Pat Metheny's Technique | PART I

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
  • This is an in-depth analysis of Pat Metheny's technique. I will provide you with all the necessary tools that you can use to make your jazz guitar solos come closer to Pat's smooth sound. If you ever wanted to learn a Pat Metheny guitar solo, make sure to go through this tutorial first. In this video, we will cover his inverted right-hand picking flow.
    ► Get your free "Flow and Inverted Picking Warm Up" PDF right here:
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Комментарии • 30

  • @anrimaruyama
    @anrimaruyama  Год назад +2

    ► Get your free "Flow and Inverted Picking Warm Up" PDF right here:
    anrimaruyama.com/blog-english/pat-methenys-technique-part-1
    ____
    ►Check out my flagship "Jazz Guitar Transformation" Online Course here:
    anrimaruyama.com/jazz-guitar-transformation

  • @franckmultiac
    @franckmultiac Месяц назад +2

    There are not a lot of guitarists who can articulate like Pat. You do this very well, mate. Impressive actually.
    As far as today’s jazz guitarists concerned, most of them sound the same. Same school, same books, same lines…
    I think transcribing PM is fantastic for advanced musicians, he is a master. An album such as Question & Answer is a good starting point to check out his thinking.

  • @ultraparadoxical7610
    @ultraparadoxical7610 Год назад +4

    I’m glad that RUclips’s algo pitched me this video. It’s exceptionally good. Thanks for sharing your research. I’m subscribing.❤

  • @jeromeweissmann8350
    @jeromeweissmann8350 Год назад +5

    Hi, i'm not a Metheny specialist but one important thing that making is sound too is the way he's olding his pick. And witch side of it he's using. Intersting video by the way :)

    • @aferreyrola
      @aferreyrola Год назад +1

      totally! he use the otther side of the pick and use thin picks, not heavy.

  • @krikeyitstimeforcricket967
    @krikeyitstimeforcricket967 8 месяцев назад +2

    Very nice and valuable lesson! Thank you.

  • @trabrex7697
    @trabrex7697 Год назад +1

    Much overlooked, right hand technique. Thank you

  • @naveamitay
    @naveamitay Год назад +1

    Awesome video man! Will definitely be checking out these concepts.

  • @jormayorccis1028
    @jormayorccis1028 8 месяцев назад +1

    Great analysis, Anri!

    • @anrimaruyama
      @anrimaruyama  8 месяцев назад

      Thanks, appreciate it 🙏

  • @kristoffaninkama3883
    @kristoffaninkama3883 10 месяцев назад +1

    I am a beginner, and I just subscribed.

  • @aferreyrola
    @aferreyrola Год назад

    Great video. One thing that i noticed about Pat articulation is the way he stop the duration of the note in the left hand. If he's playing 2 eight notes, the first one it´s gonna be shorter becouse he would pull up the finger of the fret. Also love that PRS, i miss my HB1, best guitar i ever had.

  • @tourdesource
    @tourdesource Год назад +1

    Great editing skills! By the way, are you based in Japan? Your English is flawless...

  • @paulmcmordie
    @paulmcmordie Год назад +1

    Thank you for a great insight

  • @vernondafonseca8867
    @vernondafonseca8867 Год назад +2

    Superb , thank you !

  • @kmc7239
    @kmc7239 Год назад +2

    thanks very interesting.

  • @rockstarjazzcat
    @rockstarjazzcat Год назад +2

    Real jazz people pay attention to Metheny’s work, and not just on guitar. Not sure who is telling folks not to study him, as that would be silly. Cheers, Daniel

  • @francescodicello4112
    @francescodicello4112 Год назад

    Thank you very much 😘

  • @xiimbalooframingtheartofli9693
    @xiimbalooframingtheartofli9693 Год назад +1

    Thansk!

  • @santibanks
    @santibanks 7 месяцев назад +2

    Interesting video. I think the point with Hendrix vs Metheny licks is that Hendrix comes from the rock world where the approach to music is just completely different. Many rock players aspire to copy solos and it is an important part in their development to play guitar. It often is much lick-based learning. Jazz players have a far heavier emphasis on being unique players, developing your own voice, and be true to the music. There is often a far deeper theoretic framework of modes and scales and the development of cells (especially when the focus is on Bebop language). Many jazz guitarists also study horn players like Parker, Trane, Davis, etc. But as Metheny himself learned very early on: being able to sound like Montgomery is a nice gimmick and kind of accepted if you are a 14 year old guy. If you are aspiring to be a working musician, it is just not done to be just a Montgomery clone.
    And I think this is kind of where the fine line is when it comes to these techniques: some things are so typical for just Pat that if you are going to apply them in your own playing a lot, you will wear the Pat-inspiration on your sleeve and depending on how you incorporate them, you will either sound like a bad attempt at being Metheny, or if you can apply them in a less obtrusive and natural way, it might help develop your own personal style. It is why I for example would be very weary to use the Roland GR300 sound. I think it's a fabulous sound and really good for soloing. But there is no chance you will not be compared to Metheny given that he made that sound so uniquely his. While using his legato techniques of playing can work for your own vocabulary as it's just another way of attacking the strings irregardless of the melodic and harmonic development and concepts you want to apply it to. In any case, Metheny's work allows for a life-time study. One cannot ever study "too much" Metheny. In fact, I wish more players studied the contents of his melodic lines in order to make their own solos more like storytelling vehicles instead of a shredding or arpeggio exercise.

  • @winstonsmith8240
    @winstonsmith8240 Год назад

    I understand what you're saying, but I don't want to sound like Pat Metheney [my favourite player by the way], he does it so much better than I ever will.

  • @blastsucarta1068
    @blastsucarta1068 Год назад

    Well of course you can use it....Pat does what every jazz player is aspiring to do and that is to play over chord changes😢