I am in my 60’s. Been playing since I was thirteen. I consider my self an intermediate guitarist. However my friends, neighbors, strangers, and family tell me that they enjoy hearing my playing and tell me that I am a really good guitar player. I am very humbled when strangers tell me this. Now with that being written, it took me around 20 years to start getting serious about the guitar. At that time I learned the pentatonic scale. Furthermore…I applied it to backing tracks. I ensured I was in the right key. That was the beginning of my ear-training. I could hear the tone of the notes was pleasant to my ears. Bottom line is this! Learn the pentatonic scale and apply it to backing tracks on RUclips. It will transform one’s playing and guitar skills. Btw I am still learning the guitar! To truly master the instrument, one must dedicate lifelong learning.
You know I've watched about 70 of these pentatonic videos, I know because I've built the playlists, and for whatever reason, this is the one that got me to the light bulb. I've only been playing for 8 months but practicing every day and spinning gears for the last 2 months trying to memorize some of these patterns. Putting on the backing track I just sort of automatically started playing between positions 1 and 2. I really appreciate this video, sincerely. I actually feel like I'm figuring stuff off now and playing within a context rather than just randomly. Thank you very much.
Years of trying to understand this and just like that this 7 minute video just unlocked it for me. I finally get it. I think I need to find an English music teacher.
this is by far THE MOST helpful video on this specific subject i have come across on youtube, shoutout to you for being such a concise and easy-to-learn teacher 👏
Thank you so much for explaining things in a clear consice manner, with little to no bs, i have been playing for 5 years and have always been scared of scales, leading to me hitting a huge scaley wall and quitting for a few months. All because i could never find anyone that could explain it in a way that makes sense. Thank you for being that person
bro through your channel i got into music theory. You explain it so well, i could watch ur video series abt the pentatonic scale and learned to improvise. now all in one package. my man deliveres!
I’m only 5 months in. I got my finger positiong down and am able to make transfers n whatnot as well as slides, bends, etc. just cannot for the life of me find A good way to use it. Me and my little notebook are takin notes from said video and I’m going to try to apply the information you gave. It all seemed clear and correct with none of the extra nonsense in the background so I thank you for this video, as it may be the thing I needed to clear it up.
There is only so much note taking that will benefit you here!... follow the advise in the video! Learn position 1 and use it over backing tracks! It will all make sense when put into practice! Also here is a playlist breaking each position into individual videos with licks and examples! Lead Guitar Tool Box: ruclips.net/p/PLcIs25jv9P96vFf7mfO0z2HBdYRoqYfWq
I can't believe I made it all the way through my music career without knowing the 5 positions of the minor pentatonic scale. This video is a cure for fretboard cancer
Better late than never! Check out my lead guitar series! Covers 1 position each video - Lead Guitar Tool Box: ruclips.net/p/PLcIs25jv9P96vFf7mfO0z2HBdYRoqYfWq
It's the same as modes. If you shift the root of a C Major scale to D, the second note if the scale, and play all the same notes as C Major, you get D Dorian. Shift to A, the 6th note of the C Major scale, you get A aeolian, otherwise known as A minor. Learn all the modes, and you can play in every key everywhere on the fretboard, because every modal position links to every other one, and each position has it's own set of corresponding chord and arpeggio shapes. You can learn the 7 modal shapes, and that is all you need to play a scake over the entire fretboard. There are 7 modes because there are 7 notes in the scale. There are 5 pentatonic shapes because there are 5 pentatonic notes in the scale. These shapes are the pentatonic modes. You can learn the chords and arpeggios that correspond with that mode. Then you can start "playing the changes" by shifting the scale position to correspond with the chord it goes with, allowing you to more effectively pick out the notes in the chord. You can add a flatted 5 to the mix to turn it into a blues scale, mess around with using a major and minor third in the same lick, another typical blues thing. You can also start using the pentatonic scale as a framework to add other notes from the diatonic scale, since the pentatonic is simply all the most "good sounding" notes it's the scale that you can't play a wrong note with. You can use it as a safe foundation that you can venture out of as much as you dare. This is how players like Eddie Van Halen were able to play a chaotic barrage of very fast mostly "wrong" notes and always somehow land on a note that sounded good. Eddie described this as "falling down the stairs and landing on your feet"
The minor pentatonic is simply the minor (aeolian) scale with the 2nd and the 6th left out of it. So you can add those notes in whenever you want for more more emotional effect. Personally I love playing half steps. Pentatonic is a diatonic scale with no half steps in it. You can look at these things from multiple different angles, but really it's very simple in theory. The hard part is teaching your fingers to play it everywhere without you needing to think about it.
3:29 For more clarity on this section/clip i think would be good to include explanation what makes up the minor/major pentatonic. Minor Pentatonic = 1, b3, 4, 5, b7(i.e 2 and b6 left out) Major Pentatonic = 1, 2, 3, 5, 6 (i.e 4 and 7 left out)
I gave the shapes names. 1 =G shape, 2 = E shape, 3=D shape, 4=C shape and 5=A shape. It spells CAGED if you start on 4 so I never get lost. If that make sense.
That's a great way to visualize any 5 position system. However where CAGED is concerned, pattern 1 is always tied to the E shape... the correct order of CAGED is actually EDCAG. watch my CAGED series, which goes into this in more depth. This way every scale chord arpeggio etc all lines up.
Thanks, I will watch it. Yeah G Shape is position 5 but I memorise it as position 1 and it all fell into place that way. I don’t look at them as positions but as G shape etc. I never get lost anymore and improvise all over the neck with ease. I’m too old to relearn lol … Position 1 is the start of the minor and Position 2 is the start of the major, if that makes sense. Seems to work for me. Thanks for your reply. Your videos are outstanding and very much appreciated!
You get a like and a sub sir. I don't know if it's just starting to click but I've basically been playing position one of the minor pentatonic worth the addition of the blues notes for like 5 years. This will help.
Short term perhaps. In the long term, learning the 5 positions is far more beneficial and ties together perfectly with CAGED and any other positions of modes/arpeggios/scales etc across the fretboard! Plus I have never encountered a student that struggled with simply starting with position 1 of the minor pentatonic scale, it's such an easy pattern to learn and use immediately!
make sure you learn basic chords/strumming patterns/reading tab/learn songs first! look for my beginner guitar playlist for all of this! if you have already learnt all of this then perhaps watch this series of videos which will break down each position of the minor pentatonic scale individually and show you how to apply them! ruclips.net/p/PLcIs25jv9P96vFf7mfO0z2HBdYRoqYfWq&si=gXXe_khq20m1PceY
6:45 Actually the root locations have not moved because minor/major is dependant on the 3rd. When you showed them moving it was just cos in the diagram the key changed. If you had kept key of G, the roots would be the same, but the positions would have shifted left one position.
sorry but you are wrong. The root locations change based on what key you are trying to play in, which determines specific chords that work with the key. When in the position of A major, certain chords work better with that scale than others. So the root not of A major is shifted to the first note of the second position. When playing you can hear how it works because when playing in A major for a while you can hear the A note in your playing which satisfies, or resolves your playing. Hard to explain on here but it simply does change where the root note is
Correct! However, I was referring to the players memory of each root notes location in a given position. If you were used to the root notes location in minor pentatonic pos 1, then when played as a major pentatonic position 5, the location of each root note as you remembered from minor would be different. Of course the G notes wouldn't move, only the players perception of where they are located in a position.
Jerry garcia was a pro at scaleing. Even in his fk ups he always got right back on track. When i listen to the grateful dead....i just hear jerry practicing scales.
You have to think of it as a circle of positions...or better yet a conveyor belt. Position 5 joins back up with position 1. So, in the key of Dminor, you could travel backwards through each position until you reach the nut or upwards until you run out of fretboard.
@Shred_Master no problem! It's best at this stage to go through the process of learning each position and using them as described in the video! Also check out my LEAD guitar playlist, this will walk you through each position in isolation before moving on to the next! In these videos I also discuss how they fit together/changing keys and also directly address the issue you had... highly recommend going through each one by one👌
Learn the relative Major/Minor Scale for ex: For A minor, learn C Major scale(relative minor is One and Half step behind the root scale note )they have same notes CDEFGABC. Map these on entire fretboard. You can improvise on these notes you’ll have more possibilities.
Start with a minor key backing track. Any minor key. Most if the backing tracks are either major or natural minor, not modal. From there just shift the first position shape so the root note is the same as the backing track. If the backing track is Am, then play the first position on starting on the 5th fret. If your backing track is in a major key, then use the second position as your starting point. So if you're a playing C Major backing track, you'll start with the second position on 8th fret, which is actually all the same notes since C Major and A minor are literally the same scale with different starting points.
This is a really good, informative, and "to the point" video. My only suggestion would be to not show the fretboard upside down. Unfortunately, this seems to be common practice but it's not intuitive to guitar players who are used to the low E string being on the top. This could be confusing to new guitar players.
Im super confused with these. i've practised a pentatonic scale, that starts from 5th fret of E string, and then 8th etc. , but here it doesn't even exist!
Just take the diagram he has with all the notes for the five positions out on a backing tracking in the right key and have fun for a while an it will start to makes sense
Learn to find Dominant 7 chords all over the neck. Start with the TRITONES created between 3/b7. Play frets 4567-9-10 on low E to high E. That’s G#/D the 3/b7 of E7. Now because that’s the important part of an E7 chord, it will be part of every important scale and chord related to E7. - Now all of A7’s tritones will be one fret lower, and B7’s tritones will be one fret higher; that’s E7/A7/B7, the I-IV-V of a Blues song. That’s how to move around the neck and land on the most important notes of the 3 chords. - See those diagonal lines formed across the fretboard! -
I have a 5 part series on the 5 positions of the minor pentatonic scale that breaks down each position in much more detail! It's in my lead guitar playlist if you you want to get in to the subject abit more👌
Grab a GUITAR MUSIC THEORY POSTER at the SAMJAMGUITAR MERCH STORE my-store-cb48d5-2.creator-spring.com/listing/guitar-theory-poster
I am in my 60’s. Been playing since I was thirteen. I consider my self an intermediate guitarist. However my friends, neighbors, strangers, and family tell me that they enjoy hearing my playing and tell me that I am a really good guitar player. I am very humbled when strangers tell me this. Now with that being written, it took me around 20 years to start getting serious about the guitar. At that time I learned the pentatonic scale. Furthermore…I applied it to backing tracks. I ensured I was in the right key. That was the beginning of my ear-training. I could hear the tone of the notes was pleasant to my ears. Bottom line is this! Learn the pentatonic scale and apply it to backing tracks on RUclips. It will transform one’s playing and guitar skills. Btw I am still learning the guitar! To truly master the instrument, one must dedicate lifelong learning.
Kids these days are learning the distinct feel of all 7 modal scales at the age of 12 🥴
@@Globbaglobglob when your entire family pays someone to teach you that, I'm not surprised that happens
@@GlobbaglobglobThat’s a great thing honestly.
@@Globbaglobglob They start out with RUclips and apps, that gives them an edge, different eras
@@saarza9991most of them learn on RUclips😭
You know I've watched about 70 of these pentatonic videos, I know because I've built the playlists, and for whatever reason, this is the one that got me to the light bulb. I've only been playing for 8 months but practicing every day and spinning gears for the last 2 months trying to memorize some of these patterns. Putting on the backing track I just sort of automatically started playing between positions 1 and 2. I really appreciate this video, sincerely. I actually feel like I'm figuring stuff off now and playing within a context rather than just randomly. Thank you very much.
Thanks! I'm glad this lesson helped you out! Feel free to share it around👌
Me too, this video is such a lifesaver. Discovered it during practice today! I am so grateful.
Your content is amazing. No faff, no unnecessary blah blah blah - just short, clear and useful lessons.
I appreciate that! Many thanks 👋
This is by far the most useful video on this I’ve ever found.
Thanks!
Years of trying to understand this and just like that this 7 minute video just unlocked it for me. I finally get it. I think I need to find an English music teacher.
Fantastic! glad to help
this is by far THE MOST helpful video on this specific subject i have come across on youtube, shoutout to you for being such a concise and easy-to-learn teacher 👏
Thank-you! It's very much appreciated! I think you will enjoy my other videos! Feel free to check them out!
Thank you so much for explaining things in a clear consice manner, with little to no bs, i have been playing for 5 years and have always been scared of scales, leading to me hitting a huge scaley wall and quitting for a few months. All because i could never find anyone that could explain it in a way that makes sense. Thank you for being that person
My pleasure! Glad it helped👍
Your channel is the reason I got a lightbulb moment thank you so much its all clear
That's great to hear!! Pleased to know that my videos are helping people out! Thanks for watching👌👌👌
You are a guitar hero for these videos.
Thanks!
bro through your channel i got into music theory. You explain it so well, i could watch ur video series abt the pentatonic scale and learned to improvise. now all in one package. my man deliveres!
Glad you like them!
This guy is the actual goat.
Cheers👌
I’m only 5 months in. I got my finger positiong down and am able to make transfers n whatnot as well as slides, bends, etc. just cannot for the life of me find A good way to use it. Me and my little notebook are takin notes from said video and I’m going to try to apply the information you gave. It all seemed clear and correct with none of the extra nonsense in the background so I thank you for this video, as it may be the thing I needed to clear it up.
There is only so much note taking that will benefit you here!... follow the advise in the video! Learn position 1 and use it over backing tracks! It will all make sense when put into practice! Also here is a playlist breaking each position into individual videos with licks and examples! Lead Guitar Tool Box: ruclips.net/p/PLcIs25jv9P96vFf7mfO0z2HBdYRoqYfWq
This is 100% what I was looking for and you lay it out so succinctly. 10/10 fricheks
Such a great video i learned these all in a day basically thank you so much
Fantastic!
This video is incredible, I hope more people find it
Thanks👌
these are the best videos ever dude I love you
I must’ve watched hundreds of videos tryna lean guitar but the way you explain that seems to be the key to penetrating my old brain
This is one of the best and most useful guitar videos I’ve come across!! Tysm
I think your teaching is one of the best on you tube, I watched hundreds of channels, but yours is brilliant. Nice one mate 👍
Thanks! Appreciate it!
I've been watching guitar lessons in yt and felt more confused after watching it and this video of yours has been a light bulb for me. thank you!
This is such a powerful video! there is enough info here to have you playing from the rest of your life!
I can't believe I made it all the way through my music career without knowing the 5 positions of the minor pentatonic scale. This video is a cure for fretboard cancer
Better late than never! Check out my lead guitar series! Covers 1 position each video - Lead Guitar Tool Box: ruclips.net/p/PLcIs25jv9P96vFf7mfO0z2HBdYRoqYfWq
Great video. Best one ive seen. Subbed. 😊
Thanks! Plenty more like this on the channel! Have fun browsing👍
Most simple way I’ve seen this broken down, thanks
Many thanks!
So well explained. Thanks a lot for this. Hope for more
Ur giving me everything I wanted thanks sir
Thank you for this. Everyone else talks about the scales but never shows them. this is excellent. Thanks! I subscribed.
Brilliant! Many thanks!!
I’ve never understood the logic of relabeling the scales from 1 to 2 etc. but this video is awesome.
Fantastic!
It's the same as modes.
If you shift the root of a C Major scale to D, the second note if the scale, and play all the same notes as C Major, you get D Dorian. Shift to A, the 6th note of the C Major scale, you get A aeolian, otherwise known as A minor. Learn all the modes, and you can play in every key everywhere on the fretboard, because every modal position links to every other one, and each position has it's own set of corresponding chord and arpeggio shapes.
You can learn the 7 modal shapes, and that is all you need to play a scake over the entire fretboard. There are 7 modes because there are 7 notes in the scale.
There are 5 pentatonic shapes because there are 5 pentatonic notes in the scale. These shapes are the pentatonic modes. You can learn the chords and arpeggios that correspond with that mode. Then you can start "playing the changes" by shifting the scale position to correspond with the chord it goes with, allowing you to more effectively pick out the notes in the chord.
You can add a flatted 5 to the mix to turn it into a blues scale, mess around with using a major and minor third in the same lick, another typical blues thing. You can also start using the pentatonic scale as a framework to add other notes from the diatonic scale, since the pentatonic is simply all the most "good sounding" notes it's the scale that you can't play a wrong note with. You can use it as a safe foundation that you can venture out of as much as you dare. This is how players like Eddie Van Halen were able to play a chaotic barrage of very fast mostly "wrong" notes and always somehow land on a note that sounded good. Eddie described this as "falling down the stairs and landing on your feet"
The minor pentatonic is simply the minor (aeolian) scale with the 2nd and the 6th left out of it. So you can add those notes in whenever you want for more more emotional effect. Personally I love playing half steps. Pentatonic is a diatonic scale with no half steps in it.
You can look at these things from multiple different angles, but really it's very simple in theory. The hard part is teaching your fingers to play it everywhere without you needing to think about it.
Great content no unnecessary blah blahand and we understand we liked it. Every creator must be like you. Love from Bodo tribe
Many thanks Bodo tribe!!
Perfect. Excellent lesson (and terrific channel too!).
Many thanks!
3:29 For more clarity on this section/clip i think would be good to include explanation what makes up the minor/major pentatonic.
Minor Pentatonic = 1, b3, 4, 5, b7(i.e 2 and b6 left out)
Major Pentatonic = 1, 2, 3, 5, 6 (i.e 4 and 7 left out)
You are a one of a kind teacher!
Thanks!
you have provided the easiest lesson to understand that i have come across well done.
Glad you think so! Feel free to share it around!
'..your level of technique and Imagination...'
I Knew there was Catch ! !😉
always great vids.
👏👏👏
🤣 thanks!
Love your simplicity , thanks
No problem, Thanks for watching!
The best explainer on YT
Cheers, it's much appreciated!
This is the best description I've seen on how it works.
This usefull tutorial. The best explanation. Compared to other tutorials about major & minor pentatonic scale.
Thank-you! It's much appreciated 👌
Love your videos it helps me a lot!
Glad to help! Thanks for continuing to come back and watch!
Thank you 🙏
I gave the shapes names. 1 =G shape, 2 = E shape, 3=D shape, 4=C shape and 5=A shape. It spells CAGED if you start on 4 so I never get lost. If that make sense.
That's a great way to visualize any 5 position system. However where CAGED is concerned, pattern 1 is always tied to the E shape... the correct order of CAGED is actually EDCAG.
watch my CAGED series, which goes into this in more depth. This way every scale chord arpeggio etc all lines up.
Thanks, I will watch it. Yeah G Shape is position 5 but I memorise it as position 1 and it all fell into place that way. I don’t look at them as positions but as G shape etc. I never get lost anymore and improvise all over the neck with ease. I’m too old to relearn lol … Position 1 is the start of the minor and Position 2 is the start of the major, if that makes sense. Seems to work for me. Thanks for your reply. Your videos are outstanding and very much appreciated!
You get a like and a sub sir. I don't know if it's just starting to click but I've basically been playing position one of the minor pentatonic worth the addition of the blues notes for like 5 years. This will help.
Mindblowing explanation
Thank you so much 😀
oh my god this video is so underrated, it is so well explained and i understood so fast lol
Holy shit man, this is BRILLIANT.. Liked & subscribed long ago but hot damn, this visual & explanation is a total game changer. Thank You!
Brilliant!! Really great to hear comments like this!
Im speachless, premium content thank you very much got my like and subscribe
Fantastic! Glad you enjoyed the video!!
I don't usually subscribe to Pages, but you're different
Great Teaching 👏
Thank-you! It's very much appreciated 👌
Liked 👍 & subscribed! 😁🎸 🎶
Awesome thank you!
@@Samjamguitar you're welcome 🤗
@@Samjamguitar and thank YOU!
perfect video
Thanks!
HOLY SHIT I JUST REALIZED HOW IT WORKS THANK YOUUUUUUUYUUUU
Great video
Thanks!
I find that the diagonal pentatonic is more useful for lead beginners since it’s super easy to remember.
Short term perhaps. In the long term, learning the 5 positions is far more beneficial and ties together perfectly with CAGED and any other positions of modes/arpeggios/scales etc across the fretboard! Plus I have never encountered a student that struggled with simply starting with position 1 of the minor pentatonic scale, it's such an easy pattern to learn and use immediately!
Im new in guitar my friends said learn this pentatonic forst but i dont understand a thing please help me
make sure you learn basic chords/strumming patterns/reading tab/learn songs first! look for my beginner guitar playlist for all of this! if you have already learnt all of this then perhaps watch this series of videos which will break down each position of the minor pentatonic scale individually and show you how to apply them! ruclips.net/p/PLcIs25jv9P96vFf7mfO0z2HBdYRoqYfWq&si=gXXe_khq20m1PceY
Definite light bulb for me, thank you
Brilliant! Glad to help👍
The advice to practice one shape on a backing track helped me so much
No probs!
6:45 Actually the root locations have not moved because minor/major is dependant on the 3rd. When you showed them moving it was just cos in the diagram the key changed. If you had kept key of G, the roots would be the same, but the positions would have shifted left one position.
Thank you
sorry but you are wrong. The root locations change based on what key you are trying to play in, which determines specific chords that work with the key. When in the position of A major, certain chords work better with that scale than others. So the root not of A major is shifted to the first note of the second position. When playing you can hear how it works because when playing in A major for a while you can hear the A note in your playing which satisfies, or resolves your playing. Hard to explain on here but it simply does change where the root note is
Correct! However, I was referring to the players memory of each root notes location in a given position. If you were used to the root notes location in minor pentatonic pos 1, then when played as a major pentatonic position 5, the location of each root note as you remembered from minor would be different. Of course the G notes wouldn't move, only the players perception of where they are located in a position.
Jerry garcia was a pro at scaleing. Even in his fk ups he always got right back on track. When i listen to the grateful dead....i just hear jerry practicing scales.
One of the best vids on youtube !!! Loving the explanation of how to flip between minor & major.
Awesome, thank you!
How do I use these shakes in different keys? Say D minor all the way in the 10th fret. All that empty space behind it confuses me
You have to think of it as a circle of positions...or better yet a conveyor belt. Position 5 joins back up with position 1. So, in the key of Dminor, you could travel backwards through each position until you reach the nut or upwards until you run out of fretboard.
@@Samjamguitar do do you mean do position 1 on D the go down 5,4,3,2? I’m still kinda confused here
That's it yes!
@@Samjamguitar I see! Thanks man I appreciate it
@Shred_Master no problem! It's best at this stage to go through the process of learning each position and using them as described in the video! Also check out my LEAD guitar playlist, this will walk you through each position in isolation before moving on to the next! In these videos I also discuss how they fit together/changing keys and also directly address the issue you had... highly recommend going through each one by one👌
A VIDEO ON TRIADS PLEASE
Learn the relative Major/Minor Scale for ex: For A minor, learn C Major scale(relative minor is One and Half step behind the root scale note )they have same notes CDEFGABC. Map these on entire fretboard. You can improvise on these notes you’ll have more possibilities.
if i want to jamming all over the fretboard, what key do i use in backing track? Since each position is in different note.
Start with a minor key backing track. Any minor key. Most if the backing tracks are either major or natural minor, not modal.
From there just shift the first position shape so the root note is the same as the backing track. If the backing track is Am, then play the first position on starting on the 5th fret.
If your backing track is in a major key, then use the second position as your starting point. So if you're a playing C Major backing track, you'll start with the second position on 8th fret, which is actually all the same notes since C Major and A minor are literally the same scale with different starting points.
Minor pentatonic scale goes hard
It certainly does.
love the beck pfp
easily the best video for learning the pentatonic scale. ive seen tons of other ones and never understood it until i watched this one
This is a really good, informative, and "to the point" video. My only suggestion would be to not show the fretboard upside down. Unfortunately, this seems to be common practice but it's not intuitive to guitar players who are used to the low E string being on the top. This could be confusing to new guitar players.
I know you probably don't like the idea of books. But you should write a couple. It'd be like The Guitar Grimoire - only shorter and useful.
It's actually something I'm considering! Watch this space...
This concise video just totally made it clear to me! So many other explanations just over complicate it with silly memory techniques! Thank you man!
Glad it helped!
Im super confused with these. i've practised a pentatonic scale, that starts from 5th fret of E string, and then 8th etc. , but here it doesn't even exist!
Just take the diagram he has with all the notes for the five positions out on a backing tracking in the right key and have fun for a while an it will start to makes sense
Learn to find Dominant 7 chords all over the neck. Start with the TRITONES created between 3/b7. Play frets 4567-9-10 on low E to high E. That’s G#/D the 3/b7 of E7. Now because that’s the important part of an E7 chord, it will be part of every important scale and chord related to E7. - Now all of A7’s tritones will be one fret lower, and B7’s tritones will be one fret higher; that’s E7/A7/B7, the I-IV-V of a Blues song.
That’s how to move around the neck and land on the most important notes of the 3 chords.
- See those diagonal lines formed across the fretboard! -
🎉I finally know how to solo😅😂🎉😊
Awesome!
Ive been playing for 9 years and I had no idea about the 5 positions.. I feel like I have to re-learn guitar. Lol.
I have a 5 part series on the 5 positions of the minor pentatonic scale that breaks down each position in much more detail! It's in my lead guitar playlist if you you want to get in to the subject abit more👌
U saved me
💡💡💡🤯
Glad it helped!
1:03 3:11 4:20 5:06 5:31
Just had a light bulb moment... thank you
This is not guitar lesson. This is story 😂
This is both.
this is the video
Scottish? I’m from Stirling
Kirk Hammett
I’m intermediate
this is a lot of info at once. hard to keep up
Take on board what you can and then come back to get more information! One of the many benefits of a video lesson👍
@@Samjamguitar it's all great info. I've taken to just pausing it and learning in chunks
You are speaking too fast
Hey I want to say in one night you healed me
Glad to help!!