Tricky Mandolin Chords Made Easy

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  • @mgmtrace1
    @mgmtrace1 28 дней назад

    A very good teacher of the mandolin.

  • @dougscrivens4002
    @dougscrivens4002 2 года назад +9

    At 71 I was thinking of giving up learning the mandolin, especially after struggling with the Bm chord. This video has made it much better. A big thank you from Redditch, 🇬🇧. 👍

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  2 года назад +2

      Great to hear...there are certain "work-arounds" that still provide that authentic mandolin sound.

    • @ronaldgrider7810
      @ronaldgrider7810 11 месяцев назад

      They got a Bm 2 finger it's simpler

  • @djba
    @djba Месяц назад +2

    Thanks for this very helpful video.

    • @djba
      @djba Месяц назад

      Also, I would like to add that I purchased your ibook on 10 steps to the mandolin and it is great.

  • @RobertEMason
    @RobertEMason Месяц назад

    I think you've got a great vocal - like a pleasant Bob Dylan!

  • @ronmeinsler
    @ronmeinsler 27 дней назад

    This was a fantastic lesson. Thank you for doing this.

  • @yvonneainsworth2679
    @yvonneainsworth2679 4 месяца назад +1

    So good! Thanks, this is exactly what I was looking for ☺.

  • @unclejeff64
    @unclejeff64 2 года назад +2

    This is the video I've been looking for since I got my mandolin. Thanks!

  • @reckonimokie123
    @reckonimokie123 3 года назад +4

    I love this video, watch it over & over. Great for beginners & chop for small hands. Keep them coming.

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  3 года назад

      Right, a lot of pickers don't realize there is an alternative for those playing with small hands. Thanks.

  • @taylorf1388
    @taylorf1388 Год назад

    Wonderful. Thanks!

  • @WysteriaGuitar
    @WysteriaGuitar Год назад

    Beyond brilliant, thanks you sir.

  • @billfindlay1812
    @billfindlay1812 3 года назад +1

    Excellent video Eddie...really explained a lot. ..many thanks

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  3 года назад

      Appreciate the feedback Bill. Helps me plan for future topics.

  • @sambsialia
    @sambsialia 2 года назад

    Truly helpful. Thanks so much

  • @48Xtian
    @48Xtian 3 года назад

    Very nice lesson. I allways Learn something new thanks tout your lessons. Thank you very much.

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  3 года назад

      Thanks Christian...really appreciate the feedback. Happy picking!

  • @Newfoundmike
    @Newfoundmike 10 месяцев назад

    Love it Great Layout and Thanks. best tutorial I've ever seen on anything on RUclips

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  10 месяцев назад

      Really appreciate that! Glad you found it useful.

  • @reckonimokie123
    @reckonimokie123 6 месяцев назад

    Thank you. Good lesson.

  • @SomeBlokeJenkins
    @SomeBlokeJenkins 3 года назад +3

    I just started mandolin two weeks ago and this video help me a lot! Thank you!

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  3 года назад

      Glad you found us and good luck with your mandolin journey!

  • @johngault5214
    @johngault5214 Год назад +1

    Great stuff mate, great shapes. thank you

  • @reckonimokie123
    @reckonimokie123 3 года назад

    Thank you. Simplified

  • @Shmerpy
    @Shmerpy 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for this. I've been trying to learn chords on the Irish tenor banjo (same tuning), so this helps out a lot.

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  2 года назад +2

      Yes, there's a lot of crossover there, especially with the ways to avoid the "big stretches"

  • @Zongshenfurshur
    @Zongshenfurshur 2 года назад

    i bought your beyond bluegrass banjo book yrs ago it was excellent. im gettin into mando now. this is great video

  • @victorvialmosamusic8547
    @victorvialmosamusic8547 5 месяцев назад

    Very interesting

  • @kenbyrd1918
    @kenbyrd1918 2 года назад

    Thanks just starting, helps a lot!

  • @reckonimokie123
    @reckonimokie123 2 года назад

    Thank you

  • @YankeeFiddler13850
    @YankeeFiddler13850 Год назад

    Great information and we'll presented! I wish I saw this before I recorded my first original

  • @stephenhunt572
    @stephenhunt572 2 года назад

    Superb video best I have ever seen been playing mandolin now for a couple of years bought a book on chords which has every chord possible on all four string but I must say your method is far better thanks keep making your videos

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  2 года назад

      Really appreciate that feedback. Yes, they have to put lots of chords you don't really need into those chord books, best to keep it simple and understand how to take a few shapes and move them around.

  • @petethefeet5281
    @petethefeet5281 2 года назад +1

    Thanks Eddie - I've been playing mando four years now and still can't get a clean sounding full g chop - this is a great solution - very helpfull

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  2 года назад

      You're not the only one...glad this will work for you!

  • @lynnglidewell7367
    @lynnglidewell7367 Год назад +1

    Hooray! Thanks Eddie. Someone was trying to tell me I must learn a nearly impossible chop chord stretched out across half a dozen frets. My fingers are short, gnarled, and stiff at 70. No way that's going to happen. I learned loads from you playing Banjo not realizing you teach Mandolin too. Fantastic!

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  Год назад +1

      I noticed one of my mando heroes playing that simple chop that I share. It's provides the chop tone that you're looking for. It's sad that some pickers espouse to the "chop ultimatum" the way they do. Glad this will help you!

    • @actionsub
      @actionsub Год назад

      Ditto for tenor banjo and tenor guitar. Wish I'd seen this two days ago before I restrung the tenor guitar for Chicago tuning!

  • @scottreichert1104
    @scottreichert1104 2 года назад +1

    this is great. thanks, eddie. i met you at steve kaufman's kamp in 1998. i was there for guitar, and you were, too. outside at night we had jam sessions, and you were a lot better than others, including me. you were patient and took time to show what might help our playing. later, in 2006, i started playing mandolin and put down the guitar because the layout of the fretboard on mandolin made hugely more sense. and so here you are over 20 years later, and once again i learn. this time, how to take full advantage of that sense and symmetry, showing us that the right things are always close by. thanks again, eddie.

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  2 года назад

      Scott, great to hear from you and thanks for filling me in on the background where we met. You are right about the mandolin being a very logical instrument. I always enjoyed jamming all night at those camps, even the I became one of the instructors...would always so up to class somewhat tired, but got the job done! Good luck with your future picking.

  • @reckonimokie123
    @reckonimokie123 2 года назад

    I love this lesson for small hands

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  2 года назад

      I've had lots of students over the years that needed other alternatives. Glad it worked for you as well!

  • @reckonimokie123
    @reckonimokie123 2 года назад +1

    Thx

  • @mirekklemens662
    @mirekklemens662 2 года назад

    Thank you very much my friend.
    New Subscriber. 👍
    My regards from New York. ❤👍👍

  • @jamespeschka8762
    @jamespeschka8762 3 года назад +1

    great video Eddie very informative

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  3 года назад

      Thanks 👍

    • @rimrock2010
      @rimrock2010 3 года назад

      So glad I didn’t have to quit playing the mandolin because I can’t play full chop chords!
      Great video, Eddie.

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  3 года назад +1

      @@rimrock2010 Yes, I certainly hope there weren't others who took that message to heart and gave up...there's so much more to mandolin than just that!

  • @pfi343
    @pfi343 7 месяцев назад

    Best chord video I've seen yet! and no little finger YAHOOOOO

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  7 месяцев назад

      Yes, the dreaded pinky gets a lot of us! Good luck going forward.

  • @cgandy2
    @cgandy2 2 года назад +2

    Great lesson, Eddie! Wow, you give me hope with playing chop chords now! Thank you!

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  2 года назад

      Right, that little trick has helped a lot of folks who were on the edge of giving up. Good luck!

  • @woogaa12441598
    @woogaa12441598 Год назад

    Good

  • @thisNewFoundLand
    @thisNewFoundLand 2 года назад +3

    ...that was an incredibly helpful lesson! Thanks so much, Eddie. You are a great teacher, and i admire your genuineness in style. Superb.
    Subscribed.
    Be well.
    Keep the lessons coming, please.

  • @ronblack2404
    @ronblack2404 2 года назад +4

    Love this for young beginners. Wish there was a quick reference chord chart available

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  2 года назад

      There's one on page 208 in my Bluegrass Mandolin in 10 Easy Steps ePub, or email me and I'll send you one. Tuneman@austin.rr.com

    • @dougscrivens4002
      @dougscrivens4002 2 года назад

      Try Amazon

    • @lunchmoney5086
      @lunchmoney5086 Год назад

      Try googling it. I got all kinds o PDFs and screenshots before I bought a big chord book.

  • @robertshorthill6836
    @robertshorthill6836 Год назад +1

    Eddie, I'm an older dude that has shorter fingers than some. I like that alternative G chop chord that has no D note that leaves out the E string. Also, that shape works for the A chord, but the E string can be played if the open E isn't minded in the skeam of things. BTW, I have been with my mandos for around 9 or 10 years and still can not get that D on the G string. I see several other players just fake that D note, and nobody seems to care.

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  Год назад +1

      Right, I prefer the 3-note G on strings 4, 3 and 2 as it gives a deeper sound, rather than sounding the notes on strings 3, 2 and 1 and not getting anything out of string 4.

    • @robertshorthill6836
      @robertshorthill6836 Год назад +1

      @@EddieCollinsMusic two Bs and 1 G, no D note. They claim the D note should be in the G chord, but I have found a booming guitar has all the D volume one would need. Do you agree?

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  Год назад +1

      @@robertshorthill6836 Music theory-wise, the 5th of a chord is not needed to define a chord as major, minor or 7th. And right, the lower pitched instruments provide overtones that resonate through the higher pitches we play as mandolin players, so if they have a D note, it will resonate with our notes to form a complete G chord.

  • @reckonimokie123
    @reckonimokie123 2 года назад

    I watch this everyday so I a get it down

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  2 года назад +1

      We'll have to include this quote in our "Testimonials" page! Thanks.

  • @clawhammer704
    @clawhammer704 3 года назад +1

    Do a lesson on Raw Hide please....you have helped me tremendously.....

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  3 года назад

      Thanks for the request...so far, I've never come up with a good way to share that one. See if you can find Butch Baldassari teaching it. I kind of learned it from him years ago.

  • @FoodNerds
    @FoodNerds 2 года назад

    Thanks. I’m a little person and my hands are too small to make 3 finger chords so two finger chords are what I need.

  • @mandolinic
    @mandolinic Год назад

    I'll just mention that if you don't mind using the pinky, then you can play an A major chord like your A minor, but putting the pinky on the 6th fret of the G string to play C# rather than C. And if you can play the standard 3 finger F major, then F# minor is the same shape shifted up by one fret.

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  Год назад +1

      Excellent points! I love that "stretch" A chord. I personally do it with the 3rd finger. I also mention that F# minor chord in my "Pesky Minor Chords" video: ruclips.net/video/YvXROBtKJNs/видео.html

  • @ronaldgrider7463
    @ronaldgrider7463 2 года назад

    Great lesson do you have any material for the Memphis. Scale for Mandolin

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  2 года назад +1

      My video "Pentatonic Jamming - E Blues" should be what you're looking for.

    • @ronaldgrider7463
      @ronaldgrider7463 2 года назад

      @@EddieCollinsMusic thanks Eddie your the greatest

  • @louiswiley6121
    @louiswiley6121 2 года назад

    Hey Eddie if you learn to play the banjo can you play nearly any string instrument? I guess you play banjo, mandolin, uke, guitar right?

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  2 года назад

      Louis, understanding the relationship between the strings allows you to pick up multiple instruments. Strings 4, 3 and 2 are tuned the same on both guitar and banjo. At that point, it's a matter of getting the right hand to do what it needs to do.

    • @louiswiley6121
      @louiswiley6121 2 года назад

      @@EddieCollinsMusic Eddie: I really appreciate your taking the time to reply to my questions. Thanks, I understand what your saying.

  • @propmanager1954
    @propmanager1954 2 года назад

    nice lesson but I'm confused, your Am fingering is the same as a C double stop. Is this correct?

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  2 года назад

      Yes, the notes C and E (on strings 4 and 3) are both in a C and Am chord. The difference is you'd only play the two notes for the C double stop, whereas you can strum all four strings for the Am chord, which includes the open A (2nd) string.

  • @ForsterArt
    @ForsterArt 11 месяцев назад

    Do you have a book or PDF chart for these things that is printable

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  11 месяцев назад

      My Apple ePub, Bluegrass Mandolin in 10 Easy Steps has a chapter called Chordacopia that has a bit of this, but otherwise nothing specific to this video. The ePub can be downloaded from the Apple Books app.

  • @pamelainman342
    @pamelainman342 Год назад

    How much pressure do you put on the frets with your fingers?

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  Год назад

      If you place your fingers right behind the frets to where they are just barely touching the fret wire, you shouldn't have to put much pressure at all. If you feel like you have to really push to keep the notes from buzzing, you may need to have your action set better.

  • @ronaldgrider7463
    @ronaldgrider7463 2 года назад

    When I use the three finger chop chords for some reason doesn't sound right like the c g chord especially

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  2 года назад

      It won't sound like a full chop chord, but you can get pretty darn close. You'll want to experiment with where you are striking the string with your pick...farther away from the bridge will give you a deeper tone associated with the chop.

  • @harrykuheim6107
    @harrykuheim6107 Год назад

    I got tendonitis playing that long G Chord...and wore out my Pinky hammering on...

  • @chuckguy3057
    @chuckguy3057 Год назад

    I don't understand how the F chord that he plays with just two fingers makes an F chord. Aren't the notes for an F chord FAC? In his two finger position aren't the notes being played FAA?

    • @EddieCollinsMusic
      @EddieCollinsMusic  Год назад

      Right, A F A, but the root and Major 3rd of a chord is enough for it to be defined as a Major chord. The 5th is optional. Those are the little tricks that allow us as mandolin players to get away with some simplified versions of chords.

    • @chuckguy3057
      @chuckguy3057 Год назад

      @@EddieCollinsMusic awesome! Thank so much! I just started playing the mandolin 4 days ago!