This really is a fantastic approach to understanding and building solos, a sculptor always builds a wire frame first and then slowly adds material on the frame this is the same principle. I am a fairly accomplished guitar player but wish I had seen this lesson in my early days it would have helped me understand the guitar so much quicker …this is a brilliant lesson Dylan it really is, best wishes from the UK….
wow ive played guitar for over 10 years and the last few years ive stagnated and i was just saying to my friend that this is the skill im lacking. thank you so much you have made a man soo happy today. ive been doing this with the pentatonic for a long time but never really understood what i was doing when it sounded good. so many dominos just fell into place.
I have watched a ton of YT videos on this, yet still I struggle. I am hoping that this sequence of lessons is finally going to sort me out. Thank you for taking us through this step by step. Subbed !
Great video, but it'd be better if we could just see all the chords in order, all at once so we knew which one was coming up next without having to commit your composition to memory. Just enlarge the chord currently being played. For more advanced players maybe that's not necessary but for beginners... Speeds up getting to jam along 😊 Ty for the video, subbed.
Great and an important lesson for us aspiring lead guitarists - I've been interested in chord tones for some time but at sixty years of age , for the life of me, I just can't seem to remember where all the notes are located the fretboard - wish there was an easy fix?? - any advice would be greatly appreciated - CHEERS!!
I have been using intervals to improve the phrasing of my soloing, however when it comes to chord changes I can target the chord tones but then as i am still thinking about the intervals in the scale of the key my phrasing sounds off, how do i (should i) visualise each change when it comes to the scale im playing. say i go from Cmaj to Gmaj and hit the 3rd of Gmaj on the change am i supposed to then do some soloing with the g major scale intervals in mind? I dont know if i have phrased this well, but any help on what intervals i should be visualising over chord changes would be greatly appreciated
So the key doesn’t change when playing the changes. This is where modes some into play but if you’re not comfortable with modes yet just target chord tones. So if you are in the key of C think key of C but target chord tones of each chord.
OK, SO THIS HAS BEEN A GAME CHANGER FOR ME HOWEVER,....is it normal to continually hit play back at the end because when i think i have it down I freeze up and forget where the notes are?
Excellent lesson man.
This is the best video lesson on chord tone soloing. You are a great teacher. I have subscribed.
Thank you!
A great exercise to get confidence with the guitar! Very fine, bravo!
@@mariomansuelli8967 thanks!
This really is a fantastic approach to understanding and building solos, a sculptor always builds a wire frame first and then slowly adds material on the frame this is the same principle. I am a fairly accomplished guitar player but wish I had seen this lesson in my early days it would have helped me understand the guitar so much quicker …this is a brilliant lesson Dylan it really is, best wishes from the UK….
This is the best guitar lesson till now, thanks
wow ive played guitar for over 10 years and the last few years ive stagnated and i was just saying to my friend that this is the skill im lacking. thank you so much you have made a man soo happy today. ive been doing this with the pentatonic for a long time but never really understood what i was doing when it sounded good. so many dominos just fell into place.
I have watched a ton of YT videos on this, yet still I struggle. I am hoping that this sequence of lessons is finally going to sort me out. Thank you for taking us through this step by step. Subbed !
This was great can't wait for the next couple of lessons
Next level is coming very soon!
Great lesson, saw this on my break cant wait to go through it later.
Awesome! How did it go?
I’d love to see where on the neck you play each chord through the progression to make it sound more melodic like that. Your backup playing is insane!
I’m playing on the 6th strings going from frets 7 10 2 then 3
Rock.hsppynes.ord
Thanks Dylan ,great confidence building practical lesson ....
Great lesson... Great practice routine
Thanks!
Keep going brother! I'm looking forward to learn more from your lessons
Thanks!
Very good!! Thank you very much!!!
This a game changer for me Dylan
Glad it helped!
Good lesson 👏
Thanks!
Great video, but it'd be better if we could just see all the chords in order, all at once so we knew which one was coming up next without having to commit your composition to memory. Just enlarge the chord currently being played. For more advanced players maybe that's not necessary but for beginners... Speeds up getting to jam along 😊 Ty for the video, subbed.
I made this change in level 2, thanks!
Great and an important lesson for us aspiring lead guitarists - I've been interested in chord tones for some time but at sixty years of age , for the life of me, I just can't seem to remember where all the notes are located the fretboard - wish there was an easy fix?? - any advice would be greatly appreciated - CHEERS!!
Here you go! 5 minutes a day ruclips.net/user/shortsIRro1P0GkFY?si=GPkBMBe8rRQqFC-n
@@dylanandrews739 Thanks a bunch Dylan! Keep up the great work - and wonderful playing!! - Cheers from Canada... - Drew
thanks for this Dylan! do u have the backing for this that we could download?
Your welcome! And sorry I don’t right now.
Great lesson, but might have been a better idea to give the next string and note a few seconds in advance, to allow easier selection?
I have been using intervals to improve the phrasing of my soloing, however when it comes to chord changes I can target the chord tones but then as i am still thinking about the intervals in the scale of the key my phrasing sounds off, how do i (should i) visualise each change when it comes to the scale im playing. say i go from Cmaj to Gmaj and hit the 3rd of Gmaj on the change am i supposed to then do some soloing with the g major scale intervals in mind? I dont know if i have phrased this well, but any help on what intervals i should be visualising over chord changes would be greatly appreciated
So the key doesn’t change when playing the changes. This is where modes some into play but if you’re not comfortable with modes yet just target chord tones. So if you are in the key of C think key of C but target chord tones of each chord.
OK, SO THIS HAS BEEN A GAME CHANGER FOR ME HOWEVER,....is it normal to continually hit play back at the end because when i think i have it down I freeze up and forget where the notes are?
Very normal this just means you need to train your ability to instantly recall the notes keep practicing and it’ll get better
@@dylanandrews739 Thanks, man. I'm on it!
What's in that tone?
I am using two ToneX modelers left is a BadCat and the right is a Princeton I’m also using a protein overdrive