Motel Mexico, by the Beagles, I believe? Good job you didn’t choose that other similar sounding song, otherwise Ron Shenley might send his lawyers after you! Handy video! Thanks!
Great lesson... for years I thought all chords had to be played over all six strings. Learning triads just opens up the whole neck. Thank you heaps for this lesson.
This really helped to de-mystify the epic Hotel California solo. Not to say it is not one of the most brilliant guitar solos of all time, but just that by knowing how triads work, you can work out many solos all by yourself, without always looking at tabs.
Yes, I’ve been practicing CAGED shapes and arpeggios, also have a reasonable understanding of where the notes are, along with major scales and triad shapes. This connects a lot of that!
You said you like comments, so I hope this finds you well. You have fans from all around the world already, since your education style really helps connecting the dots. I have always been avoiding to learn this solo but after re-framing the song with triads, it seems much more achievable. Lovely content, well done and keep sharing👍 wishing you all the best and success from Hungary, Europe.✌️
@@szilardszabo7135 hey there! I do appreciate the comments and I really appreciate yours. Thanks for watching and thanks for the shout out. Keep on rocking, my friend!
This is an awesome video. The connection between chords and solo that makes it easy to learn the solo. Learning the chord progression of this song is easy. I have always resisted learning this solo because of the amount of shear memorization. You have shown the roadmap not only to easily learn the solo, but to also improvise your own. And, you did it without all the blah blah blah of music theory that just gets in the way and confuses me. Thank you so much. Time to dive in.
Love to see this kind of clear, practical example of applying theory. One bit I like for this tune is focusing on the chromatic walkdown B>Bb>A>Ab>G>F# that you can accentuate in the first 6 chords.
Hello , I have just started to learn TRIADS I am not a pro but sort of a intermediate player can't solo because of lack of knowledge , This lesson has opened up a whole new journey for me to understand how to use TRIADS a must journey for all guitarists, I am looking forward to seeing and hearing much more on the subjects of TRIADS from you
I really struggle with playing any kind of lead guitar and mainly just stick with practicing and playing rhythmic stuff. This is hugely helpful! I wish I could've learned this years ago, but I'm happy to know it now. Or at least know how to incorporate it into my playing. Thanks, man! 👍
This just might be the single most important lesson ever on You Tube to help folks struggling with how to practice putting scales and Arpeggios together. I think I finally get how to create solos that wont sound like exercises. A huge Thank You.
Just chiming in to say your lessons are some of the best i've seen anywhere! I toiled through learning the types of things you've been teaching here over a lot of years through a lot of different sources and a ton of trial and error. The way you break these concepts down into short video lessons is priceless and I think you're doing a great service to any guitarist who runs across your channel! Thank you!
I am commenter number 101. Most of the people who comment are saying exactly what I feel. You are an excellent teacher. I will be checking out more of your lessons soon.
Superb. I am a 62 year old sax player learning guitar for a few years now….pursuing my passion for classic rock. Started looking at triads a few weeks ago because they were so useful on the sax. But with the million more options of playing them on the guitar all over the neck, I was getting confused. Of course I understood how they would relate to chord shapes, especially bar chords . But this is like the final piece in the jigsaw on how to use them melodically and connect them. Absolute pure gold. What a fabulous teacher. Thank you
I gave you a subscribe bcuz that’s twice in 2 days I saw one of your lessons that was as if it was tailor made for me. The Hey Joe triad Lesson and this hotel California one. I’ll tell you why it helped me so much after a little context. I have been playing both of those songs a lot lately along with while my guitar gently weeps. So seeing the 2 vids really hit me at the perfect time. I know the fat strings part of the neck pretty well from being able to do barre chords everywhere on the E and A string roots- but for whatever reason even though I know the caged system way of looking at things- for whatever reason I tend to not think as much about those 3 high strings triad shapes as much- even though they’re part of the barre cords and scales I know. But those 2 lessons literally filled out the rest of the neck for me mentally. Because if you think about it- the 3 highest strings are really the most important ones on lead guitar in a band setting, aren’t they? Bcuz they’re the ones that most cut thru the mix and get past the drums and bass the most, right? For whatever reason, whether it’s because the fat strings are closest to my face or bcuz of how we learn scale shapes- we naturally being self-taught players tend to wanna start thinking like starting from the fat strings down mentally. Even when I come in on licks that start on high strings I still get stuck in this pattern of thinking from the fat strings on down. I’m guessing that most people are like that by nature probably. You must have also been like that, I’m guessing. We learn the Low E first when we’re in that initial box 1 stage like where’s my landmark type thing. somehow even though I can improv solo all day and blend natural minor and ionian major etc- for some reason i have mental blinders on sometimes for those 3 high strings. I naturally would tend to think of the GBE strings as almost an attachment under the fat strings. This really helps me get out of that thinking and now I can sort of think of them as their own string group more easily. Fascinating. Thank you! Giving away guitar knowledge is the greatest gift you can give people. It’s like teaching people to fly lol
@@WithCarePlz Wow! Thank uou so much You’re spot on as far as learning the bottom strings first. Sometimes you just need to find the easiest roadmap so glad it helps you out. Stay tuned for more.
Hi! You may be 'late in the game' but you have shared these 'gold nuggets' in such a methodical, easily 'digestable' manner. Great ' take-away' in this lesson that can be used as a launching pad for solos whilst entrenching our knowledge of the fretboard. Profoundly grateful!
@@chmueller50 Hey brother! Nice surprise hearing from you on here. Yes, my favorite guitar. I remember that trip finally. Eating at the Mexican restaurant and staying at your place was a blast. Hope you’re doing well, my brother.
Thank you for this awesome lesson on my favorite song of all time. Though I've been playing guitar for 45 years, I couldn't figure out the solos. Wish you posted the tab on your solo. You are a great talent and teacher.
Great lesson! I’m gonna spend some time with this today. It’s funny, because I’ve been using the chords from Hotel California to practice with triads over the past couple of weeks. I’ve been working on playing the progression with triads on different sets of strings, and experimenting with adding some notes from the melody in there.
@@DoowopsidI tend to gravitate to the shapes on the D, G and B strings. They sound nice and it’s easy to find additional notes to embellish with on the high E string.
@@AllenDunn-y7b I can’t thank you enough for the kind words. That sure makes a fella feel good. Much appreciated and stay tuned for more. Keep on rocking my friend.
As a brand new subscriber, this has been really helpful for a greenhorn on soloing over chords, just in terms of locating the major and minor triads on those three strings, and then starting to find the notes for solo riffing over those chords. What would really help as well, in taking the next step, would be a breakdown of the key notes to stress, where and when, in the scales when soloing over those chords. That is to say, there are the obvious root, 3, and 5 notes in the major scale for an arpeggio over the major chords. But I wonder what you can say (or show in another video) about when you like to play the 2, 4, 6, and 7 notes, and maybe how they "feel" to you when you're soloing over major chords. For example, I've been trying to identify the best notes in the scale to bend up to the next note based on their location in the box. Anything you can say about that in terms of creating riffs would help. Same basic question about minor chords. Lastly, how and when to use the pentatonic and/or blues scales, as opposed to the major or minor scales, for soloing over major and minor chords. Hope these questions may help in terms of what a dedicated student wants to learn! Thanks!!
Hey, I literally never comment on videos, but wanted to say that I watch a lot of these videos on RUclips and how you’re explaining has given me hope for the first time I will be able to do this. You definitely not too late to the video creation game, but an exciting thing on my end is when you spot someone like you who has a unique new voice and to be early on seeing that person blow up ❤
@@chad80210 wow! Thank you so much. That’s truly humbling to hear that. Makes me happy when I know I’m doing something right for somebody. Thank you for taking the time to comment and watch my videos. I promise to help you on your guitar journey. Keep commenting and letting me know what I can do to improve. Thanks bunch.
You make it look so easy because with your experience you can, but some may need slow down explanation, just saying 🙌🙌🇬🇧❤️ so I’ve watched back a few times and get you , but remember some wont get. It ❤
There's so so many guitar player teachers on here it's crazy but I like your "meat and potatoes" philosophy. I think I'm gonna pick up a lot from you bud especially on these triads. Thanks
Classic double punch!! Stumbled upon your holy grail triad practice lesson the other day and bookmarked it to come back to. Wrapping my head around how all those different triad shapes on different sets of 3 strings work together using Hey Joe really opened my eyes to stuff I'd been missing. THEN... I decide to subscribe and see what else you might have to offer and land here first. Well, wouldn't ya know, Hotel California is one of my pride and joy solos that I learned (memorized) years ago and play often each year. Like you, I'd never really analyzed the arpeggios at the end and, to be honest, the way you play them here doesn't work for me as I'd always played mine between the 14th and 7th frets BUT... ...taking what I learned from the other lesson and applying it to the way I play this solo was mind blowing as I'd never realized how precisely each triad followed each chord of the song. Now, instead of working from memory, all I have to is think of the chord I"m playing over and voila! the correct triad is already there, ready and waiting to be played over top! Priceless
Really nice lessons. I'm two vids deep and you've helped demystify how to use triads in single note playing. You're now on my short list of guitar lesson vids with Guthrie Trapp, Tom Bukavac, Tim Pierce, Rick Beato, Brett Papa and Active Melody. Pretty good company, I'd say!
Feels like i have found some forbidden treasure..keep looking over my shoulder😅 this was a great lesson,so sick of all shredders just showing off,your a great teacher..sub from Sweden😊
I know that this is the way to go nd melodic but I'm still struggling. I know mrmy triads but I've got to keep working. Could you make more of these videos sgowing how ro use triads ? Your improvisation was great 👍
Thank you for this lesson. It's super helpful. Any chance you'd consider doing one simplifying modes? Maybe with an example or two we can try/use. Thank you regardless! :-)
@@i7macintosh thanks a bunch for taking the time to comment. Absolutely! I will definitely be doing modes. The plan is to do two videos a week. Covering as many topics as possible.
Motel Mexico, by the Beagles, I believe?
Good job you didn’t choose that other similar sounding song, otherwise Ron Shenley might send his lawyers after you!
Handy video! Thanks!
Great lesson... for years I thought all chords had to be played over all six strings. Learning triads just opens up the whole neck. Thank you heaps for this lesson.
This really helped to de-mystify the epic Hotel California solo. Not to say it is not one of the most brilliant guitar solos of all time, but just that by knowing how triads work, you can work out many solos all by yourself, without always looking at tabs.
A perfect lesson, easy to understand, fully illustrated. Plus I like your guitar!
@@PeterJones-l3o thank you so much! 92 Les Paul that I bought New that year. My favorite guitar.
What a fantastic lesson, perfect for me right now, thank you.
I feel like a blindfold was just taken off. Great lesson! Thank you!
Yes, I’ve been practicing CAGED shapes and arpeggios, also have a reasonable understanding of where the notes are, along with major scales and triad shapes. This connects a lot of that!
My god this is good. My god it’s a good lesson. Thanks 🙏
Thanks Sean, you speak to me musically. Appreciate it!
@@ph9100 thank you so much! Greatly appreciate it
Great lesson dude. Simple and to the point.
@@guitarbug234 thank you so much! Much appreciated
You said you like comments, so I hope this finds you well. You have fans from all around the world already, since your education style really helps connecting the dots. I have always been avoiding to learn this solo but after re-framing the song with triads, it seems much more achievable. Lovely content, well done and keep sharing👍 wishing you all the best and success from Hungary, Europe.✌️
@@szilardszabo7135 hey there! I do appreciate the comments and I really appreciate yours. Thanks for watching and thanks for the shout out. Keep on rocking, my friend!
Thank you Sean, love your energy and passion, really helping me, as an older player trying to get back into it after many years.
Learnt more in10 minutes than learnt in whole triad courses.Thanks .Subscribed
@@bozzy9887 that’s awesome! Thank you so so much glad it helped you
great lesson thank you very much love to improvise.
@@kennethdeopp5546 thank you so much!
Man this is opening up my eyes! Thank you so much!
That's a great video 👏
You just blew my mind. Brilliant. Thankyou.
Ive been avoiding Triads for yrs, and this lesson has opened a whole new universe for me. Thank you very much, great lesson
I always felt the likes of Hotel California were beyond me, but you broke it down so simply. Thanks
@@JamesPalmer-i5o
Much appreciated for the comment.
This just taught me so much, you are a great teacher, please keep it up! You made it so easy to understand.
@@BrianShjerve thank you so much for those kind words of encouragement
This is an awesome video. The connection between chords and solo that makes it easy to learn the solo. Learning the chord progression of this song is easy. I have always resisted learning this solo because of the amount of shear memorization. You have shown the roadmap not only to easily learn the solo, but to also improvise your own. And, you did it without all the blah blah blah of music theory that just gets in the way and confuses me. Thank you so much. Time to dive in.
@@frankwarren466 thank you so much for your comment.
KISS-keep it simple stupid. That’s my motto for learning and teaching.
Thx again!
Love to see this kind of clear, practical example of applying theory. One bit I like for this tune is focusing on the chromatic walkdown B>Bb>A>Ab>G>F# that you can accentuate in the first 6 chords.
Awesome. I started playing guitar at 53. 55 now and i have to say this has helped me tremendously!! Thank you.
@@jonc7245 thanks a bunch! Much appreciated
A great lesson to develop and understanding the lead on chords progression .
@@freefromleftwing thanks so much!
Hello , I have just started to learn TRIADS I am not a pro but sort of a intermediate player can't solo because of lack of knowledge , This lesson has opened up a whole new journey for me to understand how to use TRIADS a must journey for all guitarists, I am looking forward to seeing and hearing much more on the subjects of TRIADS from you
@@lesliecumberland834 thanks so much for the comment! Much appreciated
I really struggle with playing any kind of lead guitar and mainly just stick with practicing and playing rhythmic stuff. This is hugely helpful! I wish I could've learned this years ago, but I'm happy to know it now. Or at least know how to incorporate it into my playing. Thanks, man! 👍
@@kent.merritt stick with it, it just takes lots and lots of practice. Thanks so much!
I’m the same way and agree 100%. Maybe one day I’ll be able to not just play rhythm
clear, applicable explanation! Thanks.
@@davidwarren5785 thank you so much! Much much appreciated
Killer lesson! I know my triads, just didn't really understand how to use them. Now we're getting somewhere! Subbed.
This just might be the single most important lesson ever on You Tube to help folks struggling with how to practice putting scales and
Arpeggios together. I think I finally get how to create solos that wont sound like exercises. A huge Thank You.
Just chiming in to say your lessons are some of the best i've seen anywhere! I toiled through learning the types of things you've been teaching here over a lot of years through a lot of different sources and a ton of trial and error. The way you break these concepts down into short video lessons is priceless and I think you're doing a great service to any guitarist who runs across your channel! Thank you!
@@ScottWhite-oy7oi wow! I can’t thank you enough for the kind words. That encourages me to keep going. Thanks again!
xcellent stuff
@@davidsajben9778 thanks a bunch!
This is a wow lesson. Fabulous instruction and I get it. Serious thank you.
@@thebigleone1066 thank you so much!
Loved this! Do it with others solos mate! Fantastic. Target tones and triad are so important ads concept for the guitar. You have a subscriber.
Thanks Sean. Great content.
@@timemerson2691
Thanks a bunch!
I am commenter number 101. Most of the people who comment are saying exactly what I feel. You are an excellent teacher. I will be checking out more of your lessons soon.
@@humbleviewpoint wow! Thank you so much. Every comment like yours is inspiring to me. 🙏
Thanks! Very good stuff!
@@johnletitia thanks a bunch!
Superb. I am a 62 year old sax player learning guitar for a few years now….pursuing my passion for classic rock. Started looking at triads a few weeks ago because they were so useful on the sax. But with the million more options of playing them on the guitar all over the neck, I was getting confused. Of course I understood how they would relate to chord shapes, especially bar chords . But this is like the final piece in the jigsaw on how to use them melodically and connect them. Absolute pure gold. What a fabulous teacher. Thank you
@@johnycat7373 thank you so much! So happy this helped you
My MAN!!! Thank you at 49 years young I can finally hit a cool solo thanks for helping me
@@anthonyrioux4835 thank you for the comment! 🙏
Amen! Awesome lesson. Very clear, digestible, and sweet!
Don Henley watching this punching his monitor because he can’t copystrike it.
Don't worry - he won't starve....
I gave you a subscribe bcuz that’s twice in 2 days I saw one of your lessons that was as if it was tailor made for me. The Hey Joe triad Lesson and this hotel California one.
I’ll tell you why it helped me so much after a little context.
I have been playing both of those songs a lot lately along with while my guitar gently weeps. So seeing the 2 vids really hit me at the perfect time.
I know the fat strings part of the neck pretty well from being able to do barre chords everywhere on the E and A string roots- but for whatever reason even though I know the caged system way of looking at things- for whatever reason I tend to not think as much about those 3 high strings triad shapes as much- even though they’re part of the barre cords and scales I know. But those 2 lessons literally filled out the rest of the neck for me mentally. Because if you think about it- the 3 highest strings are really the most important ones on lead guitar in a band setting, aren’t they? Bcuz they’re the ones that most cut thru the mix and get past the drums and bass the most, right?
For whatever reason, whether it’s because the fat strings are closest to my face or bcuz of how we learn scale shapes- we naturally being self-taught players tend to wanna start thinking like starting from the fat strings down mentally. Even when I come in on licks that start on high strings I still get stuck in this pattern of thinking from the fat strings on down.
I’m guessing that most people are like that by nature probably. You must have also been like that, I’m guessing. We learn the Low E first when we’re in that initial box 1 stage like where’s my landmark type thing. somehow even though I can improv solo all day and blend natural minor and ionian major etc- for some reason i have mental blinders on sometimes for those 3 high strings. I naturally would tend to think of the GBE strings as almost an attachment under the fat strings.
This really helps me get out of that thinking and now I can sort of think of them as their own string group more easily. Fascinating.
Thank you! Giving away guitar knowledge is the greatest gift you can give people. It’s like teaching people to fly lol
@@WithCarePlz Wow! Thank uou so much
You’re spot on as far as learning the bottom strings first. Sometimes you just need to find the easiest roadmap so glad it helps you out. Stay tuned for more.
Hi! You may be 'late in the game' but you have shared these 'gold nuggets' in such a methodical, easily 'digestable' manner. Great ' take-away' in this lesson that can be used as a launching pad for solos whilst entrenching our knowledge of the fretboard. Profoundly grateful!
Just great! Thanks!
@@scottparmenter5783 thank you! 🙏
Great lesson! Engaging and really cut through some barriers for me. Thanks!!
Thank you 😁
Really cool. Subscribed. Thank you.
@@KASKASM thanks a bunch!
Awesome lesson thanks
Brilliant Sean Thanks !
Cheers Brother 💪💪🎸🎸
Thanks
Great lesson. Thanks!
Brilliant approach in simple terms. Thank you..!
@@josephwalker138 much appreciated!
I hope other watchers of this video are as blown away as I am! Sean, you are a master of guitar theory and practice!
@@judwatkins9478 wow! Truly humbled by your kindness 🙏
And your playing my favorite guitar of your whole collection. I remember you rockin' it out on that Paul in Austin, outdoor show with F-Bass.
@@chmueller50 Hey brother! Nice surprise hearing from you on here. Yes, my favorite guitar. I remember that trip finally. Eating at the Mexican restaurant and staying at your place was a blast. Hope you’re doing well, my brother.
Thank you for this awesome lesson on my favorite song of all time. Though I've been playing guitar for 45 years, I couldn't figure out the solos. Wish you posted the tab on your solo. You are a great talent and teacher.
@@kevinmurphy9315 thanks a bunch! I really appreciate you commenting. I will be launching a Patreon page soon with tabs.
Super job👍👍
Must admit that was very helpful, great example of the use of triads 👏
Awesome lesson! Got a lot out of it. thanks
@@RaymondObenchain awesome! Thx a bunch
thankyou. excited to join your channel and learn.
@@philip914 I really appreciate it! Thanks a bunch
You are quickly becoming my favorite guitar teacher along with Rusty’s guitar lessons! You make it so easy to understand! Thanks you so much.
@@wstn7938 seriously, thank you so much! And I’ve seen Rusty’s guitar lessons. He’s a great teacher as well. Keep on rocking my friend.
Super helpful - thanks for doing this
@@townheadbluesboy thanks a bunch and thank you for taking the time to comment and watch my videos! Keep on rocking my friend
@@townheadbluesboy thank you so much! Stay tuned and I will be doing this for a long time
Wow so well explained
This is a hell of a video --- glad to find this channel
@@russcali4138 thank you so much! Much appreciated
Great lesson! I’m gonna spend some time with this today. It’s funny, because I’ve been using the chords from Hotel California to practice with triads over the past couple of weeks. I’ve been working on playing the progression with triads on different sets of strings, and experimenting with adding some notes from the melody in there.
@@stephenmahlstedt7276 it’s the perfect song for working on triads. Such a great court progression. Keep on rocking.
I’m in the same situation, just wondering which strings are your favorite?
@@DoowopsidI tend to gravitate to the shapes on the D, G and B strings. They sound nice and it’s easy to find additional notes to embellish with on the high E string.
@@stephenmahlstedt7276 Thanks!
Great lesson. Thanks so much. 👍
@@spideymarino thank you so so much!
yea keep it coming
Fantastic lesson, thank you.
You're a great teatcher! 👍
@@michaeladshead-sonofthecit3701 I can’t thank you enough for the kind words!
sweeet brother!!! Best thing Ive seen in years!
@@johnmaoriroyalmusic3797 thank you so much! I really appreciate the kind words
Incredible! Wow! Thank you.
@@user-zo7rg9nh9j thanks so much!
Top, thanks
@@jondoe9309 thanks a bunch!
Beautiful guitar!
I love the finish!
Cool 🙂
Excellent lesson, thanks man
Keep going and showing brother!
What a fantastic video have a wonderful day ❤😊
OK, I am not a subscriber kind of guy but WOW! Seen a few of your vids and they are what we need more of in the online world.
@@AllenDunn-y7b I can’t thank you enough for the kind words. That sure makes a fella feel good. Much appreciated and stay tuned for more. Keep on rocking my friend.
Awesome thanks 😊
Love your passion. Great lesson
@@briandonato7593 thank you so much! Much appreciated
Thanks man! Gonna watch this more times.
🤘🕊❤️🤘 🎼
@@StrdFrgman thanks a bunch! I really appreciate the comment🙏
Awesome lesson! You got my SUB
@@richardgarcia1793 thank you so much! I definitely appreciate it
I never really had a "light bulb" moment until now. Thank you so much man, You are the best!
@@talayou Wow! Thank you so much! So glad it helped you! Stay tuned for more. We are in this journey together.
As a brand new subscriber, this has been really helpful for a greenhorn on soloing over chords, just in terms of locating the major and minor triads on those three strings, and then starting to find the notes for solo riffing over those chords. What would really help as well, in taking the next step, would be a breakdown of the key notes to stress, where and when, in the scales when soloing over those chords. That is to say, there are the obvious root, 3, and 5 notes in the major scale for an arpeggio over the major chords. But I wonder what you can say (or show in another video) about when you like to play the 2, 4, 6, and 7 notes, and maybe how they "feel" to you when you're soloing over major chords. For example, I've been trying to identify the best notes in the scale to bend up to the next note based on their location in the box. Anything you can say about that in terms of creating riffs would help. Same basic question about minor chords. Lastly, how and when to use the pentatonic and/or blues scales, as opposed to the major or minor scales, for soloing over major and minor chords. Hope these questions may help in terms of what a dedicated student wants to learn! Thanks!!
Good stuff man! And I need your help thanks
@@tpan17able so glad I could help! Much appreciated
Thanks so much Sean what a lesson got so much understanding out of that Thanks all the way from scotland keep on rocking ❤
@@johnconroy9900 thanks so much! Much appreciated and hello Scotland lol
Hey, I literally never comment on videos, but wanted to say that I watch a lot of these videos on RUclips and how you’re explaining has given me hope for the first time I will be able to do this. You definitely not too late to the video creation game, but an exciting thing on my end is when you spot someone like you who has a unique new voice and to be early on seeing that person blow up ❤
@@chad80210 wow! Thank you so much. That’s truly humbling to hear that. Makes me happy when I know I’m doing something right for somebody. Thank you for taking the time to comment and watch my videos. I promise to help you on your guitar journey. Keep commenting and letting me know what I can do to improve. Thanks bunch.
That's a cool lesson. Thank you. I'm glad I discovered your channel. I look forward to seeing / hearing more of your lessons.
@@MarkRhodesSongs thank you so much! Really really appreciate the kind words. Stay tuned for more lessons.
You make it look so easy because with your experience you can, but some may need slow down explanation, just saying 🙌🙌🇬🇧❤️ so I’ve watched back a few times and get you , but remember some wont get. It ❤
Thank you you friend. Best stuff I’ve seen so far.
@@denismiller7516 thank you so much! Much much appreciated
@@denismiller7516 thank you so much! Much appreciate
I want that guitar! Sweet tone bro!
Great lesson! 💯
Hey Sean: great to see you with your own channel. Good luck with it.
@@johnhardy1269 thank you so much!
There's so so many guitar player teachers on here it's crazy but I like your "meat and potatoes" philosophy. I think I'm gonna pick up a lot from you bud especially on these triads. Thanks
@@celicharvel thanks so much! Stay tuned for more lessons and keep on rocking
Classic double punch!!
Stumbled upon your holy grail triad practice lesson the other day and bookmarked it to come back to. Wrapping my head around how all those different triad shapes on different sets of 3 strings work together using Hey Joe really opened my eyes to stuff I'd been missing. THEN... I decide to subscribe and see what else you might have to offer and land here first.
Well, wouldn't ya know, Hotel California is one of my pride and joy solos that I learned (memorized) years ago and play often each year. Like you, I'd never really analyzed the arpeggios at the end and, to be honest, the way you play them here doesn't work for me as I'd always played mine between the 14th and 7th frets BUT...
...taking what I learned from the other lesson and applying it to the way I play this solo was mind blowing as I'd never realized how precisely each triad followed each chord of the song.
Now, instead of working from memory, all I have to is think of the chord I"m playing over and voila! the correct triad is already there, ready and waiting to be played over top!
Priceless
@@Songslayer that’s awesome! Glad the lesson helped. Yes, much better than memorizing a bunch of patterns.
Awesome; helps a lot!
Any tabs would be appreciated!
@@jeffliddy5453 thank you for your comment. Definitely working on tabs for the future.
Thanks .Subscribed
@@Dubhghaill Muchas Gracias!
Great lesson! New subscriber here 🎉
Really nice lessons. I'm two vids deep and you've helped demystify how to use triads in single note playing. You're now on my short list of guitar lesson vids with Guthrie Trapp, Tom Bukavac, Tim Pierce, Rick Beato, Brett Papa and Active Melody. Pretty good company, I'd say!
@@derek_406 Wow! Thank you so much. That means a lot. That is great company. Some of the best players! 🙏
This is great. Thank you.
@@mykneeshurt8393 thanks so much for watching!
Great lesson, thank you, subbed.
@@ridley8340 thanks a bunch!
Feels like i have found some forbidden treasure..keep looking over my shoulder😅 this was a great lesson,so sick of all shredders just showing off,your a great teacher..sub from Sweden😊
@@rigmormortis164 Man, thank you so much! I really appreciate the comment
I know that this is the way to go nd melodic but I'm still struggling. I know mrmy triads but I've got to keep working. Could you make more of these videos sgowing how ro use triads ? Your improvisation was great 👍
@@bobygap hey thanks so much for the input. I absolutely will be doing more of these similar videos. Stay tuned!
So, not a big fan of this song at all but thanks for the insight for the triads of the chords. That was excellent and you're an excellent teacher.
@@MacKinnon2k13 thank you so much! I really appreciate the kind words
nice one=subscribed
@@dalesparks7647 thanks a bunch!
Thank you for this lesson. It's super helpful. Any chance you'd consider doing one simplifying modes? Maybe with an example or two we can try/use. Thank you regardless! :-)
@@i7macintosh thanks a bunch for taking the time to comment. Absolutely! I will definitely be doing modes.
The plan is to do two videos a week. Covering as many topics as possible.
@@themusicsalonstudio That is wonderful. Thank you for taking the time to read my comment. :-) Your videos are really helpful.