This should be mandatory watching for everyone who plays. Not just beginners. Learn songs and play with others are such great things. I never learned as much as I did when I finally joined a band. I was a bedroom guitars player for the first 7-10 years. When I played with friends, in the first month I learned more and connected dots that never made sense before that. So important but most of all, it was fun. Even though I was by far the worst player in the room, I had fun and learned so much. I’m still the worst in many situations but but that drives me and makes me feel like a musician. And bottom line.... it’s just more fun. Great video Michael, much love from Tulsa.
Same for me. I studied classical guitar for years when to college for it. Finally moved to bigger city, met a guitar player, he asked me to play bass. I found a fretless fender, bought it, had the time of my life and finally learned to use my ears, connect the dots, etc. I miss that a lot. I am back to the bedroom once again. Much hope for the future my dudes!
I love that you left the sneeze in! I also love the selflessness of promoting friends and other teachers other then just yourself. You’re a cool dude, thanks for sharing your time with us man.
The biggest thing I've learned from this gem of a lesson is that that I'm a total Slacker!!!! You're a Bad ass bro. Thanks for inspiring me to practice more!
Hey Michael, I came across your videos a couple of months back (while I was looking for people who had the same reaction to Billy Strings as I had) and I've been glued to your channel ever since. As a kid in my early teens I had an interest in guitar and learned the standard crowd pleaser songs but never really went anywhere with it and got bored of it soon after. Now in my 20's, watching your videos over the past few months has given me the motivation to pick up the guitar again and try a bit of busking. In hindsight bluegrass may not have been the easiest genre to start learning but hey I'm enjoying it. I just want to thank you for your super high quality content and inspiring lessons. Your the best man. If you're looking for an artist of react to I'd suggest Molly Tuttle playing "White Freightliner Blues", she's damn impressive
Very awesome lesson! Thank you Michael. There are a hand full of teachers that I lean on for my development, and I'm so grateful to have come across your channel months ago!
Well Michael, this is a great video from a pedagogical perspective (I love to use the word pedagogical whenever I can, it makes me seem cleverer than I actually am) but it is also really encouraging. I also have to say, my favourite part is watching you play!! It is loaded with feel and it is easy to tell that you really love playing. Thank you for being such an encouragement.
Love your point about playing with others. Victor Wooten has said this for many years, novice musicians should be mingling and jamming with more experienced players in the same way that a toddler learns to speak by speaking to adults. It allows for a broader perspective as the learner, knowing that expressiveness, articulation, cooperation are often WAY more important than just playing the "right" notes all the time.
Mike, I just recently found you on RUclips. Love the videos and the content. Really has reignited my passion for guitar. LOVE all the theory you give us.
Coming from a place where I'm trying to use the basic Level 1/L5 as physical therapy, this is really intimidating. I hope to, one day, look back at this with a smile and remember how hard I THOUGHT this WAS.😊
Michael, there are so many things I want to say about this lesson, but probably the most powerful thing and the reason that I became a lifetime member at your Guitargate.com site is that you are 100% real with your videos. In a Facebook perfect picture selfie my vacations better than yours world, it is SO refreshing to have someone just be real and let life happen around them when making videos. I am a dad and I LOVE when you stop interact with your kids in videos, or do a react with a stain on your shirt or messy hair. You don’t edit the imperfections out of your videos (sneeze) to clean reality out of them and I cannot say how much weight this adds to your words and instruction in my mind. I am working through the second lesson at Guitargate trying to get down the major and minor 1, 3 & 5 forms which I currently suck at, however I hope to look back on the videos I have made and see the growth. Thanks again, and keep being you, brother!
Thank you Michael! I am a new student of your course. I appreciate not even having to ask you your advice on great practice...and with great explanations. Thank you also for your course. I like the content.
This channel is the best guitar channel on the net, Michael speaks my language he goes right to the heart of the matter and I totally get everything he is saying. Some channels are brutal and painstaking it takes an hour what he teaches in 3 minutes. Great teacher.
Great advice and learning your favorite songs and learning the theory too them will really sink in as you see what it is and when you see it OH WOW the light bulb comes on cause you can see it.. Im 59 years old its taken forever for me to start seeing things theory wise....But ONLY cause I never gave up and I learned to read music for Piano Bass and Guitar just to be able to recognize and not be left out.. Im not a great reader like Marshall Harrison is or others but I CAN READ and as far as where the notes are played listen is it low or high ? Then figure where its at on the neck learn to play it all over and triad study on each string set helped me alot A LOT cause then I STARTED SEEING oh they all connect... Make major triads first then make them minor and diminished and suddenly you now can make those chords everywhere...... Michael this is one of the best lessons ive seen from you ! Great stuff I might be broke but that will change and when something sells Ill take private lessons from you just to SEE MORE. Now Someone buy this Dumble so I can eat next month and im not kidding I bought it for an investment to learn WHY it sounds that way I know WHY and its time to sell it Ive got all sorts of great gear and its not selling here so if anyone needs speakers or cabs or amps or even a Dumble It would be the least expensive one you will find because im not greedy I just want to play music learn and eat..... Godbless a change is gonna come.......
observe a proper rehearsal of musicians - not a jamming session - all are reading from a chart. Sax, trombone, keyboard and vocals are all chasing the notes on the chart - with eyes forward on the chart. Too often guitar players looking at the fret board. Ron's advice is spot on. Chris Buono's "Music Reading, Bridging the Gap between the Neck and Notation" is one of the best formats I have come across. No need to be masterful at reading, just "functional", when you can read the melody you have fall back notes, or notes to chase in your solo. Add chart reading (20-30 min) to your daily routine - and yes Ron Frey, so many light bulbs go off. Start with a Beatles tune, read the James Bond theme or Pink Panther, other (reading) musicians will join in / audiences love the riffs. Modes become easier when you know to chase a flat 3rd or flat 7th in dorian - knowing only the major scale across the fretboard rather than a myriad of patterns. At practice read each tune in advance of rehearsal - show up at rehearsal with a basic, working grasp of the song's WRITTEN form under your fingertips. You will rise from guitar Godess / God to MUSICIAN. Postpone the next pedal purchase, buy Buono's book ISBN 978-1-4584-1143-3 (Hal Leonard publisher). (I am not Chris Buono, never met the guy). Practice on a crap guitar that you can throw at the wall - 'cuz that urge is inescapable - a new urge will seep in - "I'd love to see the chart for that beautiful melody, or melodic passage .... "
Hey, found this really useful especially the part around following a course. Think I have neglected this part and since watching this video I have gone back to working my way a course I previously subscribed to and I am seeing good improvements. Great stuff, I will have a look at more of your lessons. Cheers.
Sorry if you've gone over this before, but do you (did you I guess) do live performances? Or did you just go into being a teacher? I'd love to know your journey!
Howdy! I gigged in corporate band for a long time. Always pay to play stuff because I was so broke and had kids young.. weddings, corporate events, etc. Never did any original stuff. BUT I NEED TO. Thanks!
O my gosh I can't believe you said that!My Dad used to give me lessons over the phone and he said,"You are only as good as who you play with."well I still have only just played alone😐" Why do you always ,crack me,teach,entertain make me happy cry?🍎You ain't the average Guitar Teacher are YA?Thanks appriciate you and you're fun
Hey micheal, I got a song request. There’s an old Austin artist named Monte Montgomery who has one of the best takes on little wing I’ve ever heard and it’s pretty unconventional and unique on how he plays it, you should check it out, it’s “Monte Montgomery little wing (acoustic)”
Hello there , i got confused too, i think he meant , that the it is the third of the five chord in g major , the parent scale , ( g major = a dorian) , also when he talked about chord, he named them as they are in the key of g major , so 2 minor to 5 major in the key of G is : Amin to Dmaj , that's what he's playing , if you look at this like this, it kinda makes sens, hope this helped
I have enjoyed your views and breakdowns since I came across the channel ;-) Be very proud of your inclusiveness at the end. You are 1 of many inspirations. Thank you
The best practice for me over the past year or so has been going through the Grateful Dead catalog and attempting to learn both Weir and Garcia's guitar parts (individually) for the tunes. Weir's guitar parts helps you learn more about chord voicings and different chord inversions, while Jerry's guitar parts help you learn how to play different scales through chord changes.
Michael i saw Bo Diddley give the band a break and do 10 mins on the drums in a small theater in the 70's, just for his own fun,and he was spectacular!
Mike, your advice is terrific, your videos are wonderful, if you lived near me I'd ask for private lessons. However, I must remark that you neglected to discuss the importance of avoiding injury. Training (exercise) improperly over time will lead to injuries. Almost a guarantee. And the biggest thing is not knowing when training is being done incorrectly or overdone i.e. feeling that burn you discuss is not always advisable. Some people simply hold their breath when playing causing tension. They don't realize this and they can develop shoulder pain; nothing to do with hands. There are many more examples. Please make people aware of proper techniques, resting and getting live instruction every now and then from a very qualified teacher who sees issues beyond theory and such. Keep up the good work.
RE:A KING furious,take a quick check Tom Petty +hearbrkrs live New Orleans Jazz Fest 2012 drummers gonna be OK. great stuff you do Mike! 14:2521:10, also cha-wa jocko-mo + lil-liza jane Joe Gellini fun.
Whats up Mike, local Marylander here. I would love to see a video of a Buckethead tune. It seems to me that the guitar community is so divided by this guy. Seems like people either worship him or think hes just another shredder him. I'm a huge fan myself but I'll admit I'm not a huge fan of his live stuff. He obviously just improvs everything and he makes a lot of mistakes live. But, his studio stuff, which is an absolutely massive library, is totally insane! I would love to hear your thoughts on "Soothsayer" or "Pike 65" or any of his stuff thats not just him ripping which is a ton! Thanks Mike, most interesting music channel on the Tube!
This pretty late, but wouldn’t a ii-v progression in A Dorian be a Bm to Em? Or did you mean a ii-V with Gmaj as the tonic since you played Am to Dmaj?
I’m an expired athlete that has tried to pick a guitar in the past. Let’s say 30 years off and on. Until now I would get frustrated and sell everything I bought to play like all the guitars. Start playing basketball again. Now I’m 51. Yep the year SRV past away is when this dream started. Help
looking for a good bluegrass course. that's the genre that I dig. do you recommend any? is your course still good for someone that wants to get into bluegrass? I only ahve an acoustic and can't afford an electric. would rather spend the money on lessons.
I don't recommend moving to Nashville or Austin. Unless you want to play in 3 cover bands that play to empty rooms or people eating. SXSW venues have been increasingly kicking out live acts for DJ's, because that's where the money is. Instead, find a good size city that is thirsty for great music and own that place.
2:30 wouldn't it be better to exercise with scales, arpeggios, triad fingering? The spider thing seems a dead end for developing your ear and fingers muscle memory. So to be transparent here...I know nothing dude! the 6th is the 3rd of the 5 ...gold!
Hey! I'm by no means an expert, but I'm currently studying at a music school and the way my teacher explained it to me was that with the spider exercise you get to concentrate on two key things, 1. where you place the accent, and 2. playing every possible variation over four frets (what I mean is if you go 1-2-3-4 on the first day up and down, then 1-2-4-3 on the second and so on, I think there's only like 24 variations). It's also a great exercise to practice different rhythms on with a metronome, whole notes, half notes, quarter notes, triplets, sextuplets, eight notes and sixteenth notes etc. Obviously adding the accents and different fingerings to this :) I think it's kind of the point here that you're not trying to "hear the music" or get it into your muscle memory too much, like you would with, say, scales. This is like working out any other muscles, you want to surprise them each time with something a little different to keep them developing, to push them a little further. Then when you get to the point when you can accent any of the notes, in any rhythm and any fingering, you've basically got all of the possible variations down over a four fret space, which is common for scale fingerings. Then just drop a couple of the notes and you've got a scale, and your fingers are already in the correct position doing what they need to be doing... at least that's how I've understood this one. Sorry for the very long answer, it was kind of for myself at the same time, you learn best by teaching it to someone else haha
oh, and also, when practicing scales, arpeggios, triad fingerings or really anything like that, the number one thing you should always do is to try and keep the current interval in mind so that your ear really gets the most out of it, singing them at the same time is the absolute best for that. Like if you're practicing different major scale fingerings or something, you should be able to hear where you're at with each note, and what that note sounds like in the context of that scale. With the spider exercise you don't have to worry about any of that, which let's you concentrate on the other points I mentioned. Of course the end goal is to combine the two when you're actually playing, but to practice, it's very good to isolate them. Hope that made sense, English isn't my first language :)
SE Standard is entry level and affordable. SE custom 24 comes next. Let me tell you, though - GO PLAY ONE. I thought PRS was for me, tons of artists I see play them, look fantastic, sound great, etc....then sitting in the store with one in hand - it was clearly not for me. Always play and play and play before you buy.
good stuff Michael, but make sure everyone following you knows that "play till it burns then play a little longer" can be taken literally the wrong way. if you feel tendon issues, pain or weakness, STOP PLAYING. -signed, a guitarist of 20 years who has battled tendon problems since he was 18
This should be mandatory watching for everyone who plays. Not just beginners. Learn songs and play with others are such great things. I never learned as much as I did when I finally joined a band. I was a bedroom guitars player for the first 7-10 years. When I played with friends, in the first month I learned more and connected dots that never made sense before that. So important but most of all, it was fun. Even though I was by far the worst player in the room, I had fun and learned so much. I’m still the worst in many situations but but that drives me and makes me feel like a musician. And bottom line.... it’s just more fun. Great video Michael, much love from Tulsa.
I'm rite there with you man.
Same for me. I studied classical guitar for years when to college for it. Finally moved to bigger city, met a guitar player, he asked me to play bass. I found a fretless fender, bought it, had the time of my life and finally learned to use my ears, connect the dots, etc. I miss that a lot. I am back to the bedroom once again. Much hope for the future my dudes!
EXACTLY!! Thx brother!
I love that you left the sneeze in! I also love the selflessness of promoting friends and other teachers other then just yourself. You’re a cool dude, thanks for sharing your time with us man.
Thx brother!
The biggest thing I've learned from this gem of a lesson is that that I'm a total Slacker!!!! You're a Bad ass bro. Thanks for inspiring me to practice more!
This is great Michael!
Thanks Brian! Hope you’re well down there.
@@Guitargate doing well man. Thanks - I love watching your channel grow... you’re crushing it!
I appreciate it! Keep on keepin on!
Hey Michael,
I came across your videos a couple of months back (while I was looking for people who had the same reaction to Billy Strings as I had) and I've been glued to your channel ever since. As a kid in my early teens I had an interest in guitar and learned the standard crowd pleaser songs but never really went anywhere with it and got bored of it soon after. Now in my 20's, watching your videos over the past few months has given me the motivation to pick up the guitar again and try a bit of busking. In hindsight bluegrass may not have been the easiest genre to start learning but hey I'm enjoying it. I just want to thank you for your super high quality content and inspiring lessons. Your the best man.
If you're looking for an artist of react to I'd suggest Molly Tuttle playing "White Freightliner Blues", she's damn impressive
Very awesome lesson! Thank you Michael. There are a hand full of teachers that I lean on for my development, and I'm so grateful to have come across your channel months ago!
Love your stuff Michael, started guitar 6 months ago. Loving it.
This was just a really nice pep talk that helps keep you on course, which we all need from time to time. Felt really good to hear, thanks!
Well Michael, this is a great video from a pedagogical perspective (I love to use the word pedagogical whenever I can, it makes me seem cleverer than I actually am) but it is also really encouraging. I also have to say, my favourite part is watching you play!! It is loaded with feel and it is easy to tell that you really love playing. Thank you for being such an encouragement.
I had to watch again and take notes, very inspiring. I just hope I live another four or five years lol. Love y'all.
Love your point about playing with others. Victor Wooten has said this for many years, novice musicians should be mingling and jamming with more experienced players in the same way that a toddler learns to speak by speaking to adults. It allows for a broader perspective as the learner, knowing that expressiveness, articulation, cooperation are often WAY more important than just playing the "right" notes all the time.
Exactly
This is easly the most inspiring video I have seen in a while
Mike, I just recently found you on RUclips. Love the videos and the content. Really has reignited my passion for guitar. LOVE all the theory you give us.
I think you just gained another student, my friend. Love your channel.
You know you're in the groove when your sneeze comes in time. Thanks Mike always love the videos and guitargate.
Coming from a place where I'm trying to use the basic Level 1/L5 as physical therapy, this is really intimidating. I hope to, one day, look back at this with a smile and remember how hard I THOUGHT this WAS.😊
Perfect mindset man, we’ll get there 🫡🤘
Glad I found you! People so often forget to take a step back and review the thought process of practising! Thanks for your great insight!
Michael, there are so many things I want to say about this lesson, but probably the most powerful thing and the reason that I became a lifetime member at your Guitargate.com site is that you are 100% real with your videos. In a Facebook perfect picture selfie my vacations better than yours world, it is SO refreshing to have someone just be real and let life happen around them when making videos. I am a dad and I LOVE when you stop interact with your kids in videos, or do a react with a stain on your shirt or messy hair. You don’t edit the imperfections out of your videos (sneeze) to clean reality out of them and I cannot say how much weight this adds to your words and instruction in my mind. I am working through the second lesson at Guitargate trying to get down the major and minor 1, 3 & 5 forms which I currently suck at, however I hope to look back on the videos I have made and see the growth. Thanks again, and keep being you, brother!
Right on! Thanks so much Jordan!!
Thank you Michael! I am a new student of your course. I appreciate not even having to ask you your advice on great practice...and with great explanations. Thank you also for your course. I like the content.
This channel is the best guitar channel on the net, Michael speaks my language he goes right to the heart of the matter and I totally get everything he is saying. Some channels are brutal and painstaking it takes an hour what he teaches in 3 minutes. Great teacher.
Thanks Mark!!
bless you!
Thanks for this, Mike. Looking into your course.
The lick so spicy got him sneeze...😀
Oh man you nailed it!!
You are a good teacher.
This was such a treasure of vital insight crammed into a quick vid! Thank you!
Great tips, thanks for this! Motivating me to keep going with PaulDavids guitar course and improving that WHY connection 🤟
Great advice and learning your favorite songs and learning the theory too them will really sink in as you see what it is and when you see it OH WOW the light bulb comes on cause you can see it.. Im 59 years old its taken forever for me to start seeing things theory wise....But ONLY cause I never gave up and I learned to read music for Piano Bass and Guitar just to be able to recognize and not be left out.. Im not a great reader like Marshall Harrison is or others but I CAN READ and as far as where the notes are played listen is it low or high ? Then figure where its at on the neck learn to play it all over and triad study on each string set helped me alot A LOT cause then I STARTED SEEING oh they all connect... Make major triads first then make them minor and diminished and suddenly you now can make those chords everywhere......
Michael this is one of the best lessons ive seen from you ! Great stuff I might be broke but that will change and when something sells Ill take private lessons from you just to SEE MORE.
Now Someone buy this Dumble so I can eat next month and im not kidding I bought it for an investment to learn WHY it sounds that way I know WHY and its time to sell it Ive got all sorts of great gear and its not selling here so if anyone needs speakers or cabs or amps or even a Dumble It would be the least expensive one you will find because im not greedy I just want to play music learn and eat..... Godbless a change is gonna come.......
observe a proper rehearsal of musicians - not a jamming session - all are reading from a chart. Sax, trombone, keyboard and vocals are all chasing the notes on the chart - with eyes forward on the chart. Too often guitar players looking at the fret board. Ron's advice is spot on. Chris Buono's "Music Reading, Bridging the Gap between the Neck and Notation" is one of the best formats I have come across. No need to be masterful at reading, just "functional", when you can read the melody you have fall back notes, or notes to chase in your solo. Add chart reading (20-30 min) to your daily routine - and yes Ron Frey, so many light bulbs go off. Start with a Beatles tune, read the James Bond theme or Pink Panther, other (reading) musicians will join in / audiences love the riffs. Modes become easier when you know to chase a flat 3rd or flat 7th in dorian - knowing only the major scale across the fretboard rather than a myriad of patterns. At practice read each tune in advance of rehearsal - show up at rehearsal with a basic, working grasp of the song's WRITTEN form under your fingertips. You will rise from guitar Godess / God to MUSICIAN. Postpone the next pedal purchase, buy Buono's book ISBN 978-1-4584-1143-3 (Hal Leonard publisher). (I am not Chris Buono, never met the guy).
Practice on a crap guitar that you can throw at the wall - 'cuz that urge is inescapable - a new urge will seep in - "I'd love to see the chart for that beautiful melody, or melodic passage .... "
Really good lesson man, and great speech as well
Thanks!
Bless you!
May u also be blessed!!
Hey, found this really useful especially the part around following a course. Think I have neglected this part and since watching this video I have gone back to working my way a course I previously subscribed to and I am seeing good improvements. Great stuff, I will have a look at more of your lessons. Cheers.
THE BEST acoustic material and placement
The timing on that first sneeze was impeccable.
On point! Consider as part of pillar 2, learning to read music. A lifelong journey that opens a lot of doors.
Yes - totally part of a well balanced curriculum
Would love to see a rig rundown. Love you channel- great lesson
Great stuff, apply it everywhere
Great advice! Noted!
You and Jack Ruch have inspired me this keep going and practice those parts I know are weak aspects of my playing. Franklyn
The sneeze tone was perfect. :P
Love it man
So true! Thank you for this Sir :)
Good speech 🙌
this is super inspiring~! thank you
Great advice!!
Great sound this video is just like blessing for me i was frustrated bcz my stuck playing but now i have direct thankss man
Sorry if you've gone over this before, but do you (did you I guess) do live performances? Or did you just go into being a teacher? I'd love to know your journey!
If you'd like to hear about Michael's journey, check out his interview by Thom Pollard...great podcast. www.buzzsprout.com/268133/5645020
Howdy! I gigged in corporate band for a long time. Always pay to play stuff because I was so broke and had kids young.. weddings, corporate events, etc. Never did any original stuff. BUT I NEED TO. Thanks!
So inspiring!!!!! Thanks man
My pleasure!!
O my gosh I can't believe you said that!My Dad used to give me lessons over the phone and he said,"You are only as good as who you play with."well I still have only just played alone😐" Why do you always ,crack me,teach,entertain make me happy cry?🍎You ain't the average Guitar Teacher are YA?Thanks appriciate you and you're fun
Great info, and moral boost, thanks.
I like what he is saying very very real.👍🏿👍🏿👏🏿👌🏿✌🏿
Hey micheal, I got a song request. There’s an old Austin artist named Monte Montgomery who has one of the best takes on little wing I’ve ever heard and it’s pretty unconventional and unique on how he plays it, you should check it out, it’s “Monte Montgomery little wing (acoustic)”
Awesome advice bro!
The ol' sneeze string lube trick.
excellent advice! thank you
Isn't the major six note the third of the four chord instead of the five chord?
Hello there , i got confused too, i think he meant , that the it is the third of the five chord in g major , the parent scale , ( g major = a dorian) , also when he talked about chord, he named them as they are in the key of g major , so 2 minor to 5 major in the key of G is : Amin to Dmaj , that's what he's playing , if you look at this like this, it kinda makes sens, hope this helped
@@ogawasan5581
Thank you.
Love this, play the piano and I use the same approach there sir !
Nothing pushed me farther or faster than playing in a bar band!
Same! I paid my apartment rent through college playing gigs at local bars with friends!
Bless you
Thank you!
Absolute gold
I have enjoyed your views and breakdowns since I came across the channel ;-) Be very proud of your inclusiveness at the end. You are 1 of many inspirations. Thank you
This guy fuckin shreds
" Prima o poi incomincio ' a' studiare seriamente " ..!. Many Thans Michael .. So Nice ... ☺😊😀/💙💙💙/👍👌👏👋
The best practice for me over the past year or so has been going through the Grateful Dead catalog and attempting to learn both Weir and Garcia's guitar parts (individually) for the tunes. Weir's guitar parts helps you learn more about chord voicings and different chord inversions, while Jerry's guitar parts help you learn how to play different scales through chord changes.
Michael i saw Bo Diddley give the band a break and do 10 mins on the drums in a small theater in the 70's, just for his own fun,and he was spectacular!
Mark Kroos the dueling banjos from Deliverance
Sound advice! Thank you.
Mike, your advice is terrific, your videos are wonderful, if you lived near me I'd ask for private lessons. However, I must remark that you neglected to discuss the importance of avoiding injury. Training (exercise) improperly over time will lead to injuries. Almost a guarantee. And the biggest thing is not knowing when training is being done incorrectly or overdone i.e. feeling that burn you discuss is not always advisable. Some people simply hold their breath when playing causing tension. They don't realize this and they can develop shoulder pain; nothing to do with hands. There are many more examples. Please make people aware of proper techniques, resting and getting live instruction every now and then from a very qualified teacher who sees issues beyond theory and such. Keep up the good work.
Wow ur super good at presenting
RE:A KING furious,take a quick check Tom Petty +hearbrkrs live New Orleans Jazz Fest 2012 drummers gonna be OK. great stuff you do Mike! 14:25 21:10, also cha-wa jocko-mo + lil-liza jane Joe Gellini fun.
Gesundheit! Killer vid dude!
Khruangbin
Mike Scandia
Suggestions for reaction videos.
I see my hometown band Khruangbin and automatically like
Supposed to be Mike Scaccia from Rigor Mortis/Ministry, and from Dallas.
Showing that Texas Love on here!
Michael you should really take a look at "Ren - Screech's Tale" hes really good.
nice start
Whats up Mike, local Marylander here. I would love to see a video of a Buckethead tune. It seems to me that the guitar community is so divided by this guy. Seems like people either worship him or think hes just another shredder him. I'm a huge fan myself but I'll admit I'm not a huge fan of his live stuff. He obviously just improvs everything and he makes a lot of mistakes live. But, his studio stuff, which is an absolutely massive library, is totally insane! I would love to hear your thoughts on "Soothsayer" or "Pike 65" or any of his stuff thats not just him ripping which is a ton! Thanks Mike, most interesting music channel on the Tube!
Love it
Thank you
That hybrid picking sounds so full and funky. Do you use 2 or 3 fingers? In other words, are you using your pinkie too?
Just bought your course on udemy. Ready to get stuck in like what I saw so far!
07:34 goosebumps.
Good stuff.
How is major 6th the third of the five chord? Wouldnt it be the 2 aka the 9
Great idea. I also want to imitate
Hi Michael my name is AJ and I would love to take your guitar course. What’s the best way to get enrolled?
Howdy! Thanks so much! Guitargate.com
This pretty late, but wouldn’t a ii-v progression in A Dorian be a Bm to Em? Or did you mean a ii-V with Gmaj as the tonic since you played Am to Dmaj?
Nevermind i realized you were talking about using a Dorian progression over a major scale
Gotta practice TIME/TIMING 👍
Cheers
You gotta check out Andy Mckee "Drifting"
Can you please please do Teenesse by Eric Steckel live July 15. He is amazing 🤯 I would love too see your reaction!!!! Please 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
I’m an expired athlete that has tried to pick a guitar in the past. Let’s say 30 years off and on. Until now I would get frustrated and sell everything I bought to play like all the guitars. Start playing basketball again. Now I’m 51. Yep the year SRV past away is when this dream started. Help
Anyone knows which acustic is that behind him?
mate how big was the joint you smoked before this
looking for a good bluegrass course. that's the genre that I dig. do you recommend any? is your course still good for someone that wants to get into bluegrass? I only ahve an acoustic and can't afford an electric. would rather spend the money on lessons.
If I wanted to dive into Bluegrass, I’d do Bryan Sutton’s course on Artistworks.
what type of guitar pic or pics do you use! I currently use the Dunlop 3.0 stubby!
Appropriate insulation for space. Whatever you have to do to keep moisture, humidity, and humidity out.
I don't recommend moving to Nashville or Austin. Unless you want to play in 3 cover bands that play to empty rooms or people eating. SXSW venues have been increasingly kicking out live acts for DJ's, because that's where the money is.
Instead, find a good size city that is thirsty for great music and own that place.
2:30 wouldn't it be better to exercise with scales, arpeggios, triad fingering? The spider thing seems a dead end for developing your ear and fingers muscle memory.
So to be transparent here...I know nothing dude!
the 6th is the 3rd of the 5 ...gold!
Hey! I'm by no means an expert, but I'm currently studying at a music school and the way my teacher explained it to me was that with the spider exercise you get to concentrate on two key things, 1. where you place the accent, and 2. playing every possible variation over four frets (what I mean is if you go 1-2-3-4 on the first day up and down, then 1-2-4-3 on the second and so on, I think there's only like 24 variations). It's also a great exercise to practice different rhythms on with a metronome, whole notes, half notes, quarter notes, triplets, sextuplets, eight notes and sixteenth notes etc. Obviously adding the accents and different fingerings to this :)
I think it's kind of the point here that you're not trying to "hear the music" or get it into your muscle memory too much, like you would with, say, scales. This is like working out any other muscles, you want to surprise them each time with something a little different to keep them developing, to push them a little further.
Then when you get to the point when you can accent any of the notes, in any rhythm and any fingering, you've basically got all of the possible variations down over a four fret space, which is common for scale fingerings. Then just drop a couple of the notes and you've got a scale, and your fingers are already in the correct position doing what they need to be doing... at least that's how I've understood this one. Sorry for the very long answer, it was kind of for myself at the same time, you learn best by teaching it to someone else haha
oh, and also, when practicing scales, arpeggios, triad fingerings or really anything like that, the number one thing you should always do is to try and keep the current interval in mind so that your ear really gets the most out of it, singing them at the same time is the absolute best for that.
Like if you're practicing different major scale fingerings or something, you should be able to hear where you're at with each note, and what that note sounds like in the context of that scale. With the spider exercise you don't have to worry about any of that, which let's you concentrate on the other points I mentioned. Of course the end goal is to combine the two when you're actually playing, but to practice, it's very good to isolate them.
Hope that made sense, English isn't my first language :)
@@johnthunderstone1654 makes sense!
@@johnthunderstone1654 thanks john, I like it
Great!
Is there a entry level acoustic PRS you recommend?
SE Standard is entry level and affordable. SE custom 24 comes next. Let me tell you, though - GO PLAY ONE. I thought PRS was for me, tons of artists I see play them, look fantastic, sound great, etc....then sitting in the store with one in hand - it was clearly not for me. Always play and play and play before you buy.
Bless you...🤧
0:06 👀 RONA
good stuff Michael, but make sure everyone following you knows that "play till it burns then play a little longer" can be taken literally the wrong way. if you feel tendon issues, pain or weakness, STOP PLAYING.
-signed, a guitarist of 20 years who has battled tendon problems since he was 18