trust me you'll get better!, but it all depends on how good you really want to get, whether one has talent or not, there is never a substitute for hard work and dedication.
For people who use this video as a reference/study guide like me: 00:50 tuning 01:30 read tab and chord charts 02:20 learn open chords C A G E D Am Em Dm C7 A7 G7 E7 D7 and B7 03:50 learn 3 strum patters 04:35 learn your 5th and 6th strings 05:35 learn power chords 06:35 Barre chords E shape and A shape 08:50 know minor pentatonic scale shape 09:55 major scale 10:35 know a major and minor shape 10:55 four lead tech 13:13 muting
I'm not a great player, but I also don't want to be an asshole to anyone just beginning when I say this: this is the very first time I watch your video and know exactly everything you were talking about, and it's validating somewhat. As I said I don't consider myself a great player, but we lose track of how much we already know when we keep comparing ourselves to the absolute best in the business and we believe that what we know isn't worth anything. Which isn't true. And this video reminded me of that. And for that I thank you !
The one thing i think we should tell newbies... practice all you can. Noodle a lot. ENJOY it. when youre not enjoyiing it.. do something else (also reading music is CRAZY easy)
I know all of this stuff but never had a foundation in mind. I feel very confident now that I watched this video and read this comment. I just have to get technically proficient. I have something to go off of now. Thanks guys.
Why? either of you? So they can learn to hit notes really fast and make SHIT music? GARBAGE? Much rather them learn something they love and other people who arent hipster bitchs love.
@@GuitarsAndSynths On a Custom? I'm doubting pretty hard it's a Richlite. But, still, that's a damn fine guitar. I normally don't care for gold hardware but it looks pretty good on there with the over all set up.
I’ve been playing for a year and have watched countless videos. Martys music, Justin guitar etc. None of them lay out the big picture like this. This is by far the most consolidated and easy to understand tutorial on guitar I’ve ever seen.
I’m three weeks into learning. It’s really good to see where I should be at or be aiming to get to. Some of these like the strumming patterns I have already nailed. Working on some of the others right now like power chords. About to start learning the pentatonic scale. Know the notes on strings 5 and 6 as well. Just started learning vibrato. Learnt a small amount of muting. Learnt a lot of chords, practicing speeding up my changes and slowing down to perfect my changes. So it’s really nice to see I’m progressing in the right direction. I see learning guitar as a journey and I’m in no rush to reach the destination. I want to learn everything but learn it correctly so I’m putting the practice in every day to get it right. Thank you very good video 👍
I've been playing for 21 years, but I still find things to learn in your videos. It's truly amazing how slight changes in technique can drastically affect your sound. Thanks for all the great content!
This was fabulous. I started playing the guitar young, took lessons (I still have the book), and then played a bunch of popular songs with chord books. Watching this, I was impressed with how much I picked up (bending notes, bar chords) and a lot I missed (the three types of rhythms and learning the notes). When I have time to relearn, I can now go farther and feel more confident, because you've shown me the holes in my knowledge. Thank you.
If you work on pretty much all the techniques discussed in this video, absolutely guaranteed, Your friends will be so blown-away impressed with how quickly you've become a good guitar player after only a couple of months. I know this, from first hand experience; coz this is exactly what happened to me! A few months ago, a friend let me borrow his (acoustic) guitar. He was totally amazed about two months later when he came to take back his guitar just how good I had become in just a few weeks - now he's even asking to take guitar lessons from me: true story! This even encouraged me to go out and buy an acoustic guitar of my own...and so my guitar journey continues... 🙂 btw, I can also play Bass and Piano, so being already able to play another musical instrument definitely speeds up the learning process.
Dang... I’m about a month into playing guitar and I’m still getting comfortable switching between CAGED chords. I’m impressed. I guess we all learn at different paces
@@jacksonroberts7721 Don't forget to read his last sentence, brother. He can also play the bass and the piano already, so that helps tremendously and makes everything WAY easier on the guitar. Don't be discouraged (:
This is a great intro for a beginning guitar player. I agree with you on what is most important. Another thing I would probably add is about the way tuning causes a change in patterns and chord shapes as we move up a string -- crossing from G to B. For example, the four lowest notes of E, A and D chord shapes are all the same relative notes -- 1, 5, 1, 3. Instead of giving the numbers, I'd play the D chord in first, 5th and 10th positions to demonstrate this. In addition, the C and G shapes, playing four notes and skipping the low 3rd are also the same four notes. You could show this by playing C in 1st, 3rd, 5th, 8th and 10th positions - the C, A, G, E and D shapes.
I’ve been learning from RUclips and sometimes it’s hard to know if you’re learning things in the right order, so this video was really validating. Only thing I really struggle with is tuning by ear
this is my favorite instructory channel because you're never rude and never act like those who don''t know this stuff aren't smart/good at guitar, you just TEACH and that's awesome
This is an excellent summary of guitar techniques. I have picked each one up over time and to see them all summarised here re-inforces the value of them. I would also suggest to experiment/explore the fretboard, take a pentatonic shape and explore either side of it to appreciate its relationship with the rest of the neck, that helps develop your first solo. I knew all the major/minor bar chords in all positions but only yesterday discovered the associated 7 chords; now they have a name - Thanks Mike!
Epic! Thanks Mike - this will give my practice better direction! String bending to a note is worth doing - pick a string/fret and play it then fret the same string 1 fret down and bend up to the note you just played (good ear training). Try with different strings at different places on the neck (different pressure at different positions on the neck, different string guages need different pressure) and try 1 and 2 semitone bends. Pre-bends are fun too (bend, play and check you hit the right note - sort of reverse of the above). Tom Quayle has a very useful video lesson on this here (37 mins)... ruclips.net/video/TT9cqvQjS_M/видео.html Thanks again Mike for all the work you put in for us mere mortals :-)
Thank you for making this! Been trying to teach myself to play for two years now. I’ve been feeling like I’ve been trying to piece together a foundation and it hasn’t really been working, but now I finally feel like I’ve found the right guide to really build my base.
I've been playing the guitar very much on and off since I was 9, but pretty consistently for the last year and a half or so. I'm 21 now This is probably the single most beneficial video I've come across. I can just about hold my own in a jam, but not confidently. I've been struggling to figure out where I needed to go from where I'm now to better myself as a guitarist. I appreciate the guidance!
dude when i started playing 6 months ago you were the only person i could stand to learn from on youtube . coming back to this video after 6 months man you have done so much for me dude . seriously you are an angel
Mike.. I ordered my guitar yesterday.. it should be coming in tomorrow and I have been watching videos of learning guitar since i ordered. I am excited and nervous, but your videos are helping me.. thank you soo much for posting! Im 48 :) - when i was a kid i had a guitar with a few lessons but never took it serious - here's my chance!
Wow! This is the best instructional video out there. In one lesson he literally covers everything you need to know in a logical progression of beautifully described and demonstrated techniques along with the underlying music theory. This one lesson combined wth commitment and practice will transform someone new to the guitar into a musician. Had I had this video as a kid learning guitar I would have saved myself years and years of guitar lessons, bus rides back-and-forth and the frustration of slow piece meal instruction. For me this lesson would have been “the keys to the castle”. What a great example of technology empowering us all. Bravo!
I found a good tip u may want to add at some stage, thats when u do say a C chord, keep your fingers in position, and lift them off the fretboard, and put them back on. Doing that helped me alot when learning new chords, especially ones where ur fingers are in odd positions. (Well they feel odd to me lol). Cant remember whos vid i saw that tip on, was on utube tho.
You are such an incredible teacher! As someone who also teaches guitar (to much smaller audiences lol), stumbling across you has been a breath of fresh air! Pouring through your videos i've learned so much about how to better *teach* guitar from you, and i thank you.
I really appreciate your calm demeanor and step by step application of knowledge. I've been reading James Shipway's three volumes in one book on guitar music theory and spent a bunch of money on equipment...🙄 Now, I just need skill...🤦🏿♂️ I'm a recent EVH fan, even though I'm in my 50's. I heard this band as a teenager, but only now appreciate Eddie's skill. I now know enough to appreciate the incredible capabilities he and other guitar players have. As a former young air guitar player I want to be able to do it for real...
These videos have helped my confidence a lot. I was a great singer at a younger age, still comes naturally- I can sing anything. My older sister got the instrumentalist gene, she can play anything. I wrote two songs just listening to you and jamming. I grilled myself on guitar for 10 years and gave up; thought I sucked. Turns out I have the puzzle pieces, just need to put them together. I knew everything you showed, chord shapes etc, scales- just not really how they relate. You are a fantastic teacher. It’s kind of starting to click.
I've been playing since November of 2018 so like 5 months. I really got into it and find the thing that hooked me was playing along to my favourite songs. Learning Jimmy eat world I learned what Drop D tuning was. Playing Bowie I learned what chords in a key were. Failing my way through Floyd thought me how important bends are. It's kind of cool because when I finally sat down to properly learn barre chord shapes and other stuff like that, I had a foot in the door. A big step for me was being able to watch someone play and a learn chord shapes and notes in a song that way. Thanks for all the videos, you're prince video is the reason I finally got off my ass and picked up a guitar.
Pretty crazy that he explained everything I know up to my current progress after playing for one year. I guess this is where alot of players get stuck cos its confusing to know where to go from here.
Had guitar playing obsession through out all my childhood. Couldn't make it though. Now I'm 41 and all of sudden my spark plug initiated some thrust so bought Ibanez RGA42FMLBLF left with Marshall 30w. It's been four days since I start playing. Bought .73mm picks but I guess when I strum it gets stuck but I never dropped the pick for once lol. Now ordered 12 pack of .38mm and .46mm. I think I'm doing great with CAGED but I'm definitely not fast to switch around major chords yet. Today I will be going with MINOAR chords. I'm playing 2 hours a day, is that enough? My fingertips are soaring but hey guess what I won't take no as an answer. I wanna play metal someday but soon. I have selected two guys to learn guitar from one is this gentleman and STEVE veine (another teacher on youtube) you both are helping me a lot in my guitar learning journey. Btw I did pretty good yesterday on DDUUD strumming.
It took me a few years to pick these all up. Definitely comes naturally eventually especially if you listen to a lot of music, but it's nice having all of these in a list. Awesome video
1. learn how to tune your guitar: done (with a tuning device) 2. learn how to read tab: half done 3. be able to read chord charts... and I'm lost- but I've only been learning for a week without a teacher so I don't think that's bad- right?
There are so many little tips that are important but get lost by most experienced players. The one I took from this was to bend right up against the fret wire. I was doing it ok but when I moved it up it was perfect. Thanks.
Been half a year since i started playing the guitar. Have all of this done and man it helps. But wait, there is more! As soon as you have one new "skill" achieved it seemes like there are two new skills that want to be learned but are yet so far away. That's the progress. Keep shredding guys
@@Punttipate62 Eh he can do the shred in the blues box. He always does that live. But every single Green Day song I have ever heard are bar chords or like a G major or C major. Even tho maybe he is more proficient than Kurt Cobain and can get around the fret board better.. no.. no haha Kurt Cobain wrote much more complicated melodies n nice little progressions. And I'm not even a big Nirvana fan
Man I saw this lesson before as I running in again it just clicked timing is everything. As I learned the minimum I know everything. Every day I will practice. A BIG THANKS !!
Thanks so much I have been living on a sailboat and teaching myself to play by watching on line videos, but have not found any that have explained these principles. I just saved the video and I am sure I will refer to it often. If you ever want to come sail the Caribbean let me know I will trade for lessons
This is list is pretty good I'm in agreement with most. I'd add some next steps: - learn some basic songs (chords) so you can play and sing - learn some simple songs (melodies/riffs) like Peter Gunn including all the nursery rhymes, xmas carols, etc. - learn how to adjust (tech) a guitar or at least (first step) how to identify when a guitar needs setup (like strings too high) - learn something about sound, tone, etc. (like what happens to the sound waves when you turn the tone knob, how amps work, etc.)
Good points. I think it's important to learn the CAGED open chords and then two barre chords. B and F. Then you have all of the major chords, and you understand why it's called The "CAGED" System.
I started learning how to play guitar when I was 13. Now I'm 20. Haven't focused on learning guitar deep. Thank goodness I know the basics at the very least. Gonna try and learn again now. Wish me luck, guys!
I've been playing a long time but was curious, this is the bets i've come across for someone starting out and in todays world it can be overwhelming with whats online everyone say what you must learn, but right here this for me is what i would tell someone starting out 100% great job my man.
I just started learning and have watched countless videos. Even though this wasn't an "instructional" video it's the first one I've watched where I had that lightbulb moment on learning the fretboard and chord names/placement. Subbed...obviously.
This is perhaps the most useful lesson I've ever seen. I've been doing a lot of the 12 things since I began 3 years ago but didn't know how they all worked together. This is the solid foundation you need. Thank you so much!
Sadly if I had been given this advice 40 years ago I would be a rock star today. Too bad RUclips wasn’t around back then. All I had was my neighbor which taught me Stairway to Heaven, and that took years. Thanks Mike I have learned so much from your channel. Would love to see your Heart tribute band in person since they were among many artist back then that influenced my musical tastes even today. If you come thru Atlanta I will be sure and see you since it doesn’t look like I’ll be seeing Ann and Nancy together anytime soon. David J
I'd been toying with the idea of adding string trees to all my Gibson/Epi guitars. Now that I see them on your guitar, I'm absolutely doing it. Functional and they just look great on there. I'm glad I came back for another viewing of this great video, I hadn't noticed them first time around
Very informative channel, thank you so much for sharing your knowledge ! To everyone that is learning a new instrument : Never give up, you'll thank yourself 1, 5, 10 years from now.
I think I know everything and more from the technical parts but thanks to this video I know what I missed from the theory part I would also recommend as a total beginner to use this video as list of what your objectives are, but don't forget to keep learning songs, that's also really important!!
This is amazing! I've been intimidated so many times I try to learn some guitar. But this video puts things into some really nice quantifiable goals, to get to the point of feeling competent to truly have more fun with it!
I only started using tuners five years ago. I developed a great sense of relative pitch by regarding tuning as something to practice as much as chords and scales and then songs. Many beginners don't think of tuning as playing 101, but a "hassle standing in the way of really playing". Electronic tuners are a tool that wont help much without a "good ear" that requires a lot of practice, at least it did me, but it's worth it.
Thanks Mike, I'm a beggining guitar player. This video really gave me a goal to set with every skill you taught. I learned so much just in the time I spent watching . Also, the way you teach is so understandable to even beginning guitarists. Thanks!!
Dude, gotta tell you I love your channel and am really learning a lot from it. Appreciate all the great lessons and your calm, peaceful delivery. Keep up the awesome vids. Thanks so much.
Awesome advice. I was taught these basics in my teens about 40 years ago but never mastered them. I know power chords, bar chords the open majors and pentatonic SCALE but I really hope to get ALL these 12 essentials down...even at 54 yo. I need to work on the minors, 7ths, notes and fret positions...
Thank you for this video. So nice to know what I need to do next. I never had a teacher. Just an older cousin brother and his friends who would teach me barre chords so that they could solo.
Great points, but I was hoping you would mention practicing arpeggios over the caged system and making melodic lines that carries from one caged shape into another. Enjoy watching your videos
I have big fingers so I quickly moved from a 3 finger to 2 finger A open cord when I was learning -- watching you play 5th string major bar cords with only 2 fingers was a revelation for me when I saw you do it in one of your earlier videos. I still play like crap but now at least I can play like crap and play major and minor bar cords on 5th and 6th string.
I had been playing for years and was pretty adept player, but when that Esteban dude started hocking his guitar shit on TV in the early 90s somebody gave me this big chords chart poster was huge with bout 60 diffrent chords on it, i was a metal head, but had a few acoustics laying around, but that fucking chart gave me the keys to the kingdom, man i learned so many chords from that thing ive always learned from ear cause no one ever would take out the time to teach me, but i learned a millon different songs from many genres just by fucking with that chord chart, i hung it right in front of my jam station so id be motivated to mess with it everytime i was just lollygagging around, boy 30 years later i can say Ol" Esteban helped me more with that chart than anything else, thanks Esteban where ever you maybe, one other thing, kids learning now days got it made when i git the itch to learn guitar it was 1987 , 88" there was no internet, no youtube, no instant teachers, you had to pay heavy cash for a teacher, or by tabliture books which wasnt cheap, call me an old bastard all you want but back then you had to have heart and dedication to achieve being a decent guitar player, and people's judgement standards was way high because bands famous back then,hell even the most non popular metal bands had gunslingers that would smoke the pants off of players who are considered great by todays standards
I can read tabs and understand some music theory, I know the fret layout and a lot of the essentials, but these frickin fingers.... Swear all you good guitar players are aliens. Lol. Thanks for the vids. RUclips is a treasure trove for learning anything you can imagine because of people like you.
Lmao I’m not very good yet cuz only been playing 5 months but my 2 middle fingers are super freaking long and the other day I called them ET fingers 😂 I think it helps me
8:33 thought that was under the bridge. because it was, but i mean without the embellishments and with some different shapes here and there (specifically third chord and fourth chord. third is moved to a different spot and fourth sounds a tad different, I think you did major instead of minor but idk)
It's kinda odd to see how many online teachers make guitar sound like chore. If you treat it like chore, your not gonna wanna play, and if someone's struggling it makes it worse. For me, I learn techniques through songs or when I'm messing around. When I first started I neglected chords, and guess what... My rhythm is horrible and I need lots of help and time with chords and strumming, so listen to this man!!!
Great little video showing a good number of the essential skills you need to develop in order to create a solid foundation, on which to build your on-going development as a musician - an invaluable insight from The Art of Guitar.
Thanks for all this stuff. I should have found this 5-6 years back when I started playing guitar seriously. Anyway, it just confirmed that the way I am doing most of the stuff you showed correctly. I also do a workout before guitar playing and finger stretching and hand bending exercises before and after each session. This is just to prevent tendon and wrist injuries. Hope we will be in touch and someday I will surprise you with a lead song or perfect song. Thanks again.
The third strum pattern is realy good to know. A lot of songs have this patern, it teaches you to play the syncopated rhytms, once you speed this up you can get a lot more rhytms, and I personaly find it the easiest when I have to sing along guitar playing, because this way it is much easier to "count" (be aware of) the whole bars if you know what I mean. Also, I envy young guitarists because they have this excellent opportunity to learn from youtube and just videos like this can help them grow really fast. Plus all the tabs that are easily available here or elsewhere. If I should stress one thing, play alongside with the songs. I remember when I discovered tabs, I knew the songs but I really didnt pay too much attention to the guitar. I tried to play it just from the tabs (there were only the "paper! tabs with no rhytm patterns or rhytm only indicated with the space between the "notes") and I usualy played it totaly wrong, with my own rhytm that often made it into different song. playing with the songs will train your ear, and really help you to improve your timing.
I can do every one of those except #10. The do re me thing. How does that relate to my soloing? Also, WTF with the haters and the thumbs down????? I guess those who can’t play...hate. Keep up the great work, Mike!
In case you have all notifications turned on and see this pop up, I'm replying to the comment you made on an The-Art-of-Guitar video 4 months ago about people giving thumbs down. They do that when RUclips puts a video on the person home page that they aren't interested in. It trains the RUclips algorithm to learn a person's preferences. So, it's not that they *_hate_* the video, they just aren't interested. The reason I'm bothering with this is because I see so many people making the same comment and decided to spread this knowledge whenever I can.
14:42 The Feelers - Venus? Such an unknown (internationally anyway) Kiwi band. If not, that's the exact riff (slightly different neck position) haha. I've been playing since 1994 and I really love your vids mate. Keep on keeping on.
At least you can still laugh, when I practice, my dead relatives slap me in the back of the head, my late daughter doing the most damage, I can hear her laughing, that's pretty good for 5 years gone. Maybe it's the organs she'd donated, that could be whats smacking me around!
Fantastic video! Picking things up here and there, as a beginner, Its easy to feel like your just going in circles. (Which is a good reason to get your course.) This was extremely helpful, and it turns out I’m not quite as clueless as I thought. Thanks.
One basic that i ignored for years and i belive everyone should know at the beginning is to know how a Chrod is formed and what they are, what do they get those names, one you get that you´ll be able to play them and found them all over the neck of the guitar specially since is not hard to get what they are but nobody tell you, is just "look at this shape, this is C major" and so on and on. Also if you play on an electic guitar learn how to dial a good guitar tone in your amp or how to get good guitar tones for different situations for that matter even if you have a bad amp, that´s super useful (so nobody have to deal with your 11 on gain, 11 treble, 0 mids, 10 bass scoop bad tone). Also practice with distortion, not all the time of course but is useful to know what are your flaws when playing if you gonna play a genre that use distortion. Finally and most importnat: PRACTICE!
Why do you absolutely need to know how a chord is formed as a beginner? Is it essential to know for a beginner? What does a beginner do with all that music theory that is required to learn that? In my opinion its better to first learn the chord shapes (open and barre chords) and learn how to make music with those chords. After that understanding music theory and improvisation comes more easily and natural. If you are already familiar with the shapes its easier to recognize the notes.
super helpful thank you! been playing for bout a month or so now and didn't know some of those key things this has definitely upped my guitar experience as i can wrap my head around it better. cheers :)
thank you for this very informative video, I am just starting out learning to play the guitar and I can play most of these things but I didn't realise how important they were until your video, thank you very much for sharing it is very much appreciated
Please do Pat O' Brian and Rob Barrett of Cannibal Corpse for the artist series. You probably don't listen to Cannibal Corpse but I really want to know all the techniques they use in Cannibal Corpse.If they are too extreme/Heavy for you I understand. Love your videos by the way you've helped a lot with my playing!
@@TheArtofGuitar Hey Mike, I'm a member of your site, and I just recently watched a video of Tim Pierce, on which he explains, that bending should actually come from the wrist, not the strength of your fingers. I'm not quite sure if I missed you explaining that fact in your lessons, but I was absolutely blown away, because after Tim Pierces video I was actually able to bend properly for the first time. (I'm playing an acoustic with 12 gauge strings :D) It might sound dumb, but it's not that obvious to notice just by observing your video imo. Again, Not sure if I just missed it in your lessons and somehow I can't watch videos on your site right at the moment, so I can't double check. Anyhow, just wanted to notify you, so you can add a "bending technique" video to your online lesson, if needed. :)
Probly the best guitar learning vid I’ve seen not even joking. Liked, saved and subscribed. Jesus, this really motivated me after a frustrating practice session today.
I needed this. I’ve been self-taught on guitar so I never even tried learning open chords. I know all the sweeped arpeggio major and minor shapes but the only open chord I know is G. Never tried barring either. I only ever do lead stuff because that’s what’s interesting to me. I couldn’t tell you the name of any chord shapes or where to find them. I never use the pentatonic scale either cuz I don’t like it. I have so many gaps on my playing I need to fill in. Thx
Don't worry mate. It doesn't sound as if you're playing in a band any time soon. If your ambition is just to f* around on a guitar now and then, you do what you want to do. If you however ever want to transition to actually making music, yeah, fill those gaps. I'd suggest getting some sort of band going first to show you what gaps you have, you may not even realize most of them. Also band first, growing with the challenge second so there are no excuses for you to not join a band because you have some "gaps". But in the meantime, do whatever you want.
been playing since i was 16 now 39.,and find that no matter what you know there will always be someone that knows something you don't,or can influence your playing to become better
I thought I was terrible at guitar, now I still think I'm terrible but at least I know the basics
It really feels like the more you know, the more you realize how much you don't know
revisiting these basic techniques to see if I'm having weakness on them
Watching youtube is great for the confidence! NOOO :p
trust me you'll get better!, but it all depends on how good you really want to get, whether one has talent or not, there is never a substitute for hard work and dedication.
Guilherme Arantes how are you at guitar now?
For people who use this video as a reference/study guide like me:
00:50 tuning
01:30 read tab and chord charts
02:20 learn open chords C A G E D Am Em Dm C7 A7 G7 E7 D7 and B7
03:50 learn 3 strum patters
04:35 learn your 5th and 6th strings
05:35 learn power chords
06:35 Barre chords E shape and A shape
08:50 know minor pentatonic scale shape
09:55 major scale
10:35 know a major and minor shape
10:55 four lead tech
13:13 muting
thank u
I appreciate that public service, good sir. Thank you.
I'm not a great player, but I also don't want to be an asshole to anyone just beginning when I say this: this is the very first time I watch your video and know exactly everything you were talking about, and it's validating somewhat. As I said I don't consider myself a great player, but we lose track of how much we already know when we keep comparing ourselves to the absolute best in the business and we believe that what we know isn't worth anything. Which isn't true. And this video reminded me of that. And for that I thank you !
Man I needed to read that. Thank you.
The one thing i think we should tell newbies... practice all you can. Noodle a lot. ENJOY it. when youre not enjoyiing it.. do something else (also reading music is CRAZY easy)
This is the most relatable comment I've ever read.
I know all of this stuff but never had a foundation in mind. I feel very confident now that I watched this video and read this comment. I just have to get technically proficient. I have something to go off of now. Thanks guys.
Thank you.
Clearly every beginner should start off learning Through the fire and flames. I’m disappointed you didn’t bring this up!
Funny, I always thought you should start with the intro riff on Scavenger of Human Sorrow. Must be my mistake, lol.
Why? either of you?
So they can learn to hit notes really fast and make SHIT music? GARBAGE?
Much rather them learn something they love and other people who arent hipster bitchs love.
Nah, they should learn La Grange first.
@@cdreid9999 It's called sarcasm maybe look into it.
When you skipped tutorial and jumping straight into Insane Mode
Probably the most informative 15 minutes of youtube video on guitar i've ever watched. Thank you
ak2010utube I know!
This is truly the most useful guitar video I've ever come across. It just makes it all come together.
Right! Questions I had were just casually answered.
I couldn't agree more.. Shows me the basics that I should know down pat... Thankfully I have a good understanding of what he's talking about...
Man this guy deserves so much credit for teaching.
that lp custom looks delicious mike
does it have a real rosewood fretboard or the Richlite crap that Gibson is pushing these days?
Well. I don't know what it's made of. Chocolate maybe? Since it's black.
@@GuitarsAndSynths On a Custom? I'm doubting pretty hard it's a Richlite. But, still, that's a damn fine guitar. I normally don't care for gold hardware but it looks pretty good on there with the over all set up.
@@GuitarsAndSynths Pretty sure those Gibson Customs have Ebony fretboards, not rosewood or anything else...
My first thought was I didn't think 78 rpms were still being made. There's dating yourself, and then there's uninterring yourself.
I’ve been playing for a year and have watched countless videos. Martys music, Justin guitar etc. None of them lay out the big picture like this. This is by far the most consolidated and easy to understand tutorial on guitar I’ve ever seen.
I’m three weeks into learning. It’s really good to see where I should be at or be aiming to get to. Some of these like the strumming patterns I have already nailed. Working on some of the others right now like power chords. About to start learning the pentatonic scale. Know the notes on strings 5 and 6 as well. Just started learning vibrato. Learnt a small amount of muting. Learnt a lot of chords, practicing speeding up my changes and slowing down to perfect my changes. So it’s really nice to see I’m progressing in the right direction. I see learning guitar as a journey and I’m in no rush to reach the destination. I want to learn everything but learn it correctly so I’m putting the practice in every day to get it right. Thank you very good video 👍
I've been playing for 21 years, but I still find things to learn in your videos. It's truly amazing how slight changes in technique can drastically affect your sound. Thanks for all the great content!
This was fabulous. I started playing the guitar young, took lessons (I still have the book), and then played a bunch of popular songs with chord books. Watching this, I was impressed with how much I picked up (bending notes, bar chords) and a lot I missed (the three types of rhythms and learning the notes). When I have time to relearn, I can now go farther and feel more confident, because you've shown me the holes in my knowledge. Thank you.
best video ever for anyone teaching themselves but stuck in terms of not knowing where to begin or what to focus on next. perfect.
If you work on pretty much all the techniques discussed in this video, absolutely guaranteed, Your friends will be so blown-away impressed with how quickly you've become a good guitar player after only a couple of months. I know this, from first hand experience; coz this is exactly what happened to me! A few months ago, a friend let me borrow his (acoustic) guitar. He was totally amazed about two months later when he came to take back his guitar just how good I had become in just a few weeks - now he's even asking to take guitar lessons from me: true story! This even encouraged me to go out and buy an acoustic guitar of my own...and so my guitar journey continues... 🙂
btw, I can also play Bass and Piano, so being already able to play another musical instrument definitely speeds up the learning process.
Dang... I’m about a month into playing guitar and I’m still getting comfortable switching between CAGED chords. I’m impressed. I guess we all learn at different paces
@@jacksonroberts7721 Don't forget to read his last sentence, brother. He can also play the bass and the piano already, so that helps tremendously and makes everything WAY easier on the guitar. Don't be discouraged (:
@@AustrianEconomistyeah,if you can play bass well,guitar will be rather easy.
This is a great intro for a beginning guitar player. I agree with you on what is most important. Another thing I would probably add is about the way tuning causes a change in patterns and chord shapes as we move up a string -- crossing from G to B. For example, the four lowest notes of E, A and D chord shapes are all the same relative notes -- 1, 5, 1, 3. Instead of giving the numbers, I'd play the D chord in first, 5th and 10th positions to demonstrate this. In addition, the C and G shapes, playing four notes and skipping the low 3rd are also the same four notes. You could show this by playing C in 1st, 3rd, 5th, 8th and 10th positions - the C, A, G, E and D shapes.
I’ve been learning from RUclips and sometimes it’s hard to know if you’re learning things in the right order, so this video was really validating. Only thing I really struggle with is tuning by ear
then why not just buy or download a guitar tuner?
this is my favorite instructory channel because you're never rude and never act like those who don''t know this stuff aren't smart/good at guitar, you just TEACH and that's awesome
This video gave me a big motivational boost and a direction to work towards. Thanks a lot. Love your videos.
This is an excellent summary of guitar techniques. I have picked each one up over time and to see them all summarised here re-inforces the value of them. I would also suggest to experiment/explore the fretboard, take a pentatonic shape and explore either side of it to appreciate its relationship with the rest of the neck, that helps develop your first solo. I knew all the major/minor bar chords in all positions but only yesterday discovered the associated 7 chords; now they have a name - Thanks Mike!
Epic! Thanks Mike - this will give my practice better direction!
String bending to a note is worth doing - pick a string/fret and play it then fret the same string 1 fret down and bend up to the note you just played (good ear training). Try with different strings at different places on the neck (different pressure at different positions on the neck, different string guages need different pressure) and try 1 and 2 semitone bends.
Pre-bends are fun too (bend, play and check you hit the right note - sort of reverse of the above).
Tom Quayle has a very useful video lesson on this here (37 mins)... ruclips.net/video/TT9cqvQjS_M/видео.html
Thanks again Mike for all the work you put in for us mere mortals :-)
mixing up the pentatonic with these things is basis of most rock and metal solos
Thank you for making this! Been trying to teach myself to play for two years now. I’ve been feeling like I’ve been trying to piece together a foundation and it hasn’t really been working, but now I finally feel like I’ve found the right guide to really build my base.
I've been playing the guitar very much on and off since I was 9, but pretty consistently for the last year and a half or so. I'm 21 now This is probably the single most beneficial video I've come across. I can just about hold my own in a jam, but not confidently. I've been struggling to figure out where I needed to go from where I'm now to better myself as a guitarist. I appreciate the guidance!
dude when i started playing 6 months ago you were the only person i could stand to learn from on youtube . coming back to this video after 6 months man you have done so much for me dude . seriously you are an angel
I’ve only been playing for almost 3months and this is exactly everything I practice lol good to know I’m not wasting time
Same. I have 4 months of experience. I'm mostly self taught, so I had no idea where to go..glad I'm not wasting time either
Mike.. I ordered my guitar yesterday.. it should be coming in tomorrow and I have been watching videos of learning guitar since i ordered. I am excited and nervous, but your videos are helping me.. thank you soo much for posting! Im 48 :) - when i was a kid i had a guitar with a few lessons but never took it serious - here's my chance!
How’s it going? I’m 17 and bought my first guitar yesterday and so far I’m loving it. How has your progress been in just 7 months?
Wow! This is the best instructional video out there. In one lesson he literally covers everything you need to know in a logical progression of beautifully described and demonstrated techniques along with the underlying music theory. This one lesson combined wth commitment and practice will transform someone new to the guitar into a musician. Had I had this video as a kid learning guitar I would have saved myself years and years of guitar lessons, bus rides back-and-forth and the frustration of slow piece meal instruction. For me this lesson would have been “the keys to the castle”. What a great example of technology empowering us all. Bravo!
I found a good tip u may want to add at some stage, thats when u do say a C chord, keep your fingers in position, and lift them off the fretboard, and put them back on. Doing that helped me alot when learning new chords, especially ones where ur fingers are in odd positions. (Well they feel odd to me lol).
Cant remember whos vid i saw that tip on, was on utube tho.
I have searched for like a million of these guitar teaching videos, and must say this one was by far the most helpful
You are such an incredible teacher! As someone who also teaches guitar (to much smaller audiences lol), stumbling across you has been a breath of fresh air! Pouring through your videos i've learned so much about how to better *teach* guitar from you, and i thank you.
I’m learning the pentatonic scales rn and it’s really boosting me
Boy when you dropped Under the Bridge on us I realized how much I was missing some foundational stuff.
VERY helpful, especially the different chord variations like 7ths and minors, etc... Thank you 👍🙂
I really appreciate your calm demeanor and step by step application of knowledge. I've been reading James Shipway's three volumes in one book on guitar music theory and spent a bunch of money on equipment...🙄 Now, I just need skill...🤦🏿♂️ I'm a recent EVH fan, even though I'm in my 50's. I heard this band as a teenager, but only now appreciate Eddie's skill. I now know enough to appreciate the incredible capabilities he and other guitar players have. As a former young air guitar player I want to be able to do it for real...
The wink when you mentioned whole steps vs half steps on the fretboard was priceless.
I haven't played in a bazillion years. Getting a new guitar and can't wait to practice these techniques! Thank you!
These videos have helped my confidence a lot. I was a great singer at a younger age, still comes naturally- I can sing anything. My older sister got the instrumentalist gene, she can play anything.
I wrote two songs just listening to you and jamming. I grilled myself on guitar for 10 years and gave up; thought I sucked. Turns out I have the puzzle pieces, just need to put them together. I knew everything you showed, chord shapes etc, scales- just not really how they relate.
You are a fantastic teacher. It’s kind of starting to click.
I've been playing since November of 2018 so like 5 months. I really got into it and find the thing that hooked me was playing along to my favourite songs. Learning Jimmy eat world I learned what Drop D tuning was. Playing Bowie I learned what chords in a key were. Failing my way through Floyd thought me how important bends are. It's kind of cool because when I finally sat down to properly learn barre chord shapes and other stuff like that, I had a foot in the door. A big step for me was being able to watch someone play and a learn chord shapes and notes in a song that way. Thanks for all the videos, you're prince video is the reason I finally got off my ass and picked up a guitar.
Themightyinvader 🖕🏻
Pretty crazy that he explained everything I know up to my current progress after playing for one year. I guess this is where alot of players get stuck cos its confusing to know where to go from here.
Had guitar playing obsession through out all my childhood. Couldn't make it though. Now I'm 41 and all of sudden my spark plug initiated some thrust so bought Ibanez RGA42FMLBLF left with Marshall 30w. It's been four days since I start playing. Bought .73mm picks but I guess when I strum it gets stuck but I never dropped the pick for once lol. Now ordered 12 pack of .38mm and .46mm. I think I'm doing great with CAGED but I'm definitely not fast to switch around major chords yet. Today I will be going with MINOAR chords. I'm playing 2 hours a day, is that enough? My fingertips are soaring but hey guess what I won't take no as an answer. I wanna play metal someday but soon. I have selected two guys to learn guitar from one is this gentleman and STEVE veine (another teacher on youtube) you both are helping me a lot in my guitar learning journey. Btw I did pretty good yesterday on DDUUD strumming.
Was 7:50 Fly Away by Lenny Kravitz?
It took me a few years to pick these all up. Definitely comes naturally eventually especially if you listen to a lot of music, but it's nice having all of these in a list. Awesome video
1. learn how to tune your guitar: done (with a tuning device)
2. learn how to read tab: half done
3. be able to read chord charts... and I'm lost-
but I've only been learning for a week without a teacher so I don't think that's bad- right?
if you like to get on fast approaching learning rhythm guitar ping me I just finished my first guitar booklet out of 5. I sell it for 10euro
Out of all the people that have taught me things about the guitar I have to say this was the most informative. Thank you. Earned a subscriber.
There are so many little tips that are important but get lost by most experienced players. The one I took from this was to bend right up against the fret wire. I was doing it ok but when I moved it up it was perfect. Thanks.
Been half a year since i started playing the guitar. Have all of this done and man it helps. But wait, there is more!
As soon as you have one new "skill" achieved it seemes like there are two new skills that want to be learned but are yet so far away. That's the progress. Keep shredding guys
Learn powerchords = Billie joe Armstrong picture 😂😂
should have used a picture of Kurt Cobain
I altogether agree
@@magyar9479 and billie joe doesnt?
Mk yeah I get that but Green Day uses way more.
@@Punttipate62 Eh he can do the shred in the blues box. He always does that live. But every single Green Day song I have ever heard are bar chords or like a G major or C major. Even tho maybe he is more proficient than Kurt Cobain and can get around the fret board better.. no.. no haha Kurt Cobain wrote much more complicated melodies n nice little progressions. And I'm not even a big Nirvana fan
For anyone wanting to exercise on the basic chords, try playing temple of the king. Has most of them and it's not a very fast song
You gave me so much more confidence by one 15 minutes video, and so many things got so much clearer. Just wow. And huuge thank you.
Thank you. The work you are doing on RUclips is priceless. It means a lot to me. I am so grateful for RUclips because of people like you.
Man I saw this lesson before as I running in again it just clicked timing is everything.
As I learned the minimum I know everything.
Every day I will practice.
A BIG THANKS !!
Thanks so much I have been living on a sailboat and teaching myself to play by watching on line videos, but have not found any that have explained these principles. I just saved the video and I am sure I will refer to it often. If you ever want to come sail the Caribbean let me know I will trade for lessons
I never understood all that guitar stuff but I kept watching ur videos bc I like your personality somehow. I learned so much.
i have tried to understand guitar theory for hours. you made it click. perfect demo with vocab . thankyou
One of the best explanations of the fret board I've seen. Awesome job.
This is list is pretty good I'm in agreement with most. I'd add some next steps:
- learn some basic songs (chords) so you can play and sing
- learn some simple songs (melodies/riffs) like Peter Gunn including all the nursery rhymes, xmas carols, etc.
- learn how to adjust (tech) a guitar or at least (first step) how to identify when a guitar needs setup (like strings too high)
- learn something about sound, tone, etc. (like what happens to the sound waves when you turn the tone knob, how amps work, etc.)
Good points. I think it's important to learn the CAGED open chords and then two barre chords. B and F. Then you have all of the major chords, and you understand why it's called The "CAGED" System.
Hmmm did I hear riffs of Say It Ain’t So and Under The Bridge? 👀👀👀
I started learning how to play guitar when I was 13. Now I'm 20. Haven't focused on learning guitar deep. Thank goodness I know the basics at the very least. Gonna try and learn again now. Wish me luck, guys!
I've been playing a long time but was curious, this is the bets i've come across for someone starting out and in todays world it can be overwhelming with whats online everyone say what you must learn, but right here this for me is what i would tell someone starting out 100% great job my man.
This is a very helpful lesson, especially the discussion of muting with both the strumming and fretting hands.
I just started learning and have watched countless videos. Even though this wasn't an "instructional" video it's the first one I've watched where I had that lightbulb moment on learning the fretboard and chord names/placement. Subbed...obviously.
This is by far the best learning channel in all over RUclips! You sir are awesome 👏🏽
This is perhaps the most useful lesson I've ever seen. I've been doing a lot of the 12 things since I began 3 years ago but didn't know how they all worked together. This is the solid foundation you need. Thank you so much!
Sadly if I had been given this advice 40 years ago I would be a rock star today. Too bad RUclips wasn’t around back then. All I had was my neighbor which taught me Stairway to Heaven, and that took years. Thanks Mike I have learned so much from your channel.
Would love to see your Heart tribute band in person since they were among many artist back then that influenced my musical tastes even today. If you come thru Atlanta I will be sure and see you since it doesn’t look like I’ll be seeing Ann and Nancy together anytime soon.
David J
Dang man I'm jealous!
Those barre chords are not so easy for my old fingers! Great lesson in a little bit of time. Thanks!
I'd been toying with the idea of adding string trees to all my Gibson/Epi guitars. Now that I see them on your guitar, I'm absolutely doing it. Functional and they just look great on there. I'm glad I came back for another viewing of this great video, I hadn't noticed them first time around
I so appreciate all the fundamental advice , proper techniques , tricks , tid bits etc. thank you brother.
I know you said words in this video, but that guitar is so gorgeous, I couldn't stop looking at it side to side >
Very informative channel, thank you so much for sharing your knowledge !
To everyone that is learning a new instrument : Never give up, you'll thank yourself 1, 5, 10 years from now.
Very Good!!! Thank You. I wish you lived close I would sign up for lessons in person.
I think I know everything and more from the technical parts but thanks to this video I know what I missed from the theory part
I would also recommend as a total beginner to use this video as list of what your objectives are, but don't forget to keep learning songs, that's also really important!!
This is amazing!
I've been intimidated so many times I try to learn some guitar.
But this video puts things into some really nice quantifiable goals, to get to the point of feeling competent to truly have more fun with it!
I only started using tuners five years ago. I developed a great sense of relative pitch by regarding tuning as something to practice as much as chords and scales and then songs. Many beginners don't think of tuning as playing 101, but a "hassle standing in the way of really playing". Electronic tuners are a tool that wont help much without a "good ear" that requires a lot of practice, at least it did me, but it's worth it.
Quite a useful video.
I particularly loved the
Bend, slide, etc.
What awesome Dynamics such sounds will bring in.
Thanks again.
Thanks Mike, I'm a beggining guitar player. This video really gave me a goal to set with every skill you taught. I learned so much just in the time I spent watching . Also, the way you teach is so understandable to even beginning guitarists. Thanks!!
Dude, gotta tell you I love your channel and am really learning a lot from it. Appreciate all the great lessons and your calm, peaceful delivery. Keep up the awesome vids. Thanks so much.
Awesome advice. I was taught these basics in my teens about 40 years ago but never mastered them. I know power chords, bar chords the open majors and pentatonic SCALE but I really hope to get ALL these 12 essentials down...even at 54 yo. I need to work on the minors, 7ths, notes and fret positions...
I appreciate you saying this....I'm struggling to get through this list, but I'm gonna keep trying!
Thank you for this video. So nice to know what I need to do next. I never had a teacher. Just an older cousin brother and his friends who would teach me barre chords so that they could solo.
Great points, but I was hoping you would mention practicing arpeggios over the caged system and making melodic lines that carries from one caged shape into another. Enjoy watching your videos
I have big fingers so I quickly moved from a 3 finger to 2 finger A open cord when I was learning -- watching you play 5th string major bar cords with only 2 fingers was a revelation for me when I saw you do it in one of your earlier videos. I still play like crap but now at least I can play like crap and play major and minor bar cords on 5th and 6th string.
Everytime I watch another one of your video's I learn something new, love your content and teaching stlye...please keep them coming!!
I had been playing for years and was pretty adept player, but when that Esteban dude started hocking his guitar shit on TV in the early 90s somebody gave me this big chords chart poster was huge with bout 60 diffrent chords on it, i was a metal head, but had a few acoustics laying around, but that fucking chart gave me the keys to the kingdom, man i learned so many chords from that thing ive always learned from ear cause no one ever would take out the time to teach me, but i learned a millon different songs from many genres just by fucking with that chord chart, i hung it right in front of my jam station so id be motivated to mess with it everytime i was just lollygagging around, boy 30 years later i can say Ol" Esteban helped me more with that chart than anything else, thanks Esteban where ever you maybe, one other thing, kids learning now days got it made when i git the itch to learn guitar it was 1987 , 88" there was no internet, no youtube, no instant teachers, you had to pay heavy cash for a teacher, or by tabliture books which wasnt cheap, call me an old bastard all you want but back then you had to have heart and dedication to achieve being a decent guitar player, and people's judgement standards was way high because bands famous back then,hell even the most non popular metal bands had gunslingers that would smoke the pants off of players who are considered great by todays standards
Realizing how complex it is really makes me appreciate older songs...like you said there was no internet & instant teachers.
I can read tabs and understand some music theory, I know the fret layout and a lot of the essentials, but these frickin fingers.... Swear all you good guitar players are aliens. Lol.
Thanks for the vids. RUclips is a treasure trove for learning anything you can imagine because of people like you.
Lmao I’m not very good yet cuz only been playing 5 months but my 2 middle fingers are super freaking long and the other day I called them ET fingers 😂 I think it helps me
8:33 thought that was under the bridge. because it was, but i mean without the embellishments and with some different shapes here and there (specifically third chord and fourth chord. third is moved to a different spot and fourth sounds a tad different, I think you did major instead of minor but idk)
It's kinda odd to see how many online teachers make guitar sound like chore. If you treat it like chore, your not gonna wanna play, and if someone's struggling it makes it worse. For me, I learn techniques through songs or when I'm messing around. When I first started I neglected chords, and guess what... My rhythm is horrible and I need lots of help and time with chords and strumming, so listen to this man!!!
Great little video showing a good number of the essential skills you need to develop in order to create a solid foundation, on which to build your on-going development as a musician - an invaluable insight from The Art of Guitar.
Thanks for all this stuff. I should have found this 5-6 years back when I started playing guitar seriously. Anyway, it just confirmed that the way I am doing most of the stuff you showed correctly. I also do a workout before guitar playing and finger stretching and hand bending exercises before and after each session. This is just to prevent tendon and wrist injuries. Hope we will be in touch and someday I will surprise you with a lead song or perfect song. Thanks again.
Thanks for this. I wasn't sure how well I was doing, but I can do almost everything you included in the video, so maybe I'm not doing too bad. Thanks!
The third strum pattern is realy good to know. A lot of songs have this patern, it teaches you to play the syncopated rhytms, once you speed this up you can get a lot more rhytms, and I personaly find it the easiest when I have to sing along guitar playing, because this way it is much easier to "count" (be aware of) the whole bars if you know what I mean.
Also, I envy young guitarists because they have this excellent opportunity to learn from youtube and just videos like this can help them grow really fast. Plus all the tabs that are easily available here or elsewhere.
If I should stress one thing, play alongside with the songs. I remember when I discovered tabs, I knew the songs but I really didnt pay too much attention to the guitar. I tried to play it just from the tabs (there were only the "paper! tabs with no rhytm patterns or rhytm only indicated with the space between the "notes") and I usualy played it totaly wrong, with my own rhytm that often made it into different song.
playing with the songs will train your ear, and really help you to improve your timing.
I can do every one of those except #10. The do re me thing. How does that relate to my soloing? Also, WTF with the haters and the thumbs down????? I guess those who can’t play...hate. Keep up the great work, Mike!
In case you have all notifications turned on and see this pop up, I'm replying to the comment you made on an The-Art-of-Guitar video 4 months ago about people giving thumbs down. They do that when RUclips puts a video on the person home page that they aren't interested in. It trains the RUclips algorithm to learn a person's preferences. So, it's not that they *_hate_* the video, they just aren't interested.
The reason I'm bothering with this is because I see so many people making the same comment and decided to spread this knowledge whenever I can.
14:42 The Feelers - Venus? Such an unknown (internationally anyway) Kiwi band. If not, that's the exact riff (slightly different neck position) haha. I've been playing since 1994 and I really love your vids mate. Keep on keeping on.
I'm pretty early, let me make a joke:
My guitar skills
*ba dum tsssss*
Ha ha ha ha... huh #metoo 😫 waaaah!
At least you can still laugh, when I practice, my dead relatives slap me in the back of the head, my late daughter doing the most damage, I can hear her laughing, that's pretty good for 5 years gone. Maybe it's the organs she'd donated, that could be whats smacking me around!
@@Damaged262 damn, I'm sorry man
pick up your guitar and play it, that's the only way to learn
Fantastic video! Picking things up here and there, as a beginner, Its easy to feel like your just going in circles. (Which is a good reason to get your course.) This was extremely helpful, and it turns out I’m not quite as clueless as I thought. Thanks.
One basic that i ignored for years and i belive everyone should know at the beginning is to know how a Chrod is formed and what they are, what do they get those names, one you get that you´ll be able to play them and found them all over the neck of the guitar specially since is not hard to get what they are but nobody tell you, is just "look at this shape, this is C major" and so on and on.
Also if you play on an electic guitar learn how to dial a good guitar tone in your amp or how to get good guitar tones for different situations for that matter even if you have a bad amp, that´s super useful (so nobody have to deal with your 11 on gain, 11 treble, 0 mids, 10 bass scoop bad tone).
Also practice with distortion, not all the time of course but is useful to know what are your flaws when playing if you gonna play a genre that use distortion.
Finally and most importnat: PRACTICE!
Why do you absolutely need to know how a chord is formed as a beginner? Is it essential to know for a beginner? What does a beginner do with all that music theory that is required to learn that? In my opinion its better to first learn the chord shapes (open and barre chords) and learn how to make music with those chords. After that understanding music theory and improvisation comes more easily and natural. If you are already familiar with the shapes its easier to recognize the notes.
excellent instruction ! I've never played, but it still made since.
super helpful thank you! been playing for bout a month or so now and didn't know some of those key things
this has definitely upped my guitar experience as i can wrap my head around it better. cheers :)
thank you for this very informative video, I am just starting out learning to play the guitar and I can play most of these things but I didn't realise how important they were until your video, thank you very much for sharing it is very much appreciated
Please do Pat O' Brian and Rob Barrett of Cannibal Corpse for the artist series. You probably don't listen to Cannibal Corpse but I really want to know all the techniques they use in Cannibal Corpse.If they are too extreme/Heavy for you I understand. Love your videos by the way you've helped a lot with my playing!
I grew up on CC man!
@@TheArtofGuitar Oh well I was completely wrong 😂😂😂 rock on dude \m/ and Stay Metal!!!!
The-Art-of-Guitar hey mate great video. I would like to know your opinion on what us guitar 🎸 players need to know for blues cheers 🍻👍👍🍺
Dude, I saw Cannibal Corpse last month they were awesome live. The whole pit was moving.
@@TheArtofGuitar Hey Mike, I'm a member of your site, and I just recently watched a video of Tim Pierce, on which he explains, that bending should actually come from the wrist, not the strength of your fingers. I'm not quite sure if I missed you explaining that fact in your lessons, but I was absolutely blown away, because after Tim Pierces video I was actually able to bend properly for the first time. (I'm playing an acoustic with 12 gauge strings :D) It might sound dumb, but it's not that obvious to notice just by observing your video imo. Again, Not sure if I just missed it in your lessons and somehow I can't watch videos on your site right at the moment, so I can't double check. Anyhow, just wanted to notify you, so you can add a "bending technique" video to your online lesson, if needed. :)
Probly the best guitar learning vid I’ve seen not even joking. Liked, saved and subscribed. Jesus, this really motivated me after a frustrating practice session today.
I needed this. I’ve been self-taught on guitar so I never even tried learning open chords. I know all the sweeped arpeggio major and minor shapes but the only open chord I know is G. Never tried barring either. I only ever do lead stuff because that’s what’s interesting to me. I couldn’t tell you the name of any chord shapes or where to find them. I never use the pentatonic scale either cuz I don’t like it. I have so many gaps on my playing I need to fill in. Thx
Don't worry mate. It doesn't sound as if you're playing in a band any time soon. If your ambition is just to f* around on a guitar now and then, you do what you want to do. If you however ever want to transition to actually making music, yeah, fill those gaps. I'd suggest getting some sort of band going first to show you what gaps you have, you may not even realize most of them. Also band first, growing with the challenge second so there are no excuses for you to not join a band because you have some "gaps". But in the meantime, do whatever you want.
been playing since i was 16 now 39.,and find that no matter what you know there will always be someone that knows something you don't,or can influence your playing to become better