What I love about Dean is he approaches the guitar with no ego & sees and respects other players' abilities. He finds joy in playing and progressing his understanding of the guitar. Will admit when he's stuck or doesn't understand something even though he is a beast himself. Honestly, that is how he has gotten so good in the first place. Let's all try to be like Dean 👍
Loved ur comment.. When uve been playin for 25 years like dean ud have respect for even a clarinet player. Only way to further improve is to respect the dedication n craft and peoples abilities n passion n be a student till ur dust ...i mean ,hes watchin brandon's licks n riffs tape and just zonin out by his desk ...isnt what this is all shud be about anyway?
Brandon is my favorite modern player. Not just his outstanding chops and phrasing, but his down to the detail articulation of almost every note. Every time I listen to him I'm inspired to pick up my guitar. The Black Dahlia Murder is also my favorite death metal band so I was ecstatic when he joined the band, and he didn't disappoint. Nightbringers is the Rust in Peace of the modern era.
love this type of content and appreciate a player of your caliber showing an accurate representation of the learning process. How you figure things out, get confused, make mistakes etc., it's a very real experience for all players but often excluded with production magic that gives unrealistic expectations & skewed perceptions! great vid and brandon is sick 😎
Man played live at a local dive bar near me looking like Elrond come to slay the fellowship of the pit. Man played like a elf bard with +4 in Charisma. And indeed all his additional skill points went straight to guitar shredding.
I'll give you a Brandon Ellis secret trick since I've followed most of his lessons: Always outside pick everything. You can do economy, alternate, legato, but always outside pick your string changes. Boom. Sweetness and rhythm. I didn't know that either.
So funny to watch this video yesterday on Troy's channel and geek out, and then today see Dean watch Brandon play with that smile on his face. Ellis is the MAN, his channel is great too. Playthroughs with no BS, camera pointed to show fretboard clearly... He knows his audience. Such a treat to watch both of you guys.
I started playing the guitar in the late 80s. For the next 10+ years, I practiced for 5-6 hours daily, sometimes 12 or more hours. To make a long story short, I stopped being interested in solo when I started listening to Napalm Death and Meshuggah. Then I heard about Brandon, started watching his videos on RUclips, then he started playing with TBDM and I fell in love with solo again. And when he was on tour with Exodus and replacing Lee, playing all the Rick Hunolt original solos, he bought me for life.
I find it really frustrating. I love his playing, but to me his vibrato is too slow and intentional sounding. Wide vibrato sounds awesome, but his is just too slow for me
@@Trahzy yes because the only true dichotomy is that you either sound mechanical or that you have Brandon Ellis’a vibrato. What kind of a moron are you? Does Marty Friedman sound mechanical to you? No? Well, his vibrato isn’t wide and slow like Brandon’s.
I hung around with the metal crowd in high school in the Detroit area in the late-90s/early-2000s, and I remember seeing a few shows with this new band, who I thought was called "Black Dolly Murder." The next year I went away to college and was hanging out with my new metal friends when one of them started talking about this awesome band called "Black Dahlia Murder" and I was like, "So, THAT'S what their name is." That new metal friend I made ended up leaving school to start a band called The Hurt Process. It's awesome to see local bands make it big.
@@matthewbaer7871 I don't think that's limiting at all. Check out Holdsworth, he only used the bridge and he's definitely not limited haha! I think lack of knowledge of music theory is limiting.
@@preston2636 spent* so because you used a tool incorrectly, it means it's a useless tool? It doesn't even cover mistakes. You should have spent those 18 years learning to play instead of trying to come up with weird "tricks" to make your bad playing sound good.
Loved Brandon ever since he was just posting incredibly tasty stuff on RUclips pre TBDM. His vibrato, phrasing, and style are massive inspirations for me.
Saw their live show last night, he's a fucking beast. He might be one of the best metal guitarists right now, he's just always studio quality when he plays live.
Brandon is absolutely amazing. I was glad to see a video with Troy about him. I think the best BDM is the stuff since he's joined the band. Trevor is a great loss but I really love where the band is now.
His lead tone has a softness to it. Fixed bridges can sound pretty stiff. a note is often sub threshold for feedback. His harmonic vocabulary is excellent. b3 The vibrato is wide and fast, easy to accidentally pull off from it, but he doesn’t. I kinda want to try that dyad pickup.
You young guys really have it all together. When sweep picking first came to us in the form of Malmsteen, we all kind of stood back and marvelled. Thinking it was alien tech or something. Since I pick everything it came to me slowly if at all. I. An but I am limited. I learned by listening to my favorite shredder Al DiMeola and perhaps some Santana. So I am a picker of all things guitar. My left hand is OK, not like you guys. But, my right hand is pretty happening. I can rip off 64ths still without issue and that is my thing to this day. It all starts with where you as a player start. Had I started playing.much later perhaps my style might be different. But as it is, I play this way for life. Not a bad thing and I suppose I could learn. But I'm a guitar player and inherently lazy LOL Great player by you both. Bravo Sir.
So f'n cool to see such impressive and classically-inspired techniques by Ellis. Not a complete shock, but I still don't think most people associate that kind of playing with BDM. Dean's ability to quickly learn damn near anything from ear is super impressive. Most metal musicians are more aural-based than written, but Dean's got an absolute gift that I'm more used to from classical and jazz musicians. Perhaps it's just an availability bias, as few (if any?) metal guitarists have such an open window as Dean, so we get to watch him go through his process of learning riffs and solos. But it's impressive nonetheless.
12:19 dean you’re thinking of an augmented 6th chord, that’s the one that has italian french and german versions. The neapolitan chord is just a major triad starting on the b2 of the key
Watching some of his interviews, he's a big 80's shred guy with a crazy amount of theory understanding. He really isn't mentioned enough when it comes to lead guitarists. The solo in Sunless Empire is super technical, but sooooo pretty at the same time. Might be an interesting video to break down one of his solos!
When attending music-advanced-course I also could not remember the neapolitan. But it was the only chord I never could figure out in a harmony-analysis. At some point I could itentify the chord just because I could never identify it. Because of its suspension(s) it is used as a junction between keys.
I abandoned it too years ago for leads. The bridge pickup is much less forgiving for leads but it cuts through the mix like butter and accentuates pick attack much more and is cleaner, even if you play perfectly clean on the neck pickup its still kinda muddy.
@@preston2636 I just feel like the neck pickup hides a lot of the characteristics of the string. I think Holdsworth said in an interview that he was trying to make the one sound as perfect as possible. So he had a chamber made where the neck pickup used to be to get a warmer tone from the bridge. I know for me, I typically pick on the ponticello side... It's just engrained into my playing from classcial guitar as my default hand position. So I typically have a warmer sound to my playing in general, so the bridge pickup helps compensate that. Obviously when I play metal rhythms my hand goes to the sul tasto position.
I'm only in the first few minutes of the video, but that swiping technique immediately reminds me of the intro and outro riffs of Cafo from AAL. Insanely hard riff that blends sweeping and swiping together.
Some of those chords in the middle remind me of Alexi Laiho stuff, Where Dead Angels lie, his work with Singergy. Dude had a very unique writing style in metal, imo.
Although i get where you're coming from i wouldn't consider cannibal corpse ignorant to theory. Alex Webster has a crazy knowledge of theory. I would think something more like sanguisugabogg or something when i think ignorant to theory.
@@DeanLambI guess ignorant as in "writing riffs that disregard a focus on theory" and not "not knowing theory". As much as I respect Alex as a guitar player, I just can't get into music like Cannibal Corpse. Probably because of that "ignorance".
been long time BDM fan, but never checked out this dudes playing show off vids. It’s so good it makes me want to pick up my own guitar again kinda not really lol I can do the Jason Becker run I learned from a VHS tape and that was good enough for me 20 something years later.
He's the kind of player who somehow makes you want to pick up your guitar and practice for a week straight, but also throw it in the garbage and never play again lmao
As good as Dean is he is still soooo humble. Crazy good and is still learning songs and taking something from them. He could easily just stay good at what he does but nope he is trying to take ideas and be better so sick! Brandon is so good at guitar that vibrato is nuts
You can all kinds of parallel chords over minor; if you play Ebmaj7 after an Emin7, and it will sound incredible. Bbmaj7 will also sound great, as will Bb7, and also F7. Turn these into arpeggios and add some extensions and the possibilities feel limitless.
Archspire should make a "Got talent/some kind of monster" type spoof series to market/audition their new drummer, would be funny and would spread the Stay Tech mission to the world.
awesome video im out here trying to put some skillpoints into my refrigerator by selling my guitar amp at the pawn shop and increasing my survival skill points because there is a hurricane coming
Dean, you're conflating the Neapolitan chord with the Augmented 6th chord. Neapolitan is a (often) pre-dominant ♭II, and the German, French, and Italian Aug6th chords are also predominant, although they also have dominant tonality, that are (sort of) rooted off the ♭6. Essentially, they're tritone substitutions that resolve to the V chord
I think you were mixing the neapolitan chord with the augmented sixth chords, of which there is French, German and Italian. Basically it's a dominant chord over the #4th scale degree and each variant is just an increasingly dissonant variant like going from V to V7 to V7b9 but all within the same realm. They act as solid predominants usually Love the vids!
When 4 levels of death metal from Black Dahlia with Brandon Ellis / Ryan Knight?
I've been asking for that for a couple of years now. Between Brandon, Ryan, and Brian he has his pick of amazing guitar players
Yeah man I've been waiting and asking for years to see them try to play Everything Went Black.
@TheHighsmith8 the exact song I'd love to see Dean struggle his way through
Takes me back to trying to learn the "I will return" solo and just being absolutely flabbergasted by Ryan's crazy legato stuff.
Pleaseeeee
What I love about Dean is he approaches the guitar with no ego & sees and respects other players' abilities. He finds joy in playing and progressing his understanding of the guitar. Will admit when he's stuck or doesn't understand something even though he is a beast himself. Honestly, that is how he has gotten so good in the first place. Let's all try to be like Dean 👍
TOP Secret 0.5x Speed video you seeing drunken people and learn
Loved ur comment..
When uve been playin for 25 years like dean ud have respect for even a clarinet player.
Only way to further improve is to respect the dedication n craft and peoples abilities n passion n be a student till ur dust ...i mean ,hes watchin brandon's licks n riffs tape and just zonin out by his desk ...isnt what this is all shud be about anyway?
I love that it seems to not even cross Dean's mind that 10,000's of guitarist look at him with the exact same reverance. Such a fucking cool dude.
100.000
Exactly, he is pretty humble. He'd be a pretty cool dude to chill with.
Brandon is my favorite modern player. Not just his outstanding chops and phrasing, but his down to the detail articulation of almost every note. Every time I listen to him I'm inspired to pick up my guitar. The Black Dahlia Murder is also my favorite death metal band so I was ecstatic when he joined the band, and he didn't disappoint. Nightbringers is the Rust in Peace of the modern era.
love this type of content and appreciate a player of your caliber showing an accurate representation of the learning process. How you figure things out, get confused, make mistakes etc., it's a very real experience for all players but often excluded with production magic that gives unrealistic expectations & skewed perceptions! great vid and brandon is sick 😎
exactly.
Dude was in Arsis when he was 16 IIRC, the term prodigy gets overused but he is a legit guitar prodigy
he was like 20/21, but still. Would love a 4 levels of Death Metal video on Arsis, holy hell
Thanks for giving Arsis some love. James Malone is a riff machine, and vastly underappreciated, imo.
caught TBDM on Friday with Dying Fetus. was an amazing show. one thing about both TBDM guitarists is their accuracy live. MIND BLOWING!
So happy you're talking about Brandon. He's among the best guitarists of all time imho
Brandon is easily one of my fav guitarists. His vibrato is so distinct and awesome
Man played live at a local dive bar near me looking like Elrond come to slay the fellowship of the pit. Man played like a elf bard with +4 in Charisma. And indeed all his additional skill points went straight to guitar shredding.
This is the funniest thing I've read today. Thank you for the laugh!
i wonder what your favourite movies are
The dudes playing has so much swagger.
I'll give you a Brandon Ellis secret trick since I've followed most of his lessons: Always outside pick everything. You can do economy, alternate, legato, but always outside pick your string changes. Boom. Sweetness and rhythm. I didn't know that either.
So funny to watch this video yesterday on Troy's channel and geek out, and then today see Dean watch Brandon play with that smile on his face. Ellis is the MAN, his channel is great too. Playthroughs with no BS, camera pointed to show fretboard clearly... He knows his audience. Such a treat to watch both of you guys.
I started playing the guitar in the late 80s. For the next 10+ years, I practiced for 5-6 hours daily, sometimes 12 or more hours. To make a long story short, I stopped being interested in solo when I started listening to Napalm Death and Meshuggah. Then I heard about Brandon, started watching his videos on RUclips, then he started playing with TBDM and I fell in love with solo again. And when he was on tour with Exodus and replacing Lee, playing all the Rick Hunolt original solos, he bought me for life.
Brandon is THE man, love watching/listening to him playing, such an amazing musician !
His vibrato is the best I've ever heard!!!
I find it really frustrating. I love his playing, but to me his vibrato is too slow and intentional sounding. Wide vibrato sounds awesome, but his is just too slow for me
@JobForAMaxboy We get it, you like mechanical nerdy playing.
reminds me of loomis soooo much
@@JobForAMaxboyIt's taste and not doing thin ass vibrato to where it might as well be a trill
@@Trahzy yes because the only true dichotomy is that you either sound mechanical or that you have Brandon Ellis’a vibrato. What kind of a moron are you? Does Marty Friedman sound mechanical to you? No? Well, his vibrato isn’t wide and slow like Brandon’s.
I've been waiting for a video like this. I've been geeking over Brandon Ellis since he joined TBDM
Guitar god admiring guitar god; I approve
Do Fredrik Thorendal next 😮
DJENT DJENT DJENT DJENT
Not even close lmao
I hung around with the metal crowd in high school in the Detroit area in the late-90s/early-2000s, and I remember seeing a few shows with this new band, who I thought was called "Black Dolly Murder." The next year I went away to college and was hanging out with my new metal friends when one of them started talking about this awesome band called "Black Dahlia Murder" and I was like, "So, THAT'S what their name is." That new metal friend I made ended up leaving school to start a band called The Hurt Process. It's awesome to see local bands make it big.
This is insane and exactly what I need to see to get better. Thank you for always providing shit that makes me want to pick up my guitar and play.
Man those runs were fucking clean, I can barely alternate through strings and he can just flow through them without missing a note, insane
He's the best guitarist in Metal rn imo.
I will totally second that!!!
him and Wes Hauch fo sho
maybe most technically proficient but best guitarist for the last 26 years has been dino cazares
@@tfwnoyandere lmao you're hilarious, that's the last person I would say is the best.
@@Everythingwentblack69 dude is god of cave dweller grooves, give brujerizmo or vayan sin miedo a spin and its literally impossible to disagree
Im team bridge pickup for solos for life. Much less forgiving but much more rewarding.
They are both situational. And you are limiting yourself as a musician
What's less forgiving? Can you hear mistakes more on bridge? Never noticed that
@@matthewbaer7871 I don't think that's limiting at all. Check out Holdsworth, he only used the bridge and he's definitely not limited haha! I think lack of knowledge of music theory is limiting.
@@matthewbaer7871 i speant 18 years using neck pickups. The neck pickup was limiting me because i was using it to cover mistakes i was making.
@@preston2636 spent* so because you used a tool incorrectly, it means it's a useless tool? It doesn't even cover mistakes.
You should have spent those 18 years learning to play instead of trying to come up with weird "tricks" to make your bad playing sound good.
I didn't understand a word of this, but my ears liked it.
Dude plays anything while looking straight ahead and sounds THAT good. Damn
Kudos on the Martyr tip, checked them out today, their stuff absolutely rips 🤯
Awesome video. Imagine 4 levels of death metal with Phil Tougas
Phil is the master
I've been wishing for that for ages, it would be awesome
FINALLY. brandon is hands down one of the best technical metal players to ever live. he is definitely on another level!
Getting to watch one of my favourite riff lords froth one of my other favourite riff lords is just the kind of content the internet was made for.
Dean lamb is a fantastic guitarist ❤
Loved Brandon ever since he was just posting incredibly tasty stuff on RUclips pre TBDM. His vibrato, phrasing, and style are massive inspirations for me.
So when he was touring with arsis...... lol
Brandon Ellis and Ryan Knight are two of my favorite guitarists of all time, it's so sick to see them both in the same band.
Some dudes are just truly gifted. His high school talent show video is ridiculous.
Yes!!! Excited for this one!
I get a kick out of watching Dean struggle these things!.....BUT he is a MONSTER when he does his own thing!
a goldmine of concepts, thanks Dean for that episode!
Dean is so good at guitar. Definitely out of everyone's time even his own 🤓
Saw their live show last night, he's a fucking beast. He might be one of the best metal guitarists right now, he's just always studio quality when he plays live.
Brandon is absolutely amazing. I was glad to see a video with Troy about him. I think the best BDM is the stuff since he's joined the band. Trevor is a great loss but I really love where the band is now.
On top of Brandon's feel, his tone is always absolutely killer. Such spicy lead tones.
Cracking the Code changed my life.
saaaaaaaaaame
Brandon is just insanely good, his playing is always awesome and precise
I would do strange things to hear a Brandon Ellis solo album
His lead tone has a softness to it. Fixed bridges can sound pretty stiff.
a note is often sub threshold for feedback.
His harmonic vocabulary is excellent.
b3
The vibrato is wide and fast, easy to accidentally pull off from it, but he doesn’t.
I kinda want to try that dyad pickup.
i absolutely love brandon ellis, easily my top 1 favorite modern guitarist
You young guys really have it all together. When sweep picking first came to us in the form of Malmsteen, we all kind of stood back and marvelled. Thinking it was alien tech or something. Since I pick everything it came to me slowly if at all. I. An but I am limited. I learned by listening to my favorite shredder Al DiMeola and perhaps some Santana. So I am a picker of all things guitar. My left hand is OK, not like you guys. But, my right hand is pretty happening. I can rip off 64ths still without issue and that is my thing to this day. It all starts with where you as a player start. Had I started playing.much later perhaps my style might be different. But as it is, I play this way for life. Not a bad thing and I suppose I could learn. But I'm a guitar player and inherently lazy
LOL
Great player by you both. Bravo Sir.
Brandon is just one of the best players I've ever seen. Killer player with an amazing guitar collection. Vibrato is just insane
Brandon has to be the smoothest guitar player out there!! And he's just as good live!!
So f'n cool to see such impressive and classically-inspired techniques by Ellis. Not a complete shock, but I still don't think most people associate that kind of playing with BDM.
Dean's ability to quickly learn damn near anything from ear is super impressive. Most metal musicians are more aural-based than written, but Dean's got an absolute gift that I'm more used to from classical and jazz musicians. Perhaps it's just an availability bias, as few (if any?) metal guitarists have such an open window as Dean, so we get to watch him go through his process of learning riffs and solos. But it's impressive nonetheless.
Yes!!!! Yes he did!!!! Brandon is a god!
12:19 dean you’re thinking of an augmented 6th chord, that’s the one that has italian french and german versions. The neapolitan chord is just a major triad starting on the b2 of the key
16:40 the fact that he can play that while during a staring competition XD
Spat coffee everywhere. great gag amigo
@@bobolliebahaha
Watching some of his interviews, he's a big 80's shred guy with a crazy amount of theory understanding. He really isn't mentioned enough when it comes to lead guitarists. The solo in Sunless Empire is super technical, but sooooo pretty at the same time. Might be an interesting video to break down one of his solos!
This is top tier content , yall should collab!!
Thanks for introducing me to Troy Grady pick slanting transformed my learning speed
When attending music-advanced-course I also could not remember the neapolitan. But it was the only chord I never could figure out in a harmony-analysis. At some point I could itentify the chord just because I could never identify it. Because of its suspension(s) it is used as a junction between keys.
After getting into Holdsworth I actually stopped using my neck pickup... I don't overly like the way it sounds, except for clean playing.
I abandoned it too years ago for leads. The bridge pickup is much less forgiving for leads but it cuts through the mix like butter and accentuates pick attack much more and is cleaner, even if you play perfectly clean on the neck pickup its still kinda muddy.
@@preston2636legato = neck
Picking = bridge for me
@@preston2636 I just feel like the neck pickup hides a lot of the characteristics of the string. I think Holdsworth said in an interview that he was trying to make the one sound as perfect as possible. So he had a chamber made where the neck pickup used to be to get a warmer tone from the bridge. I know for me, I typically pick on the ponticello side... It's just engrained into my playing from classcial guitar as my default hand position. So I typically have a warmer sound to my playing in general, so the bridge pickup helps compensate that. Obviously when I play metal rhythms my hand goes to the sul tasto position.
Guitar nerds😂. You all need girlfriends. At least Dean is Married... to a chick that plays guitar😂😂😂
I stopped using the neck for leads after getting into Per Nilsson’s playing. Who, by the way is a huge Holdsworth guy.
I'm only in the first few minutes of the video, but that swiping technique immediately reminds me of the intro and outro riffs of Cafo from AAL. Insanely hard riff that blends sweeping and swiping together.
Hungarian Gypsy Minor is one of my favorite scales of all time ❤❤❤
1:31 is this the intro to Great Fairy Fountain 😂😂
Lmao I thought the exact same thing as I heard this
yessss i've been waitin for this
one of my fav players, what a beast
tbdm is my fav band for sure.
I hate having short fingers. Watching videos like this always reminds me. But never despair. I work with what I got😅
Brandon Ellis is sick. He has so much swagger, Friedman inspired, he’d be a perfect fit for Megadeth
Mustaine would hate Death Metal riffs, plus he'd never let him write anything.
@@murk4552like writing death - metal riffs is all Brandon capable of...
I'm learning a ton from this
You guys are both God tier players. Brandon is my goal for vibrato
It actually makes me so happy to see dean be stretched, it makes me, a mere mortal, feel far less inadequate and VERY inadequate at the same time!
Some of those chords in the middle remind me of Alexi Laiho stuff, Where Dead Angels lie, his work with Singergy. Dude had a very unique writing style in metal, imo.
Although i get where you're coming from i wouldn't consider cannibal corpse ignorant to theory. Alex Webster has a crazy knowledge of theory. I would think something more like sanguisugabogg or something when i think ignorant to theory.
I don't mean that type of ignorant. I mean it in the "hit you in the head tough riffs" kind of ignorant.
Cody the drummer of Bogg is one of the best guitar players I’ve ever met irl. He is a theory guy in addition.
@@DeanLambI guess ignorant as in "writing riffs that disregard a focus on theory" and not "not knowing theory".
As much as I respect Alex as a guitar player, I just can't get into music like Cannibal Corpse. Probably because of that "ignorance".
been long time BDM fan, but never checked out this dudes playing show off vids. It’s so good it makes me want to pick up my own guitar again kinda not really lol I can do the Jason Becker run I learned from a VHS tape and that was good enough for me 20 something years later.
He's the kind of player who somehow makes you want to pick up your guitar and practice for a week straight, but also throw it in the garbage and never play again lmao
@6:18 could also be harmonic major or double harmonic major, although in the videos context I guess it was mixolydian b6
they are obviously super good live. having said that, his leads, and that vibrato live, good lord. was like a joke it Was so good
As good as Dean is he is still soooo humble. Crazy good and is still learning songs and taking something from them. He could easily just stay good at what he does but nope he is trying to take ideas and be better so sick! Brandon is so good at guitar that vibrato is nuts
You can all kinds of parallel chords over minor; if you play Ebmaj7 after an Emin7, and it will sound incredible. Bbmaj7 will also sound great, as will Bb7, and also F7. Turn these into arpeggios and add some extensions and the possibilities feel limitless.
His solo on Sunless Empire alone bumped that album to one of my favourite Black Dahlia Murder albums.
I hope this is a precursor to a TBDM/Archspire tour
9:05 you start sounding a little like planetary duality era The Faceless here. I'm gonna be trying to get comfy with this idea haha
That chord you're talking about at 7:00 immediately reminded me of The Faceless. I think they use that at :52 on "The Ancient Covenant"
Absolutely, they used it a lot
Just seen them boys in Boise Idaho last night. Great show
I love you, Dean.
That walk down is totally a Slayer homage.
Feels more like Carcass
@@bobmcstuffins8194 well since Slayer preceded Carcass I’m still going with Slayer 😄
Archspire should make a "Got talent/some kind of monster" type spoof series to market/audition their new drummer, would be funny and would spread the Stay Tech mission to the world.
Swiper swipe!
Great stuff here!
Thanks for giving BDM some love! When you gonna do a BDM archspire tour?!?
He's so good it's insane. Same for Ryan.
I just saw him play last night, he is so good
Dean accidentally creating something awesome starting around 9:05-9:45
Did anyone else catch that Finntroll US tour back in 2013 when Brandon had to fill in for Skrymer last minute? That was neat.
TROLLHAMMAREN
Brandon is such a fucking killer guitarist. Dude is fuckin insane, and Black Dahlia's riffs are god tier
awesome video im out here trying to put some skillpoints into my refrigerator by selling my guitar amp at the pawn shop and increasing my survival skill points because there is a hurricane coming
🤣🤣
Stay safe my Floridian brother
Miltonhouse Manastorm on his way to blow all your outhouses into the sea
@@byranakiempitts7374 i survived a suicide attempt
@@joeymcginnis6167 how do you know my name
Brandon Ellis' playing reminds me of Ralph Santolla. I love it.
Dean, you're conflating the Neapolitan chord with the Augmented 6th chord. Neapolitan is a (often) pre-dominant ♭II, and the German, French, and Italian Aug6th chords are also predominant, although they also have dominant tonality, that are (sort of) rooted off the ♭6. Essentially, they're tritone substitutions that resolve to the V chord
Would love to see a video of this of old Chris storey stuff in asp
I think you were mixing the neapolitan chord with the augmented sixth chords, of which there is French, German and Italian. Basically it's a dominant chord over the #4th scale degree and each variant is just an increasingly dissonant variant like going from V to V7 to V7b9 but all within the same realm. They act as solid predominants usually
Love the vids!
9:00 That turned into a bit of "Galaxy 500" by Reverend Horton Heat
13:42 sounds like slayer
Yeah was just thinking "Raining Blood"
-- have they both not heard of Slayer? Surely fkn not!!
He's got a Gibson 3-way switch on that Jackson. Never seen that before.
I'm not a big fan of Black Dahlia but the dude chooses BANGING melodies
SAME Dude! I've saw them live a few times at festivals and always just watched Brandon JAM! BEAST!
Yeah I honestly wasn’t to big on them until Brandon joined
@@metalhead41294 nightbringers is my fav coz of Brandon