Joe Satriani Guitar Lesson - Mixing Major and Minor

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  • @autocrow
    @autocrow 8 лет назад +145

    Now I can honestly tell people I'm taking guitar lessons from Joe Satriani!

    • @DriFD3S
      @DriFD3S 7 лет назад

      W

    • @pablovertuso3193
      @pablovertuso3193 7 лет назад +1

      autocrow ahuh yup thats right

    • @MrXatcloud
      @MrXatcloud 4 года назад +8

      Don't know your age but at mine, 52, I'm still amazed of the power of the Internet even after all these years of RUclips. So saying "I'm taking lessons from Satriani", Is a true miracle for me. I feel great joy.

  • @joellouiseize
    @joellouiseize 9 лет назад +40

    Satriani is not only an amazing guitarist but he's a gifted teacher in my view!

  • @flyboymcgee8059
    @flyboymcgee8059 9 лет назад +10

    Joe is one of the best guitar teachers because he explains himself with ease

  • @Clayton-t5i
    @Clayton-t5i 3 месяца назад +1

    Love it, I just found a couple of these. I've seen Joe at least 5 times, 3 with G3 and 2 solo. My favorite instumental guitar guy,. I've seen most everybody, Eddie, Slash, Vai, Petrucci, Yngwie, Bonamassa (another of my faves), Johnny Winter, and many big rock band guitar players. Joe is my #1 because he creates all these cool "modal vibes", yet tends to lean towards the bluesy /rock vibe which I love. And his knowledge and understanding is deep , deep.

  • @fwfrazorx
    @fwfrazorx 7 лет назад +1

    If I could take lessons from one guitar player on the entire planet, it would be Joe. I have loved him since I was a kid. I have been following this guy before there was an internet and I would buy his books and read every word he wrote about each song. Keep rockin, Joe and thanks for all the lessons. Hope to one day meet you in person, I feel like I already know you though lol.

  • @TheSamuraiApocalypse
    @TheSamuraiApocalypse 9 лет назад +189

    I hope someday I will break the barrier of just being good and become great. My understanding of music isn't quite where it needs to be yet. I'm sure others feel the same way I do.

    • @Dystopia95
      @Dystopia95 9 лет назад +19

      +TheSamuraiApocalypse Don't hope. Do. (My role as philosopher today is done.)

    • @gooddave
      @gooddave 9 лет назад +8

      +TheSamuraiApocalypse I'm the same as you in that regard. I try every single day to get better at something about the guitar, whether it's learning to play the scales I know in different places all over the neck, spotting the different inversions of basic arpeggios, my rhythm playing, or just learning some cool new lick ideas.
      The only thing that gets me about Satch a lot of times is that, despite how much theory he knows and how much he studied when he was younger, his influences tend to be guys that were/are great, self-taught and probably didn't/don't think much about theory at all. I'm sure that The Lydian Mode never even crossed Van Halen's, Jimi Hendrix or Billy Gibbons' minds.

    • @oakenguitar3
      @oakenguitar3 9 лет назад +4

      +TheSamuraiApocalypse Sometimes you just have to put the guitar down and read a lot of music theory books. I read the idiots guide to music theory, then read tons of Wikipedia and borrowed my friends college jazz music theory book and read a pocket sized music theory book. I also read a book on music theory written for guitarists.

    • @gooddave
      @gooddave 9 лет назад

      Cool. :)

    • @gooddave
      @gooddave 9 лет назад +1

      There's a guy named Desi Serna who writes some good guitar books. They're helped me out a lot in the last year. He knows how to take some pretty complicated subjects and write about them in plain English.

  • @WeabeOfficialMusic
    @WeabeOfficialMusic 9 лет назад +20

    I'm a simple guy, I see Joe Satriani and I click like!

  • @michaels2136
    @michaels2136 6 лет назад +1

    He speaks in a way that makes you understand his thinking behind note choices, even if your understanding of music prohibits you from being able to reach those conclusions on your own. I haven't watched many tutorial videos of his yet, but I can tell he is an excellent teacher.

  • @diegobarrionuevo5679
    @diegobarrionuevo5679 7 лет назад +15

    -Dudde who is your guitar teacher?
    -It’s Joe.
    Then you leave the room like a boss.

  • @niptodstan
    @niptodstan 9 лет назад +18

    That guitar looked so nice to play. The neck looked effortless to use.

    • @paulbateman
      @paulbateman 9 лет назад +1

      +niptodstan Thats what i thought. It was like a low action with all the roundness of a high action :)

  • @z.z.onichi5365
    @z.z.onichi5365 4 месяца назад +1

    holy grail of melody and guitar and guitar player and guitar tone❤

  • @ultraroadmap
    @ultraroadmap 9 лет назад +2

    Thanks Joe for everything but especially for the lesson on modal arpeggios in Guitar World mag back in the early 90's...it gave my solos some spice!!!

  • @jeremyswalley8625
    @jeremyswalley8625 Год назад +1

    I’ve learned just by listening! He always has a great note intuition !!

  • @qbttf
    @qbttf 9 лет назад +2

    The man, the myth, the legend himself. Rock on !

  • @songwritingplanet
    @songwritingplanet 4 года назад

    The hair joke was pretty funny because on your early albums you had the super long hair thing going. It's nice to hear a rock star with such a humble and refreshingly good sense of humor!

  • @bestboy897
    @bestboy897 9 лет назад +33

    i wish i could have Joe as my teacher

  • @Mikey-wg2xu
    @Mikey-wg2xu 5 лет назад

    Love this guy’s subtle humor. He is always playing around with our minds a bit. 😂

  • @quailstudios
    @quailstudios 9 лет назад +6

    Thanks Joe. Fun stuff.

  • @MiisterShane
    @MiisterShane 9 лет назад +51

    More Satch-riani!
    More Satch-el!
    These are my demands, ta

    • @marimar1759
      @marimar1759 9 лет назад

      +MiisterShane
      Cant agree more!

    • @guitarworld
      @guitarworld  9 лет назад +5

      +MiisterShane More Satchel is on the way!

    • @MiisterShane
      @MiisterShane 9 лет назад

      +Ernie Tubman Yes indeed!
      +Guitar World Never fails to disappoint, I can't wait!

    • @bestboy897
      @bestboy897 9 лет назад +1

      +MiisterShane satchel is amazing

    • @MiisterShane
      @MiisterShane 9 лет назад +2

      fazeel ashraf Absolutely true!

  • @thomaspappas2851
    @thomaspappas2851 4 года назад +1

    I never understood the morons who try to argue that Satriani has no feel. The guy oozes feel. He's not a blues guitar player but he is pure inspiration and improvisation when he's creating. You don't have to be a classic rock blues based player to have a great sense of what the blues taught us which is how to marry chords with Melody in the most heartfelt way possible. I think Joe does it just fine

    • @Timliu92
      @Timliu92 2 года назад

      He definitely plays with a ton of feel, just not in the blues-based way typical rock guitar players do. And that is totally fine for me too as long as the music he is making is wonderful (and it is).

  • @TheMeJustMe75
    @TheMeJustMe75 7 лет назад

    Joe was on Headbangers Ball and gave a lesson. The lesson was "The Funnier Face You Make, the Better Guitar Player You Are." It can be found here on youtube.

  • @guitarlink79
    @guitarlink79 9 лет назад +3

    Great lesson, now is amazing to see how the guitar responds to Joe's desires, with the noise examples. I tried but my guitar is not that obedient. lol great video thanks.

  • @sumitp9385
    @sumitp9385 6 лет назад

    Can anybody explain how, at 1:54 after he dials in the volume knob from what looked like zero to 2 or 3, is he getting that sound without touching the fretboard or the strings near the bridge ?? Yes, he started off with dropping in on the whammy on a note but he completely turned off the volume then where is that sound coming from at 1:54 ???? 0.0 Guitar Alien !

  • @lovetofishneosheo1829
    @lovetofishneosheo1829 5 лет назад

    Seen him in Tulsa Oklahoma with bucket head about 25 years ago he was a musical genius then and still is today

  • @GasStationSushiiii
    @GasStationSushiiii 9 лет назад +302

    Voldemort is the best teacher

  • @ChipRobertsOfficial
    @ChipRobertsOfficial 9 лет назад +2

    The riff he played as an example of a late Eighties riff was, fittingly enough, very similar to Ratt's "No Surprises."

  • @alexpleshy8565
    @alexpleshy8565 7 лет назад

    Joe makes it look easier than it is. That's probably why he's a real inspiration

  • @vanhalen2466
    @vanhalen2466 8 лет назад +6

    That tune at the end is great, its like his classic stuff, If he can still write stuff that melodic he should, even if he hasn't got the hair for it anymore.
    I like that it's a more structured melody than some of his newer stuff which seems more improvised and like it was written in a meditation or like hes really pulling every interesting note out of every melody all the time.... some of his newer stuff just feels a bit too drawn out in the melody compared to his earlier stuff.

  • @manueladrianmontielacosta9716
    @manueladrianmontielacosta9716 5 лет назад +1

    I love love the Ibanez Original Edge Bridge is supreme stability and tone, my favorite in my Ibanez guitar¡¡¡¡

  • @chefnaj78
    @chefnaj78 7 лет назад +1

    I am not always a fan of Ibanez but man Satch's guitar looks awesome.

  • @dfifty2
    @dfifty2 6 лет назад

    Joe is playing to notes and it just sounds FANTASTIC. I guess that's the difference between him and us :-)

  • @timmorganmusic4282
    @timmorganmusic4282 3 года назад

    Joe Satriani is my favorite guitarist of all time and I would probably pass out if I met him!

  • @peterjon2758
    @peterjon2758 6 лет назад +1

    hmm..When I solo over a major progression...I use all of the modes, including aeolion (minor) and it never sounds "off"....

  • @HladniSjeverniVjetar
    @HladniSjeverniVjetar 9 лет назад +42

    Does this man ever age...?

    • @KingTabor
      @KingTabor 9 лет назад +1

      thought the same

    • @jeddak
      @jeddak 9 лет назад +16

      +TheAxisOne having seven horcruxes hidden in various places around the world helps prevent aging

    • @wingedassassin9999
      @wingedassassin9999 9 лет назад

      +jeddak wut?

    • @johntello8904
      @johntello8904 8 лет назад +1

      Harry Potter reference lol.

  • @JAFOpty
    @JAFOpty 9 лет назад +1

    gotta love the Satch. Please more vids

  • @z.z.onichi5365
    @z.z.onichi5365 4 месяца назад

    JOE is the most Epic person on earth
    such a coool dude OMG
    love it❤
    such a great sense of humor
    i need more of this

  • @juanperez-jk9vu
    @juanperez-jk9vu 8 лет назад +8

    4:25 That sounded like not of this earth.

  • @KoshikaSurasena
    @KoshikaSurasena 8 лет назад

    that sound and how many different there were at the twist of the volume pot (and toggles)

  • @MrSteviek52
    @MrSteviek52 5 лет назад

    Pure fun....pure-fection....genius joe....master of the good vibe....ya gotta love him ! Amen 🙏🏻

  • @bryansphere6359
    @bryansphere6359 7 лет назад +11

    Who else agrees with me that a "Satch-O-caster" guitar needs to be made?

  • @frankie.d1127
    @frankie.d1127 9 лет назад

    I think it would be a good idea for Satch to use a looper pedal to give these harmony lessons some context?!

  • @GoDrex
    @GoDrex 6 лет назад

    Joe is such a good teacher

  • @Snowy0123
    @Snowy0123 9 лет назад +16

    Original Edge, the best tremolo Ibanez has ever made

    • @andym28
      @andym28 9 лет назад

      Wow must check it out if it's better than the lo pro edge

    • @liciying
      @liciying 9 лет назад

      its made by Gotoh, not Ibanez lol

    • @liciying
      @liciying 8 лет назад

      +Master Exploder Yeah, still Ibanez prestige hardware is made by Gotoh lol

  • @bbking0064
    @bbking0064 9 лет назад

    I gather it's a Satch song playing in the intro (@ 0.00). Can anyone share which one it is? Thanks!

  • @RolanTHUNDER
    @RolanTHUNDER 9 лет назад +2

    Yes! Just the question that's been on my musical mind - thank you for answering it Master Satch :DHe says: "if you're hanging out with me or Steve Vai..." and I'm sitting here wishing so much I could be (**,)

  • @kbrinson85
    @kbrinson85 9 лет назад +2

    lovin that tone! what's the rig here?

  • @guitaristoftheyearcompetit4282
    @guitaristoftheyearcompetit4282 8 лет назад

    cheers joe great advice really shred some light on how to solo rock on

  • @nachomama55
    @nachomama55 6 лет назад +6

    His advice is beyond my comprehension. I'm just gonna play Enter Sandman and feel better.

  • @discotex2236
    @discotex2236 9 лет назад +1

    Joe knows the answer to this question but gives us the Satchel answer instead. Ok, the only two things that help here are the comments about playing a major or minor 3rd and rock noise when appropriate. In my limited knowledge, I do have a few fairly simple ways to view this. Try thinking major scale and then alter it to fit the music. Do you want a dark or bright feel to the melody? Dark is typically minor 3rd and bright is major 3rd. You can also play inside the chord changes which should have you jumping between major and minor feels. To blur the lines though, I think your ear is your best guide. Country guitar is full this blurring with chromatics tossed in for added spice.

    • @oakenguitar3
      @oakenguitar3 9 лет назад +2

      +Disco Tex haha here is some of my thoughts...one example in blues is blues scale played over all dominant 7 chords has minor 3rd in the melody and major 3rd in the harmony which gives blues music one of its characteristic sounds. In generally all of music, its acceptable to have chords borrowed from the parallel scale. Like if you're playing over C major chord progressions but it has a few minor 4 chords which is F minor instead of F major, you can play notes of C minor over that F minor chord that fit well because F minor is from the C minor key.

    • @jfo3000
      @jfo3000 6 лет назад

      In Joe's example at the end the root note of the second chord is the minor third of the first chord, the first chord however was major. So in this case playing a major third of the first chord works with the first chord and a minor third of the first chord works with the second chord. I think he left that for us to descover.

  • @robd754
    @robd754 9 лет назад

    if was hanging out with Joe and Steve??? when can i do that?

  • @rustyshackleford4743
    @rustyshackleford4743 9 лет назад +3

    That finish on that body is fucking slick!

  • @TheofficialJakeIrvin
    @TheofficialJakeIrvin 6 лет назад

    He’s so good it’s ridiculous

  • @rccarsandmusic2641
    @rccarsandmusic2641 6 лет назад +1

    Spoiler alert you sharp or flat one note. There's no blur just being able to use the melodic minor scale over the right chords. The Melodic Minor has attributes of the major and minor scale in it and the wholetone. Scale. Get cracking kiddies I have been doing this for 49 years!

  • @wonder6789
    @wonder6789 5 лет назад +1

    (4:54) "I haven't got the hair for that riff" - LOL!!

  • @alexandergromov4033
    @alexandergromov4033 9 лет назад +3

    Joe is the best

  • @StarshipTrooper2050
    @StarshipTrooper2050 2 месяца назад

    For the best tutorial on mixing major and minor leads , see Andy Aledort’s lesson….one of his In Deep sessions I believe.

  • @hionforex9169
    @hionforex9169 2 месяца назад

    I like when a song starts off in a minor key then by the end it switches to a major key. kind of like its a defeated, sullen mood with the minor then triumph is realized reflected in the switch to the major key. there is a black sabbath song that has this switch i think it's sabbath bloody sabbath. listen to it and how it switches from minor at the start to major at the end.

  • @raghavrao5221
    @raghavrao5221 7 лет назад

    when are you playing the minor 3rd vs playing a b9?

  • @kennyken7278
    @kennyken7278 9 лет назад

    What an awesome looking guitar!

  • @tranquilchords3372
    @tranquilchords3372 6 лет назад

    which song is being played in the back

  • @shatnershairpiece
    @shatnershairpiece 6 лет назад

    It’s interesting that I went to the Satriani concert and was telling some girls about this before the show. These were women in their 20’s and they had absolutely no idea who Satriani was. It’s getting to the point that even the most popular guitar players, ones who have been around for 30 years or more, are practically unknown except by aging dinosaurs.

  • @BFHPET
    @BFHPET 4 года назад

    what is the song in the intro i forgot

  • @Zom21
    @Zom21 6 лет назад

    Is he playing the 2480?

  • @venkatraman5280
    @venkatraman5280 9 лет назад

    made of tears is a good example of this right?

  • @GoranVedriskheops
    @GoranVedriskheops 2 года назад

    Joe is awesome, funny man, amazing guitar player, and a great person

  • @bloodcutterscrewmusicandga3830
    @bloodcutterscrewmusicandga3830 6 лет назад

    I think that explains it there isn't much more than can come from it at some point its either one or the other. thanks joe

  • @willmay1
    @willmay1 9 лет назад

    keep them coming, another Chickenfoot recording would be great, the first 2 are very good although not much radio play, why i do not know but as they say third time's the charm !

  • @guitarsdave
    @guitarsdave 9 лет назад

    ill listening threw my iPhone but watching on a iMac but its a few seconds off so its really trippy

  • @abhishekraj9368
    @abhishekraj9368 4 года назад

    "I don't have the hair for that"...hahaha...laughed my ass off...Joe...you don't need hair for the level of awesome you're at!! Thanks for the great lesson!! Just the fact that I could follow what you were saying proves your lessons are paying off...haha!

  • @johnbeau2828
    @johnbeau2828 6 лет назад

    When can we hang out with Stevie?

  • @vobbl4275
    @vobbl4275 7 лет назад

    Freakin genius aura amazing guitar man animation dude,, thank u!

  • @stuffy_halford
    @stuffy_halford 5 лет назад

    What song was playing in the intro? (Sorry I’m new to Satriani)

  • @blur4771
    @blur4771 4 года назад

    I seriously thought I had a mice running around in my house when that intro kicked in 😂

  • @guitarlicker_
    @guitarlicker_ 5 лет назад

    that's a juicy tone you got there

  • @ccapdepon
    @ccapdepon 9 лет назад

    Thanks - great points - just depends on the feel of things and where the music wants to go!

  • @kentlofgren
    @kentlofgren 9 лет назад

    Whenever I see videos like this, I'm always: "Hm, you can actually know beforehand, more or less in detail, what should work?". Myself, I kind of just start and then improvise and play the tones that sound sweet to me. Needless to say, though, I do not play live :-) I tend to wander off and use tones that are not so sweet, and I have to "go back" and redo that part.

  • @KarstenJohansson
    @KarstenJohansson 9 лет назад

    The final riffs on the video going from major to minor remind me of Brad Gillis.

  • @Ameen2310
    @Ameen2310 9 лет назад +3

    Angus Young does that a lot. Mixing major and minor scales in solos.

    • @y0sh1100
      @y0sh1100 9 лет назад +1

      not really, it's just minor pentatonic/blues scale

    • @Ameen2310
      @Ameen2310 9 лет назад

      +y0sh1100 listen to the solo from you shook me all night long and you'll know what I'm talking about... it's a separate thing that he doesn't really actually know much about scales anyway.

    • @WilliamSlaght
      @WilliamSlaght 9 лет назад +1

      +Ameen Singh Angus Young only knows his blues scale. However, Jimmy Page was the most notorious for actually mixing pentatonic/blues scale, pentatonic natural 3/mixolydian omit 2 & 6 scale, and as well as natural minor scale. Blue notes are mostly only the b5 and b3, then I could actually go into more details, but that's the general idea. Check out when early songs of the British Invasion such as The Kinks. They were not realizing it then, but the big classic song You Really Got Me, all the chords are played as Major chords, yet solo comes in as minor pentatonic (of which the term pentatonic is already assumed to be minor nowadays, except if "major" gets added).
      This is an important sound of rock and roll, even the great Chuck Berry did it, even the Blues greats did with their Blues. Interesting color, yet a simple concept nevertheless. It's the simple things or details that we always seem to notice anyway.
      Anyway as I mention Jimmy Page was notorious for a mix of the three scales I mentioned of which are similar. Check out his live performances of when he plays How Many More Times for example and see he clearly states one idea with this major sound from only using the maj3rd from that "pentatonic natural 3/mixolydian omit 2 & 6 scale" of which I believe it probably has some sort of Indian or Japanese name that goes along with this pentatonic scale, yet I do not know. It is an amazing sound nevertheless. Then he would switch to minor pentatonic and so forth.
      Anyway go check out Pat Metheny, and see how incredible his playing is! Amazing player to start out with when listening to Jazz. Cheers!

    • @jamesmcdonald2244
      @jamesmcdonald2244 9 лет назад

      +LinkBulletBill Hendrix was also fantastic at mixing major and minor and incorporating mixolydian - the solo from Bold As Love is a great example. Page is a brilliant player as well, the boogie chillun section from Whole Lotta Love always puts a smile on my face. Peace.

    • @WilliamSlaght
      @WilliamSlaght 9 лет назад +1

      James McDonald Mixing major and minor in blues playing I would consider to be completely a standard thing to do.

  • @hemixprs
    @hemixprs 9 лет назад

    Love the orange guitar

  • @evalex71
    @evalex71 9 лет назад +21

    He really is a genius

  • @HollowDesert
    @HollowDesert 7 лет назад

    What pickups are those?

  • @Boenk09
    @Boenk09 5 лет назад

    He is amazing guitars

  • @grahamkelly8299
    @grahamkelly8299 4 года назад +1

    His bends are so good it makes ya wanna pick up the drums instead!!

  • @billybumbler69
    @billybumbler69 7 лет назад

    That is a killer lesson

  • @cenaakashakash
    @cenaakashakash 6 лет назад +1

    He looks so freakin good for his age...

  • @metalvocalistwanted
    @metalvocalistwanted 9 лет назад

    Thank you sir may we have another :B\m/

  • @Kanenas42
    @Kanenas42 9 лет назад

    starting song?

  • @salamander822
    @salamander822 8 лет назад +3

    is it me or does satriani look like doctor evil with that shirt on in the very beginning of the video lmaooo

  • @floydsmith714
    @floydsmith714 8 лет назад

    What is that neck pickup?

    • @LoNeroMusic
      @LoNeroMusic 8 лет назад

      Floyd Smith it's called a sustainiac.

  • @johntello8904
    @johntello8904 8 лет назад

    Satriani is my freaking idol!!!!!!!

  • @raredesign
    @raredesign 9 лет назад

    Soo um...can I hang out with you and Vai?!

  • @Chroxaw
    @Chroxaw 8 лет назад

    what is the intro song?

  • @thomaspappas2851
    @thomaspappas2851 4 года назад

    That last melody was very Beck inspired almost sounded like a modernized version of Beck's bolero.
    But like one of your listeners I thought the rift did sound very much like rats lay it down in the general sense although lay it down had a lot more going on. Very cool to watch him I wish that he made longer lessons

  • @Eduman1979
    @Eduman1979 9 лет назад

    neck pickup ?? its a sustainer what pickup??

  • @ChilliFedor
    @ChilliFedor 5 лет назад

    THAT IS WHERE THE "FEEL " IS...

  • @nieze
    @nieze 9 лет назад +2

    Damn he plays like butter

  • @UniversalSouls
    @UniversalSouls 5 лет назад

    Nice guitar Joe!!

  • @zawaxe123
    @zawaxe123 5 лет назад

    Tnx Master Joe 😇😎😎

  • @KalelMares
    @KalelMares 7 лет назад

    Who wouldn't like to hang out with Joe and Steve ajaja, and play whatever you want.

  • @markschimmoller3402
    @markschimmoller3402 5 лет назад

    That was fun!