Thanks for watching my friends! Hope you enjoy this video and be sure to comment below and let me hear your feedback about these top 5 chord progressions. Also, more videos coming soon and a new guitar giveaway. e :)
If one plays in key of G, 6m is Em, not Am, as you played around the 5:30 mark. You definitely play an Am, C, G, D progression. That would be a 2m, 4, 1, 5 progression, which also works well.
OK, i just watched this video and on the #4 progression he SAID out loud - 1,4,5,6m. but when he played in and spoke it out loud he played and said: 1,4,6m, 5. And it SOUNDED good. So, which is it?
I've been noodlin since 18 yrs old and over the years have taught myself a little music theory, but now at 64 you just flipped the switch on the lightbulb for me when you mentioned the IV under the I. I'm happy that I found you and am now a subscriber. Thank you!
Not spending too much time looking through all the comments, but Am is the minor second of G. You played Am C G D which is also quite popular but I think you meant Em C G D which is imo the most popular chord progression starting on a minor chord.
I was going to make the same comment, but decided to look around first. I'm surprised Erich didn't post a reply back when this video first came out and you commented. He is amazingly responsive when it comes to students comments and questions on the UGS website.
Yeah for some reason whenever there's confusion like this in a lesson there doesn't seem to anybody addressing it in the comments. I have no clue how this goes over peoples' heads. Makes you feel like you're the only one paying attention...
Greatest guitar lesson. All you really need is this and power chords. I started learning at 8. Quit. Restarted after 12 years. Picked up more in a week watching YourGuitarSage then a year back then. You just won another subscriber
Great lesson. Something I wish I learned even as a beginner. But maybe i just wasn't ready to conceptualize how to use it. Appreciate how well you instruct your online users.
So this what my friend was talkin about. He said every song has the same chord progression and always there's gonna be a minor chords for a reason. He didn't quite explain it well and at the time didn't get it. But now the way you said it with detail explains a lot!! Thanks Erich you're the best!
Jonathan, not every song has the same chord progression for sure. Not every song has a minor chord, for sure! However, many songs do have very similar patterns.
Reminds me of those old web sites where the front page was 50 feet long with the "But Wait!" and "There's More!" and "Hurry, Limited time Offer!" - this guy is a waffler
Ah this is fantastic!!! been doing 1 4 5 forever got boring , but this is a big WOW been looking in the wrong places for learning . this is inspiring for Me to continue playing more. Thank You very very much.
I liked the way this guy did chord progressions, although my favorite is a 1,5,4 in EMajor he has explained the voicing in a song . Anybody can learn chords, notes and music theory and depending on the person memorizing chords in g,c,d,e,f,a,b or thinking about it like g a minor bminor c,d we all learn differently but this guy went over chord progressions that we might hear everyday on the radio or internet.
Great video, helped me through a little rut I've been in! Only complaint is on number is on progression 2 you said it was the iv - IV - I - V in G but played a ii - IV - V - I instead, still a lovely chord progression!
Ok, for someone coming back to playing after 20+ years and I only learned by sitting across from my dad and following him on the neck. Needless to say I wasn't a really good player but all he played was 50's-60's stuff so it was pretty easy to follow. He never taught me really anything but chords. We still had a great time playing together and after awhile I was right with him and it sounded pretty good. So you have basically you made my head hurt and showed me how much real work I am going to have to put in to be a basic player. Thanks for the invitation to the free course. I will definitely be diving in head first.
Rich Rinehart I’m in somewhat the same boat as you, as I started playing as a teenager, self taught and with friends, just played cords. Now I want to learn a bit of theory just to make sense of it all but also it will show how you can add variety and spice to your playing.
Justin guitar is a great teacher and his website and all lessons are free. Lots of videos on RUclips also, but on his website everything is organized. Have a great time playing!
@@glorioskiola Thanks G L O R I A Gloria Sorry I just couldn't resist. I bet you've only heard that about 1 million times. I just got my 12 string back from my guitar guy and I am basically right now just working on getting my fingers back in shape. Two of my cousins play and my goal is to be able to play with them in the near future. When I was a kid our family Christmas party for my grandparents always turned into a jam session with my dad on 12 stringer, uncle on mandolin, uncle on 6 stringer and one of my aunts on squeeze box (she was incredible). When I was a kid almost all of my family spent the summers at a campground so every other weekend was spent watching my dad lead whomever had come out to play. It was pretty incredible. Here is a small piece of history. My dad had a band in the 60's and early 70's called the Peacemakers. They played all over Michigan and even did some shows in Chicago. Del Shannon was my dads drummer and he wrote the song "Runaway" with Del and they played it in the band before Del went to Nashville with a local legend named Rem Wall and the rest is history. Rem wanted my dad to go but he disliked the music industry and quit the band because he had to learn songs he didn't like. LOL
Rich, thank you for the kind words. Yes, lots to know but just like life, one step at a time. www.yourguitarsage.com/30 is where I teach all this stuff step-by-step. That course is free. 🤗
@@yourguitarsage In hindsight I wish I would have continued to play after my father passed away. He was terminally ill for about 3 years and I spent the last 2 with him playing at least 4 nights a week. I went over on Monday night and just the two of us played from 7:00 to about 2:30 am. I put the guitars up and luckily said, "I love ya, see you later on today" and I went home to get some sleep. A family friend stopped by to see him at about 8 am and he had passed sitting at the kitchen table, just where I had left him. So I couldn't even get my 12 string that was his for years, my heirloom piece out of the case without losing it. It's been 21 years and I still get a little rush of emotion when I pick it up. The hole in my soul will never ever heal. I really miss watching him rocking back and forth with his eyes closed singing his ass off. Sometimes he would have his eyes closed and he would be searching up and down the neck trying to piece together some song that popped in his head. He would say something like "Hold on, I gotta get this out of my head or it will drive me crazy!"
To save some time - the Chord Progressions: 1) 1 - 5 - 6 - 4 2) 1 - 4 - 5 3) 6 - 4 - 1 - 5 4) 1 - 4 - 5 - 6 5) 1 - 6 - 4 - 5 @YourGuitarSage says the most common keys to learn and memorize would be the C and G scales. Have fun and keep learning my friends 🚀🏆🎶
@yourguitarsage. I deleted a previous comment in which you corrected me in a grammar error and 100% right you were. I was very quick to judge with my comment but on reflection after watching the full video you done a great job in explaining what you were teaching. Good work man and apologies for my previous comment, it was one of those days.
The first one is Pachebel’s Canon. There is a video on RUclips in which the comedian and musician Rainer Herschel conducts and orchestra and choir singing many famous songs that use that chord progression.
Great lesson! I just used this progression in rehearsal as a rhythm so my lead guitarist could play over me. So I'm researching now to learn more so I'm even better at it. WHAT A BEAUTIFUL GUITAR! WOW!
The I-V-vi-IV (or its rotated variant starting on vi) is already known as the "Axis progression" as it was popularized by comedy rock band Axis of Awesome that made a mashup of about a hundred songs in 5 minutes.
Thanks to your kind soul and effort to teach ...You are very convincing with your methodical approach ... Now all is left is practicing knowingly what we are doing and progressing ...
Em, C, G, F, also used in “square hammer “ by Ghost. If you have never listened to Square Hammer “live in MEXICO “. it will change the way you view music for life, .
You mentioned the 1 4 5 progression, but a subtle variation on that is the 1 5 4 progression. Think Knocking on Heavens Door - G D C. Also, during the chorus, you can alternate between 1 5 4 and 1 5 2m progressions: G D C / G D Am.
Oh yeah I’m digging that catchphrase at the end about being kind to all beings I like that good video man this is the first time I’ve seen you I just subscribed
In my experience, almost all the great songs have progressions that fall into a few groups. I've been playing since 1964, when I quit the accordion and picked up an electric guitar. The progressions you demo all have thousands of examples.
thanks much, you are the Master, we are the students, sorry i had to drop your program, but i found myself in financial difficulty. The first in a long time. Once i get it straightened out i will be back. i've been playing for years and i still learned things that i knew but didnt know what it was. And now that i am trying to go to blues your program helped me a lot. like i said i will be back thanks so very much Micheal ( dxfarmer )
Repetition is key so have some sort of part is the song that has the same notes. Do not have the same words for any part of a song. Just adjust the words to fit into the beat of the song.
When first learning open chords and then chord progression, I started hearing hundreds of familiar songs using those patterns. Then I thought "No can't be" but only to find later that the entire "Encyclopedia" to playing songs has just been reduced to a "Stupid-simple notebook". Elvis has left the building!
Thanks Erich! Always super helpful! Lessons like these are so useful - where learning one thing (chord progession) is really learning many things (multiple songs using the same progression/s). Also really enjoyed your lesson about the minimalistic blues soloing - again, doing your thing of stripping a topic/concept down and focussing on the essentials.
Excellent.. Simple as it can be.. I know that it can be confusing [and I see the point about people thinking a 6th in a progression might mean say an Em6th but I think that's a bit picky]. Count off the ''Do re mi'' starting anywhere and then figure out what that note is based on the known strings EADGBE.. It has to be in there.. , play that chord and you're good to go.
Waw, this lesson changed the way I look at root notes a big deal because I knew the progressions & the scales but I never thought the 6th is a direct pointer to the minor root etc. In that way of thinking 😁. This makes practicing scales more interesting because you can stop half way on root notes & ring the relative progression chords & try other stuffs rather than being a burden to the neighbours just playing scales up & down like a moron. Thanks a lot 🎩🤘🎸🤙
Yeah Erich I'm in your full course, already have been through the first 30 lessons in intermediate technique and 365, I know G major C major scale five pentatonic positions and D Dorian scale for Carlos Santana! And I owe it all to your great teaching, and lesson plans, YEA! 😋
I have problems in utilizing the chords, specially the barre ones. But due to this formula I have constructed for all the seven scales and find it excellent workout for a beginner like me. But I am not sure the formula works for the other scales than G. If it includes all, It would be a two thumbs up. Bye bye chord problems! Thank you
Cheers Erich. Handy reminder lesson on chord progressions. I like to stick 10 to 15 minutes of playing 'most common chord progressions ' in my practice routine. This is good little lesson. Thanks again.
Thanks for watching my friends! Hope you enjoy this video and be sure to comment below and let me hear your feedback about these top 5 chord progressions. Also, more videos coming soon and a new guitar giveaway. e :)
If one plays in key of G, 6m is Em, not Am, as you played around the 5:30 mark. You definitely play an Am, C, G, D progression. That would be a 2m, 4, 1, 5 progression, which also works well.
You repeat a 1, 2m, 4, 5 progression at 6:14 or so.
I do enjoy your videos, Eric, but you might want to take a look at those two spots.
Can you do more Videos on Songwriting Please !!! More like that !!!
YourGuitarSage you should teach the original Tennessee Whiskey
I really do appreciate what you do!!
The chord progressions are:
1-5-6m-4
1-4-5
6m-4-1-5
1-4-5-6m
1-6m-4-5
👍
Actually, they are written as:
I-V-vi-IV
I-IV-V
vi-IV-I-V
OK, i just watched this video and on the #4 progression he SAID out loud - 1,4,5,6m.
but when he played in and spoke it out loud he played and said: 1,4,6m, 5. And it SOUNDED good. So, which is it?
First was in order and the second one sounds better for you so use the one you like. :)
@@johntraylor1522 so glad I'm not the only one.. I thought yeah I understand now and then wtf..so ty
I've been noodlin since 18 yrs old and over the years have taught myself a little music theory, but now at 64 you just flipped the switch on the lightbulb for me when you mentioned the IV under the I. I'm happy that I found you and am now a subscriber.
Thank you!
Welcome, friend! 🤗
Excellent teacher, humble and straight to the point.
Thank you, buddy!
This is, without a doubt, the very BEST guitar lesson I have ever seen! Thank you so much!
Thank you, Lawrence 🙏
I agree, really made all of the chord progressions really easy to understand. All the information was super easy to digest.
Are you related to him?
He Takes to long to say anything,but never stops talking !
The circle of fifths is very helpful to understand key signatures. Ie C-G-D-A-E etc.
3min into the video. - " Here we go, im one of those who like to get straight to the point" hahaha.
Exactly. Who the hell wants to watch a 22 minute video to get information that could be put into 5 min!?
such a boring video. this guy likes the sound of his own voice.
Not spending too much time looking through all the comments, but Am is the minor second of G.
You played Am C G D which is also quite popular but I think you meant Em C G D which is imo the most popular chord progression starting on a minor chord.
Country Roads, right?
I was scratching my head about this, thanks for validating my suspicion here
I was going to make the same comment, but decided to look around first. I'm surprised Erich didn't post a reply back when this video first came out and you commented. He is amazingly responsive when it comes to students comments and questions on the UGS website.
Yeah for some reason whenever there's confusion like this in a lesson there doesn't seem to anybody addressing it in the comments. I have no clue how this goes over peoples' heads. Makes you feel like you're the only one paying attention...
Greatest guitar lesson. All you really need is this and power chords. I started learning at 8. Quit. Restarted after 12 years. Picked up more in a week watching YourGuitarSage then a year back then. You just won another subscriber
🙏
Great lesson. Something I wish I learned even as a beginner. But maybe i just wasn't ready to conceptualize how to use it. Appreciate how well you instruct your online users.
So this what my friend was talkin about. He said every song has the same chord progression and always there's gonna be a minor chords for a reason. He didn't quite explain it well and at the time didn't get it. But now the way you said it with detail explains a lot!! Thanks Erich you're the best!
Jonathan, not every song has the same chord progression for sure. Not every song has a minor chord, for sure! However, many songs do have very similar patterns.
Thanks a lot for clarifying on this very important skills of guitar learning. Very much appreciated it.
He stops jabbering and gets to the point at 3:18
Thx
Thx
Thanks!!
Reminds me of those old web sites where the front page was 50 feet long with the "But Wait!" and "There's More!" and "Hurry, Limited time Offer!" - this guy is a waffler
Thank uso much man
This is the 3rd guitar lesson I desperately needed and didn’t get when I was a kid.
🤗🙏Here is more that you did not get as a kid. www.yourguitarsage.com/30
Ah this is fantastic!!! been doing 1 4 5 forever got boring , but this is a big WOW been looking in the wrong places for learning . this is inspiring for Me to continue playing more. Thank You very very much.
I liked the way this guy did chord progressions, although my favorite is a 1,5,4 in EMajor he has explained the voicing in a song . Anybody can learn chords, notes and music theory and depending on the person memorizing chords in g,c,d,e,f,a,b or thinking about it like g a minor bminor c,d we all learn differently but this guy went over chord progressions that we might hear everyday on the radio or internet.
👊🙏
Always loved the F,C,Am,G
Excellent video - your breakdown of the Nashville number was so helpful, made it finally click for me.
Glad it was helpful!👍🙏
Definitely the best video on RUclips. Thank you
Glad it was helpful!🙏
Great video, helped me through a little rut I've been in! Only complaint is on number is on progression 2 you said it was the iv - IV - I - V in G but played a ii - IV - V - I instead, still a lovely chord progression!
Ok, for someone coming back to playing after 20+ years and I only learned by sitting across from my dad and following him on the neck. Needless to say I wasn't a really good player but all he played was 50's-60's stuff so it was pretty easy to follow. He never taught me really anything but chords. We still had a great time playing together and after awhile I was right with him and it sounded pretty good.
So you have basically you made my head hurt and showed me how much real work I am going to have to put in to be a basic player.
Thanks for the invitation to the free course. I will definitely be diving in head first.
Rich Rinehart I’m in somewhat the same boat as you, as I started playing as a teenager, self taught and with friends, just played cords. Now I want to learn a bit of theory just to make sense of it all but also it will show how you can add variety and spice to your playing.
Justin guitar is a great teacher and his website and all lessons are free. Lots of videos on RUclips also, but on his website everything is organized. Have a great time playing!
@@glorioskiola Thanks G L O R I A Gloria
Sorry I just couldn't resist. I bet you've only heard that about 1 million times.
I just got my 12 string back from my guitar guy and I am basically right now just working on getting my fingers back in shape. Two of my cousins play and my goal is to be able to play with them in the near future. When I was a kid our family Christmas party for my grandparents always turned into a jam session with my dad on 12 stringer, uncle on mandolin, uncle on 6 stringer and one of my aunts on squeeze box (she was incredible). When I was a kid almost all of my family spent the summers at a campground so every other weekend was spent watching my dad lead whomever had come out to play. It was pretty incredible. Here is a small piece of history. My dad had a band in the 60's and early 70's called the Peacemakers. They played all over Michigan and even did some shows in Chicago. Del Shannon was my dads drummer and he wrote the song "Runaway" with Del and they played it in the band before Del went to Nashville with a local legend named Rem Wall and the rest is history. Rem wanted my dad to go but he disliked the music industry and quit the band because he had to learn songs he didn't like. LOL
Rich, thank you for the kind words. Yes, lots to know but just like life, one step at a time. www.yourguitarsage.com/30 is where I teach all this stuff step-by-step. That course is free. 🤗
@@yourguitarsage In hindsight I wish I would have continued to play after my father passed away. He was terminally ill for about 3 years and I spent the last 2 with him playing at least 4 nights a week. I went over on Monday night and just the two of us played from 7:00 to about 2:30 am. I put the guitars up and luckily said, "I love ya, see you later on today" and I went home to get some sleep. A family friend stopped by to see him at about 8 am and he had passed sitting at the kitchen table, just where I had left him. So I couldn't even get my 12 string that was his for years, my heirloom piece out of the case without losing it. It's been 21 years and I still get a little rush of emotion when I pick it up. The hole in my soul will never ever heal. I really miss watching him rocking back and forth with his eyes closed singing his ass off.
Sometimes he would have his eyes closed and he would be searching up and down the neck trying to piece together some song that popped in his head. He would say something like "Hold on, I gotta get this out of my head or it will drive me crazy!"
To save some time - the Chord Progressions:
1) 1 - 5 - 6 - 4
2) 1 - 4 - 5
3) 6 - 4 - 1 - 5
4) 1 - 4 - 5 - 6
5) 1 - 6 - 4 - 5
@YourGuitarSage says the most common keys to learn and memorize would be the C and G scales.
Have fun and keep learning my friends 🚀🏆🎶
👍💪🙏
G,D,Em,C is the first
Am,G,C,D (you can mix it up starting with G...)
Got now I got the Major Chord Count Amazing lesson
Thank you.
Rock on!
Another nice aspect of playing. Thx mate! Nashville No System. Never heard before. ❤
@yourguitarsage.
I deleted a previous comment in which you corrected me in a grammar error and 100% right you were.
I was very quick to judge with my comment but on reflection after watching the full video you done a great job in explaining what you were teaching.
Good work man and apologies for my previous comment, it was one of those days.
👊🏻🙏
I’m old and played since peter Paul and mary and the Beatles. You have really enlightened my understanding so thank you very much!
Thanks Cindy!
Thank you so much for all your knowledge, experience and your heart for sharing it with us!!🙌🏻 🎸
My pleasure! Thank you, Chris. 🙏
This clarified some of my confusions. Thanks.
The first one is Pachebel’s Canon. There is a video on RUclips in which the comedian and musician Rainer Herschel conducts and orchestra and choir singing many famous songs that use that chord progression.
Absolutely, it’s in this video. 👍
Minor second (Am) in the key of G.
Wow all these years and books
This blows the myths and techniques out of the ball park
What a lesson
Thank you
Now for the 9 🙏🎸✌️
Extremely helpful and straight to the point anks
🤗🙏 www.yourguitarsage.com/30
duuuude...best youtube lesson for my level right now- THANK YOU
Great lesson! I just used this progression in rehearsal as a rhythm so my lead guitarist could play over me. So I'm researching now to learn more so I'm even better at it. WHAT A BEAUTIFUL GUITAR! WOW!
Oh man. I've so much to learn.
Just keep enjoying the learning - that's the key to anything. Have fun - Cheers mate 😁
You're a great teacher! Thanks man.
The I-V-vi-IV (or its rotated variant starting on vi) is already known as the "Axis progression" as it was popularized by comedy rock band Axis of Awesome that made a mashup of about a hundred songs in 5 minutes.
Thanks to your kind soul and effort to teach ...You are very convincing with your methodical approach ... Now all is left is practicing knowingly what we are doing and progressing ...
Em, C, G, F, also used in “square hammer “ by Ghost. If you have never listened to Square Hammer “live in MEXICO “. it will change the way you view music for life, .
You mentioned the 1 4 5 progression, but a subtle variation on that is the 1 5 4 progression. Think Knocking on Heavens Door - G D C. Also, during the chorus, you can alternate between 1 5 4 and 1 5 2m progressions: G D C / G D Am.
Oh yeah I’m digging that catchphrase at the end about being kind to all beings I like that good video man this is the first time I’ve seen you I just subscribed
Thanks, Nate! 🙏🤗👍
Oh man Ii ventured out to far above my current playing level with this one!!! I'm so impatient.
Great stuff man, feel like this is what your first couple lessons with a guitar tutor are like!
👍🙏 www.yourguitarsage.com/30
In my experience, almost all the great songs have progressions that fall into a few groups. I've been playing since 1964, when I quit the accordion and picked up an electric guitar. The progressions you demo all have thousands of examples.
you are so helpful, thank you, God bless you!
Thanks so much ..you just opened up a whole world of music for me and put an end to my stagnate playing. Well done
Thank you my friend 🙌
thank you Erich. Now I understand the numbering system. Guess I knew it all the time. Just didn't understand it. LMAO
Beautiful Gibson Guitar!!!!
Well explained Erich, thank you.
Thank you, Steve www.yourguitarsage.com/30
Tuesdays gone! .... Thanks, Erich!
My sage, your sage, our sage.
🤗👍
C , Am , F & G ....all the chords for 50's & 60's hits.....but, all these chords come together well, hence why they are played so often...
Super helpful
Glad it helped
Maybe my favorite video. I wrote all that down and the 1,4,5,m6 for many keys and going to have fun tonight with it noodling. Thx!
Yes!
Another great lesson. Enjoyed the always witty but protracted monologue.
😂🙏
Awesome KNOWLEDGE, you make it easier by seeing where your fingers are and what fret ,great job !!
Thank you Paul!
Cool man ... thank you.
Awesome video!
Awesome video!! So helpful.
thanks much,
you are the Master, we are the students, sorry i had to drop your program, but i found myself in financial difficulty. The first in a long time. Once i get it straightened out i will be back. i've been playing for years and i still learned things that i knew but didnt know what it was. And now that i am trying to go to blues your program helped me a lot. like i said i will be back thanks so very much
Micheal ( dxfarmer )
So kind! Thank you Michael 🙏
This is awesome. Thanks!
Thanks for the enlightment sir !!!
Thank you master 🙌
🤗🙏
I'm stoned, can't someone just post the chords?!! 😝
Hahahaha!
:-)
If you know your major scale do re mi fa so la ti do then apply a number to each one.
Then use 1 4 6m and 5 in any order to create a song.
Repetition is key so have some sort of part is the song that has the same notes. Do not have the same words for any part of a song. Just adjust the words to fit into the beat of the song.
When first learning open chords and then chord progression, I started hearing hundreds of familiar songs using those patterns. Then I thought "No can't be" but only to find later that the entire "Encyclopedia" to playing songs has just been reduced to a "Stupid-simple notebook". Elvis has left the building!
beautiful explanations of progressions admirable
Thank you friend!
Thanks man
You're an awesome teacher man, thanks for the great video
Thanks Erich! Always super helpful! Lessons like these are so useful - where learning one thing (chord progession) is really learning many things (multiple songs using the same progression/s). Also really enjoyed your lesson about the minimalistic blues soloing - again, doing your thing of stripping a topic/concept down and focussing on the essentials.
Thanks for clarifying something so simple!
Thank you 🙏
Thank you Sage! This is an awesome video with some golden nuggets! A Keeper for me! Thank you again!! :)
Thank you MB! 🙏
Fantastic lesson!!!
Happy New Year Erich, family and staff!!! Thank you for all you do!! I appreciate you!
Thank you 🙏More to come this year!
GRETA JOB !! ty !
Very well speaking.
Thanks, friend! 🤗🙏
Thanks!
Hey man! Really great music lesson! Cheers from Singapore!
You are amazing 👍🏻 Dude! Thumb's up~John
Thank you John 🙏
Excellent.. Simple as it can be.. I know that it can be confusing [and I see the point about people thinking a 6th in a progression might mean say an Em6th but I think that's a bit picky].
Count off the ''Do re mi'' starting anywhere and then figure out what that note is based on the known strings EADGBE.. It has to be in there.. , play that chord and you're good to go.
Thank you Brian 🙌
Waw, this lesson changed the way I look at root notes a big deal because I knew the progressions & the scales but I never thought the 6th is a direct pointer to the minor root etc. In that way of thinking 😁. This makes practicing scales more interesting because you can stop half way on root notes & ring the relative progression chords & try other stuffs rather than being a burden to the neighbours just playing scales up & down like a moron. Thanks a lot 🎩🤘🎸🤙
Awesome - finally someone just said it
Thank you sir!
i hope you make lots of money with your efforts- your a good egg guitar sage
Yeah Erich I'm in your full course, already have been through the first 30 lessons in intermediate technique and 365, I know G major C major scale five pentatonic positions and D Dorian scale for Carlos Santana! And I owe it all to your great teaching, and lesson plans, YEA! 😋
Thank you Kerry. Your name looked REAL familiar. I knew we had interacted before👊🏻
"Folks like me to get straight to it." Then why did you say that three minutes in?
This is scary, it is really making sense! Thank you so much!!
I love that reaction Tim! Thank you.👊🏻
One of the best out there as far as instruction goes! Thanks Erich!
🙏thank you Mike!
Thank you so much 🥺❤️ just started learning the guitar and this is so much help!
I have problems in utilizing the chords, specially the barre ones. But due to this formula I have constructed for all the seven scales and find it excellent workout for a beginner like me. But I am not sure the formula works for the other scales than G. If it includes all, It would be a two thumbs up. Bye bye chord problems!
Thank you
Bought my first guitar 4 weeks ago, I'm not even tired of your videos yet
🙏
It appears Chord progression 3 & 4 should replace what the video states as 6m with a 2m. But thanks for the info very helpful
He does make it easy
Thanks for going in depth!
Cheers Erich. Handy reminder lesson on chord progressions. I like to stick 10 to 15 minutes of playing 'most common chord progressions ' in my practice routine. This is good little lesson. Thanks again.
Thank you Phil👍
Thank you, Erich! I am getting there!
You can get there Mike!
Thank you so much.. from India
Great quick no.s lesson to boot
👍
I would like to let yourguitarsage, run in the background like a seminar, rather than study each lesson, as though it was a lecture.😎🍌🙏
Thank you for this lesson