 Excellent.
good point, it's probably a scammer.
Great lesson. I’ve subscribed 👍
@@colink4823 thank you so much! There are a lot of other ones you should check out as well!
precious ! 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻 Although I would be exercising this on my acoustic guitar without amp.
Thank you!!
Your lessons are the best. Can you do one on how to guild chords from a single shape? Thank you.
@@miguellauandos1902 absolutely!
Great content but have you considered organizing some of your videos into playlists?
That's a good idea!
Hey Korey, I am liking the content and trying to practice this a bit each day. I'm just wondering why you decided to access the initial third - E for example, on the A string as opposed to grabbing it on the D string 2nd fret? Thank you for the great lessons.
@@mbshark33024 hello! That’s so all five shapes are based off of each other. If I would’ve placed it on the D string, we would’ve got a different fingering and I wanted to keep it consistent.
Brilliant lesson. My head hurts
You’ll get there!
Great video
Thanks Marlon!
Another fantastic lesson! After getting the patterns down solid, do you vary the rhythm like playing in triplets? My first goal is to get to the 15 min straight, which will be challenging enough. Thank you!
Yes, 8ths, triplets and 16ths!
Hi Korey. Excellent lesson as usual. But I don't understand why the long stretch to the 7th, when it's just down one on the next string? I'm not studying music...hope it's not a dumb question.
Hi! All these shapes are based on each other and it’s the easiest to visualize for a first set. There are actually 49 diatonic arpeggio fingerings (7 in each of the 7 major scale patterns) and the goal is to learn them all - and you might find a shape that is easier to play there.
😎