Donate to *SUPPORT* the Project (Get the eBook)... creativeguitarstudio.com/donations Join my Patreon for this lessons: Bonus Video, PDF handout & Jam-Tracks... www.patreon.com/posts/101603975 Merch Store: T-Shirts, Hats, Coffee Cups, Sweaters and MORE! creative-guitar-studio-2.creator-spring.com/ My Loop Pedal: BOSS RC-5... amzn.to/3fIFGB3
THANK YOU, VERY MUCH, ANDREW!! I HAVE ALWAYS SUSPECTED THAT LEARNING THE "GUITAR" (OR SIMILAR FRETTED INSTRUMENTS), WOULD BECOME EASIER, AND EASIER, AS ONE DEVELOPS BETTER HAND-EYE COORDINATION, (DEXTERITY), AND LEARNS TO FIND "LANDMARKS" (NOTE LOCATIONS), AND, LEARNS TO PLAY A WIDE VARIETY OF "LICKS", RHYTHMS, AND STYLES (LEARNING THE SUBTLETIES OF "BENDS, STACCATO, VIBATO, HAMMERING, SLIDING, ETC.
You will get it! If you spend 5-10:minutes changing from first chord to second chord then 5-10 minutes changing from second chord to third chord then 5-10 minutes from third chord to fourth chord and more chords in what ever progression you are playing. I’m learning Hendrix ‘ all along the watch tower’ 5 parts rhythm and lead. Basically the whole song but I’m tackling one part at a time I play like I said before, 5-10 minutes on one lick in the 6 components of the first part of the 5 parts of the whole song. I start of at 1/4/speed then the better I get the faster I can play if you try and play full speed /tempo you learn to be sloppy and don’t articulate each individual note cleanly thus forming a bad habit and making mistakes. That’s the first thing I teach my students, slow down, it’s not a race! I’ve been playing for 55 years and I always play slowly to begin with when learning anything new. It’s day 3 practicing one hour a day and now I can play part one perfectly at speed /tempo.Good luck with you smooth concise chord changes Todd. I hope this helped.🎸 Greetings from Australia 🇦🇺
Hi Andrew it didn’t help him per-sae , (apart from teach him new chords) what Todd was saying was he struggles with chord changes. As a teacher I thought you would read his reply properly and respond properly, maybe give advice as I did, not just reply with a generic sounding reply you send to everyone. Thanks for your tutorial it was just what I needed ! I didn’t purposely look you up, never heard of you, I stumbled across this video by accident, and I’m really glad I did! Greetings from Australia 🇦🇺🎸 @@creativeguitarstudio
@@JohnnyRayedd-Neck I took a screenshot just so I have this ty! I tend to speed up when not using a metronome or some sort of backtrack or looper beat! It's a marathon not a sprint.... Like you all say... slow and clean = speed lol!! Awesome ...advice and to get info from all over the world! Instruction from Australia!! That is totally awesome!! No, I am not gonna say it lol! AHAHAH
A thing I like about this is that some lessons say "how to play a G triad everywhere up and down the neck." You are not going to do this in a song. This lesson shows playing chord progressions as you would in a song.
Quck question: when you are playing all three notes of the triad together, are you using hybrid picking, with the pick (between the thumb and index finger) picking down, and the middle and ring finger picking up?
Hi Andrew, @3:24 are they not the bottom 3 strings!? Yes they are ‘top’ as in ‘high’ in pitch but not ‘top’ as in string order from the top (low E string ) to the bottom (high E string). They are the 3 bottom strings, not in pitch but in string order as they are at the bottom of the fret board. Please correct me if Im incorrect. I’m sure you will say it’s only his terminology but it doesn’t make sense that the top string is the bottom string. I’ve been playing for 55 years and have always heard and been taught that the low E string is the top string physically speaking on the fret board.
I went to Music College, and so did Andrew Wasson, hey... he's a G.I.T. Graduate, (basically the best guitar school in the whole world), and when you speak of the layout of any instrument you ALWAYS relate what you're speaking of to the pitch of the instruments sound. In relation to the sound, the low 6th (low "E"), string is the lower pitch "E." And, the high "E" (1st string) is the higher pitch "E" (or high "E")... Thus, why most guitar string manufactures will write; Low 'E' and; High 'E' on string packages to denote the specific strings in a package of guitar strings... So, yes he is indeed 100% correct.
So, I'm thinking... When playing triads, I've been strumming them like any normal chord. Seems here like it is pluck all 3 at the same time with the pick and fingers 2 and 3. Is that right? Is that more right than what I'm doing or is it just another way to play a chord, not specific to triads? Thanks
There’s no one correct way to do it - strumming them, plucking them all together or playing them as arpeggios will give a different effect, but chord is the same.
Donate to *SUPPORT* the Project (Get the eBook)... creativeguitarstudio.com/donations
Join my Patreon for this lessons: Bonus Video, PDF handout & Jam-Tracks...
www.patreon.com/posts/101603975
Merch Store: T-Shirts, Hats, Coffee Cups, Sweaters and MORE!
creative-guitar-studio-2.creator-spring.com/
My Loop Pedal:
BOSS RC-5... amzn.to/3fIFGB3
Thank you so much for putting this video together. I really appreciate it !
I triad this before I'll triad this again thanks.
If at first you don't succeed...
@@patrickshepherd1341 dust yourself off and triad again
Poet in the house...
Your progression sounds beautiful. Thank you for sharing.
THANK YOU, VERY MUCH, ANDREW!! I HAVE ALWAYS SUSPECTED THAT LEARNING THE "GUITAR" (OR SIMILAR FRETTED INSTRUMENTS), WOULD BECOME EASIER, AND EASIER, AS ONE DEVELOPS BETTER HAND-EYE COORDINATION, (DEXTERITY), AND LEARNS TO FIND "LANDMARKS" (NOTE LOCATIONS), AND, LEARNS TO PLAY A WIDE VARIETY OF "LICKS", RHYTHMS, AND STYLES (LEARNING THE SUBTLETIES OF "BENDS, STACCATO, VIBATO, HAMMERING, SLIDING, ETC.
omg man, I just came from a video of yours from 5 years ago and you look completely different! thx for the lesson 😁
Welcome back! Thanks for watching again, and for the comment. - Andrew
This where I struggle , the playing through chord switches even triads... back to practice great video!!
Thank you, Glad it helped!
You will get it! If you spend 5-10:minutes changing from first chord to second chord then 5-10 minutes changing from second chord to third chord then 5-10 minutes from third chord to fourth chord and more chords in what ever progression you are playing.
I’m learning Hendrix ‘ all along the watch tower’ 5 parts rhythm and lead. Basically the whole song but I’m tackling one part at a time I play like I said before, 5-10 minutes on one lick in the 6 components of the first part of the 5 parts of the whole song. I start of at 1/4/speed then the better I get the faster I can play if you try and play full speed /tempo you learn to be sloppy and don’t articulate each individual note cleanly thus forming a bad habit and making mistakes.
That’s the first thing I teach my students, slow down, it’s not a race! I’ve been playing for 55 years and I always play slowly to begin with when learning anything new.
It’s day 3 practicing one hour a day and now I can play part one perfectly at speed /tempo.Good luck with you smooth concise chord changes Todd. I hope this helped.🎸
Greetings from Australia 🇦🇺
Hi Andrew it didn’t help him per-sae , (apart from teach him new chords) what Todd was saying was he struggles with chord changes. As a teacher I thought you would read his reply properly and respond properly, maybe give advice as I did, not just reply with a generic sounding reply you send to everyone. Thanks for your tutorial it was just what I needed ! I didn’t purposely look you up, never heard of you, I stumbled across this video by accident, and I’m really glad I did!
Greetings from Australia 🇦🇺🎸
@@creativeguitarstudio
@@JohnnyRayedd-Neck I took a screenshot just so I have this ty! I tend to speed up when not using a metronome or some sort of backtrack or looper beat! It's a marathon not a sprint.... Like you all say... slow and clean = speed lol!! Awesome ...advice and to get info from all over the world! Instruction from Australia!! That is totally awesome!! No, I am not gonna say it lol! AHAHAH
That's how to play the guitar. Beautiful man...
Terrific lesson and super smart practice exercise.
A thing I like about this is that some lessons say "how to play a G triad everywhere up and down the neck." You are not going to do this in a song. This lesson shows playing chord progressions as you would in a song.
play with a backing track then. you dont need a youtubers permission lol
Gotta learn triads across strings 2,3,4 and 3,4,5 as they’re a big hole in my knowledge
Lovely sound.
Quck question: when you are playing all three notes of the triad together, are you using hybrid picking, with the pick (between the thumb and index finger) picking down, and the middle and ring finger picking up?
That is 100% correct. You got it. Thanks for watching and for the comment. - Andrew
Hi Andrew, @3:24 are they not the bottom 3 strings!? Yes they are ‘top’ as in ‘high’ in pitch but not ‘top’ as in string order from the top (low E string ) to the bottom (high E string). They are the 3 bottom strings, not in pitch but in string order as they are at the bottom of the fret board. Please correct me if Im incorrect. I’m sure you will say it’s only his terminology but it doesn’t make sense that the top string is the bottom string. I’ve been playing for 55 years and have always heard and been taught that the low E string is the top string physically speaking on the fret board.
I went to Music College, and so did Andrew Wasson, hey... he's a G.I.T. Graduate, (basically the best guitar school in the whole world), and when you speak of the layout of any instrument you ALWAYS relate what you're speaking of to the pitch of the instruments sound. In relation to the sound, the low 6th (low "E"), string is the lower pitch "E." And, the high "E" (1st string) is the higher pitch "E" (or high "E")... Thus, why most guitar string manufactures will write; Low 'E' and; High 'E' on string packages to denote the specific strings in a package of guitar strings... So, yes he is indeed 100% correct.
So great!!
Just signed up and donated. Only bummer is there are no photos of things you describe,
Amazing, thank you
Beautiful ❤❤❤
That opening piece sounded like the theme to an old spaghetti western movie 😂
Mmmm….Spaghetti🤤
Kinda saucy??
Love me some Ennio Morricone!
Hi Andrew where can I find this lesson on patreon as I just subscribed to access the pdf but can’t find it?
www.patreon.com/posts/101603975
Keep in mind that this is a Wednesday release lesson, so you'll need the $15 a month plan to access it.
@ That explains it! Cheers.
Good lesson forboth beginners and more experienced players. Music not grunge. Thanks
very helpful
whats the song called for the tabs of that little song you played in the intro??
So, I'm thinking... When playing triads, I've been strumming them like any normal chord.
Seems here like it is pluck all 3 at the same time with the pick and fingers 2 and 3.
Is that right?
Is that more right than what I'm doing or is it just another way to play a chord, not specific to triads?
Thanks
There’s no one correct way to do it - strumming them, plucking them all together or playing them as arpeggios will give a different effect, but chord is the same.
Yeah man
Right man. Some of us have neighbours you know.
What about A B D E and F?
👍👍👍👍
enjoyed this lesson BUT can't afford to join Patreon sorry
Я не могу сейчас играть на гитаре, также когда работала в технаре с этими вечными мужиками. Которым мои руки ге нравятся
На операцию мне никто не скинул я, вибратором девственности лишаться не интересно. Старые ключи как не подходили так и не подходят
Hey guy,play this song at least 5 minute.please.what is it name?
💗💗💗💗💗💗💗 ⚘⚘⚘⚘⚘⚘⚘