Cosmic Country masterclass with Daniel Donato

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  • Опубликовано: 2 фев 2025

Комментарии • 46

  • @flapjackson6077
    @flapjackson6077 11 месяцев назад +1

    Daniel, you’re very insightful, not to mention talented as all get out. Great presentation!

  • @amoblahblah
    @amoblahblah 2 года назад +4

    I can’t believe how simple it is. I’ve soloing for like the past hour.
    This is probably the most straightforward and impactful lesson I’ve ever had.

  • @jasonjosiahphillips
    @jasonjosiahphillips 3 года назад +5

    Thank you. This just made my mind "Click!" I already had the Penatonic scale in my head for years but I felt at a dead end and what you said made me realized I'm farther along then I thought I was. I have less challenges for the goals I set then I realized. I was over complicating things. You're one cool dude.

  • @hunteredwards3961
    @hunteredwards3961 3 года назад +2

    This just clicked for me, thank you so much!! High quality material right here!!

  • @joshuaflores1990
    @joshuaflores1990 Год назад +2

    Holy sh%#! You are an incredible teacher. Never had anything explained like that as far as guitar theory goes.

  • @paulshults4574
    @paulshults4574 2 года назад +2

    This was a power hour! I'm grateful for this gem! Subscribed!

  • @Slipperygecko390
    @Slipperygecko390 Год назад +2

    Love this man, thanks so much for explaining minor and major to me. 5 notes sounds simple but when you play one note before, with and after another its expresses a different feeling in the music. That gives you 15 different vibes you can get out of one note in the scale, from that you can get 70+ options simply from playing any two notes in a scale together, before and after. That is just the tip of the Ice burg because you can then play 3 after each other and so on, at which point the math's is too much for me. Add in bends and slides, hammer on/off and all the different things that different rhythm's does to the feeling of what you're playing and you have have got a pretty special instrument that never ends in what it can do with it. I freaking love playing guitars man.

  • @mikeadams1723
    @mikeadams1723 3 года назад +5

    And this is where all the best-of-the-best musicians do not want everybody knowing I've been trying to tell people this for years no one listens

    • @robinr.2233
      @robinr.2233 6 месяцев назад

      I never understand the concept of “they don’t want you to know”. The best at any endeavor do not have some secret that only they know, think about it.

  • @matthewherold2535
    @matthewherold2535 3 года назад +5

    Daniel Donato, you are an awesome inspiration. Thank you for the time and effort you put in to making our world a more musical place.

  • @merldesoisa2287
    @merldesoisa2287 2 года назад +1

    Great job thanks brother ❤❤👍👍

  • @Troy1g
    @Troy1g 2 года назад

    The Rhythm Riff and Grooves also please. Love it,

  • @jefferylinc
    @jefferylinc 3 года назад

    Fantastic!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @TPW2
    @TPW2 3 года назад +2

    Something I'm noticing in practicing this is that the transitions between major and minor can seem a bit clashing.. but if you focus on the flattened third of the major scale when transitioning from the minor to the major it gives a nice fluidity of motion between the two! Or put in terms of minor, focus on the second degree of the minor pentatonic scale and walk that one note up a Semitone to drop you into the major.
    For example if your noodling in a minor pentatonic and want to make the transition to the major, go up from C (2nd degree of minor pentatonic) up to C# then proceed in the major key. Mess around with this in both directions, it seems to me like that C to C# movement is pivotal in making smooth transitions in this type of playing. Theres probably tons of other tricks for blending but this is just one I noticed! Hope this is helpful!

    • @TPW2
      @TPW2 3 года назад

      More universally I think the idea of melodic continuity is whats at play, like I said with the c to c# but it also seems to work well with the g and f# . So what i mean by melodic continuity is just connecting the two scales together in a linear way to transition between them which seems most effective by the semitone movements that exist between them.

  • @donnagillispie
    @donnagillispie 3 года назад

    Thank you Daniel! Your Brilliant!

  • @songsbymichael
    @songsbymichael Год назад

    Hi I’m Mike from Laguna Beach thanks Daniel.

  • @mikeadams1723
    @mikeadams1723 3 года назад +1

    You know a lot of people don't know this this is the way the best-of-the-best blues players play the way I was taught about 10 years ago

  • @fattyz1
    @fattyz1 9 месяцев назад

    That lesson you did for Marty was so great I had to subscribe.

  • @guy2860
    @guy2860 3 года назад +1

    Love the Univibe!

  • @alecweinstein
    @alecweinstein 2 года назад

    Wow new favorite teacher!

  • @RaidMaster84
    @RaidMaster84 10 месяцев назад

    You're awesome man. You make things sound so easy. 😀

  • @toddadams6443
    @toddadams6443 Год назад

    Great lesson man!

  • @thisisme.4555
    @thisisme.4555 2 года назад

    really great stuff

  • @emilienbialecki448
    @emilienbialecki448 3 года назад +3

    Dude, I really get that cosmic country vibe and for me double stops are why country music sounds so good and that's also why I found lapsteel guitar and surf music so relaxing!
    Are you doing any long format video about double stops???? 😁
    I looking for inspiration regarding that and I really recommend watching Cornell Dupree's Hot licks video tutorial on RUclips there is a countless number of really tasteful r&b licks. This video is a true gem, a must see for guitarists who wants to enrich their musical vocabulary.
    Peace. 🙏

  • @ImTheChoice1
    @ImTheChoice1 10 месяцев назад

    This is not a dis in any way… But I had to replay it to get to what he’s referring to as the major part of this minor/majors concept…actually ( in key of A) is that he’s playing in A minor Pentatonic and then F# minor Pentatonic. Is that right?
    P.S. A guitar phenom!!! Great teaching skills! Opens up his mental avenues seamlessly and makes you think and learn. Kudos. I’m 72 y/o and won’t die till I can do this! Big THANKS Daniel

  • @Troy1g
    @Troy1g 2 года назад +1

    Daniel, do you stay in what I call the blues to overlay Major/Minor pattern for the entire song or do you treat each chord change independently. For example, when you go to the Four chord here, it would be D, do you start playing and thinking as if you were in the Key of D for those measures?

  • @johnpandolfino8663
    @johnpandolfino8663 2 года назад +1

    The Allman Brothers Band with Duane and Dickie were masters at this approach.....

  • @jasonphelan5785
    @jasonphelan5785 3 года назад

    This has some really handy info it - thank you for posting.

  • @sweetcell8767
    @sweetcell8767 3 года назад +1

    I'm only starting my journey into country playing. Just a basic question: is the major 7th a note you avoid in country playing? I can't seem to make it sound very good except as a leading note into the tonic? Or as a passing note.

  • @Dlee966
    @Dlee966 Год назад +1

    I think I’ve developed so strong of habits of a certain style of playing It’s like I have to relearn all this stuff like a beginner, even though I know all of this stuff if that makes any sense at all lol

  • @ImTheChoice1
    @ImTheChoice1 10 месяцев назад

    Is there a transcription?

  • @davidsajben9778
    @davidsajben9778 Год назад

    so u play gminor pentatonic and which major sits on it?

  • @jeroenr4524
    @jeroenr4524 3 года назад

    great info

  • @kevinliewer8676
    @kevinliewer8676 3 года назад

    How to properly tie them all together? All the staccato notes you run through when you’re chicken pickin?

  • @musik102
    @musik102 3 года назад

    It's interesting, I think, that Jerry Donahue made his name via hybrid picking but then switched to thumb pick and fingers.

  • @bjohnson515
    @bjohnson515 8 месяцев назад

    Note:
    When teaching, don't display how fast you can run thru the scales. It just makes it tougher to pick up what you are doing.

  • @stevesuv
    @stevesuv Год назад

    Claptons first crossroads solo.

  • @johnman84
    @johnman84 4 месяца назад

    I've been playing 6 cowboy chords for the last 20 years... I'm just barely starting to unlock the rest of the neck by finding different places to play those chords.
    But the whole pentatonics thing is still out of reach. I just get so lost.
    .... one of these days, I guess. 😎

  • @SoonerTruth
    @SoonerTruth 3 года назад

    After researching this concept these "stacked patterns" are right their in the "Major scale.... Minor Pentatonic on top of Major Pentatonic is simply the "Dorian Pattern" just to simplify it ...The reason he talks about it the way he does because within that scale shape we need to "Think in terms of Major Minor

  • @mikeadams1723
    @mikeadams1723 3 года назад

    Now after this once they find out they can apply any of the minor modes on any three of the minor positions then that's where the magic happens in any up music

  • @Jimbob-hp6ud
    @Jimbob-hp6ud Год назад +1

    Tom Holland but country version

  • @jonaskarlstrom4152
    @jonaskarlstrom4152 2 года назад

    I need a guitar like that, when i know min, maj pentatonic i buy one.

  • @admbrnk3665
    @admbrnk3665 Год назад

    3:34 - I get in trouble when I do that 🫤