Hi I hope you enjoyed this lesson on using Triads to play guitar solos. Grab the backing track here! -----------> Grab The Backing Track Here! 😀 www.patreon.com/UpliftingRiffs/shop/laid-back-groove-in-c-major-148836
Great lesson Shane.........this stuff is gold for me...........learning so much and my playing has really improved so quickly since I started learning g the notes onthe fretboard the triads ......the notes in the triads 3rd roots 5ths.......I'm.able to make nice melodic solos now........a big thank you Paul from Ireland
As a novice to soloing, what frustrates me most about about videos like this that suggest playing solos can be so easy if you just use triads is when the instructor just moves right from the open position chords that most beginners like me know, straight to some random position on the fret board and says let's play triad "x" here instead. Leaving out the info on how you got to the new triad position and why, makes lessons like this so confusing to beginners, in my opinion.
You need to look at a tutorial that teaches the triad shapes for all the chords......these loads of ways to play a chord..........a chord is made of 3 notes a root a third and a fifth........these all come from the major scale........for instance in the key of c a c chord is made of c (root note) e( third note) and a g ( fifth note) all these notes are pulled from the major scale..........the third of a chord determines whether the chord is major or minor.........to make a chord/ triad minor you just flatten the third............this is focused chord tone soloing........hope this helps
All triads are based off of all the open chords/barre shapes you already know. It's the beauty of this instrument. If you move c open chord up 2 frets it becomes D 2 more frets it's E, one more it's F. It's where he was on the fret board. All chords move chromatically up the fret board. Although I'm still a novice myself. Just beginning to wrap my head around these ideas. Surely can't make it musical yet.
Hi I hope you enjoyed this lesson on using Triads to play guitar solos. Grab the backing track here! -----------> Grab The Backing Track Here! 😀
www.patreon.com/UpliftingRiffs/shop/laid-back-groove-in-c-major-148836
Indeed i m enjoying it much
THanks!@@danokangudie4414
Great lesson Shane.........this stuff is gold for me...........learning so much and my playing has really improved so quickly since I started learning g the notes onthe fretboard the triads ......the notes in the triads 3rd roots 5ths.......I'm.able to make nice melodic solos now........a big thank you Paul from Ireland
Very welcome Paul I'm glad it helps! Triads are they key!
So useful for old man as me , thanks alot
Very welcome!
Beautiful. I've never tried triads it always looks complicated. But it's something I need to apply sooner than later.
Yes exactly thanks. 😀
Great lesson Shane, thanks. Just what I needed to keep me focused when I practice. :)
Very Welcome. Appreciate it very much! Glad it helps!😄
It sound good nice and clear explaination i love it more practical
Awesome thank you Dano!
Great, more like this please.
Luke thanks! Will do glad you liked it!
❤❤❤❤
Thanks!
What type of pedals are you using.
I'm using Neural DSP Plugin called Tone King.
As a novice to soloing, what frustrates me most about about videos like this that suggest playing solos can be so easy if you just use triads is when the instructor just moves right from the open position chords that most beginners like me know, straight to some random position on the fret board and says let's play triad "x" here instead. Leaving out the info on how you got to the new triad position and why, makes lessons like this so confusing to beginners, in my opinion.
You need to look at a tutorial that teaches the triad shapes for all the chords......these loads of ways to play a chord..........a chord is made of 3 notes a root a third and a fifth........these all come from the major scale........for instance in the key of c a c chord is made of c (root note) e( third note) and a g ( fifth note) all these notes are pulled from the major scale..........the third of a chord determines whether the chord is major or minor.........to make a chord/ triad minor you just flatten the third............this is focused chord tone soloing........hope this helps
All triads are based off of all the open chords/barre shapes you already know. It's the beauty of this instrument. If you move c open chord up 2 frets it becomes D 2 more frets it's E, one more it's F. It's where he was on the fret board.
All chords move chromatically up the fret board. Although I'm still a novice myself. Just beginning to wrap my head around these ideas. Surely can't make it musical yet.