hopefully you do some more tutorials like this in the future, I recently picked up guitar and think someone from the math rock/midwestern emo scene would be cool to learn from.
Your content is seriously great I've been following this Chanel for years and the quality of your content never seizes to amaze me. Not only is your content improving but your confidence behind the camera is just amazing, so coherent and consise
As someone who is very in to fingerstyle guitar in general and keeping in mind I am by no means an authority, I think you'd be better off using your thumb for the A and D strings during the C-shaped passage, with your index/middle/ring covering the top 3 strings (ie: G/B/E). At least in classical guitar, your pinky finger is very rarely used (usually to fully voice a chord with 5 notes), and even more very rarely used in an arpeggiated section like this one where the A and D strings give you ample time with your thumb regardless of tempo. Right-hand finger independence is still very important as the video says, but I'm almost certain anyone well acquainted with fingerstyle would not approach the right-hand fingering in the first chord as it's shown with the pinky finger.
@@AsDf-jc8uy yea I agree. I play a lot of classical guitar and although i will give the pinky a try with electric guitar to see how I like it, I normally don't use it when playing classical.
@@LetsTalkAboutMathRock :D :D im just being a silly boi! good video though i like the emphasis on the fingerpicking exercises and encouraging players to use a finger for each string is good habbit to form
Start learning Math Rock today with my Math Rock Essentials eBook: A Guitarist's Guide To Learning Math Rock 👉bit.ly/4eV2Elp
hopefully you do some more tutorials like this in the future, I recently picked up guitar and think someone from the math rock/midwestern emo scene would be cool to learn from.
For sure! Thanks. I have a beginner playlist on my main page 👍
Your content is seriously great I've been following this Chanel for years and the quality of your content never seizes to amaze me. Not only is your content improving but your confidence behind the camera is just amazing, so coherent and consise
Thanks a bunch 😁 happy to hear that. Thanks again
Love me some maff rock.
that's a really handy lesson for my level. Thank you!
Glad it was helpful!
brillant exercice so far, i'm already noticing results from it! thank mate!
I like that it incorporates some tapping practice, really cool exercise
Such a pretty exercise. I almost want to loop it and just make riffs over it to ease my mind lol
I needed this so much, thank you
Awesome stuff Steve. You make it look so easy 😄
Haha! Cheers. That's how I feel when I watch Yvette, Tim, etc haha
Ngl, this helped a bunch. Thanks!
Ace! Thanks
Still admiring your lovely new strat.
Beautiful riff.
Thanks, Shawn! Hope you're well
LOVE THIS EXERCISE :)
awesome video thanks!
do you rest you fingers on the strings the very moment you begin to play?
I use my index and thumb to finger pick.
new guitar, new me
Do I have to read music to learn from your book?
nope. There’s tablature included for everything 👍
What was the second song that was acoustic in the beginning? Not the Yvette song
Adventure, Stamina, and Anger by TTNG, but you probably knew that it’s TTNG
Thanks, I've been getting better tapping n shit. 👍👍
i am missing TTNG by the day, would you do another ttng inspired riff?
i love that exercise btw, will it be a full song soon?
Thanks! I have no plans to make it one as it's more of an exercise, although it is quite a musical sounding exercise 😅
Missing? Did they split up?
@@unforgettableluncheon106 nah, they've just been not making music for a while
their drummer is in a new band making a new record though
LETS GO
Talk about Flegel-Rock
What a title
Oh no, I need to practice using my little finger!? 😭
Heh heh heh. Jokes aside, you don't have to use your pinky but it's worth giving it a shot 👍
As someone who is very in to fingerstyle guitar in general and keeping in mind I am by no means an authority, I think you'd be better off using your thumb for the A and D strings during the C-shaped passage, with your index/middle/ring covering the top 3 strings (ie: G/B/E). At least in classical guitar, your pinky finger is very rarely used (usually to fully voice a chord with 5 notes), and even more very rarely used in an arpeggiated section like this one where the A and D strings give you ample time with your thumb regardless of tempo. Right-hand finger independence is still very important as the video says, but I'm almost certain anyone well acquainted with fingerstyle would not approach the right-hand fingering in the first chord as it's shown with the pinky finger.
@@AsDf-jc8uy yea I agree. I play a lot of classical guitar and although i will give the pinky a try with electric guitar to see how I like it, I normally don't use it when playing classical.
start with a cmajor chord *plays d# major* xDD
Meant to say C major shape 😅
@@LetsTalkAboutMathRock :D :D im just being a silly boi! good video though i like the emphasis on the fingerpicking exercises and encouraging players to use a finger for each string is good habbit to form
nice
Nicer
the Nicest
Nice
crap what tuning is this in
standard?
??????? ?
need more video like this, thanks a lot