around 83 or 84, i walked into a store in my neighborhood called "mid atlantic music". i went there to buy a guitar. i picked up a pointy hondo off the wall and began butchering a motley crue song. some guy walked up behind me and said "wanna learn the right way to play that?" i passed him the guitar and he showed me how it was done. he passed it back, i played it like he showed me. i thanked him, and he walked away. i took the guitar up to the counter, and pulled out my wallet. the guy behind the counter said something to the effect of "pretty cool getting a quick lesson from a famous pro, huh?" i had no idea what he was talking about. he says to me "the guy that just gave you that lesson was vinnie moore". back then, if you didn't read the teen mags, you didn't know what anyone looked like. no internet. anyhow, i never forgot that a famous pro took the time to help me suck just a little less.
@@vanguard4065 it's possible i have the time wrong, but here in delaware, he was well known. either way, it's been more than 40 years. if i was off by a year, it wouldn't be unusual
Awesome. 30 years later I get to watch all the instruction vids I couldn't afford as a kid in the late eighties for free now!! These videos, to me as a kid, were like the secret to unlock shredding powers but only if you could afford it!
I paid a lot of money for this video back in the 90’s and here it is free on RUclips But it’s still so inspiring that I watch it over and over Thanks VinnMan you rule
The guitarists from the 80ies were special.The sad part is we will never have guitarists like them anymore.The Melody lines and everything else was amazing.Vinnie Moore will always be one of my favorites of all time along side Jason Becker,Yngwie,Marty Friedman
Trevor, i dont know go check out chick schredders alizee defan Seems every 10 year old can shred malmsteen or Jason Becker which was not the case in the 80s, but yes 80s players were special
@@ianpearce7121 .I agree.Hats off to the 10 years old talents but I doubt if anyone from this new age musicians could create such memorable stuff as the musicians from the 80s.RUclips is filled with covers but to create something so melodius and epic I doubt.
True but they didn't grow up with the internet and tabs and free lessons on you tube.there was no yoy tube!!these kids have all kinds of short cuts.lol....
Also, on Mind's Eye, from the man himself: "Minds Eye was recorded and mixed in 11 days. I had 4 days to do all rhythms, melodies, harmonies and solos." The man is a very efficient player.
Part of me is extremely jealous of how much incredible material is available to anyone who wants to learn guitar online.. Back when I first picked up guitar in the early 80's there was only one or two guys who gave lessons in my hometown and it was limited, but then again in a way it made all of us who I knew were on the same path more passionate about learning and discovering new things.
+1 true....... we had to slow down vinyl in the day.... pain in the azz.... no videos...no tab.... nothing back then it makes you give total respect to guys like Eddie and Malmsteen.... they had no point of reference for what they did. At least we had their records... No you have all these videos for free
James Rockford Yeah man. 80's were both tough and magical times for guitar players. I remember having to slow down and replay lines on vinyl. As well as having just ONE of everything (guitar, cheap amp with one sound, and one cheap generic distortion box) and guitar magazines as reference. I wonder how we got through those times that by now seem so painfully obviously boring now that we have access to unlimited material and references, tones, amps, modeling amps, guitars, etc. Guitars that are considered budget by todays standards would seem like premium ones in our time. and forget the fact that I now own about 10 different amps both Solid State and tube and even a rare Crate GT80 hybrid quad-channel as well as every amp app on my ipad.. we live in better times now dude, and I'm envious of what these kids have that I didn't. may have made a difference in my ability to play guitar better than how I do currently. Though it's never too late, I still look and feel young for my age and am happy to be a small part of this technology =-)
gscgold I agree with you 100%. It's amazing what our current generation (and everyone else on earth right now) has in terms of knowledge sharing with this easily accessible network and way of life. But this goes beyond just being prolific at playing the guitar. Imagine if our entire society used this encyclopaedia of knowledge to be the best at EVERYTHING. Ahhh
One of the best instructional videos ever made. Not for the licks or exercises, but for the priceless information he gives in the Legato/Left Hand section. He warns that you will be sore, that you need to push it and that it requires A LOT of strength. If beginners and intermediates pay attention to this, they'll avoid all the snake oil BS on the internet these days where everyone has a "secret tip" or a "life changing" tip for x technique.
Had this video on VHS when I began to play more than 30 years ago... and that was too crazy and fast for me as a beginner!! Lol! Thanks a lot for this video and great memories :)
I came from Holdsworth to this. I'm sorry, but this sounds so musical by comparison. Vinnie sound was forged on the masters such as Bach. His albums are out of this world. Vin is one of the best.
I used to practice and play along to this vhs every day for months. It really does help you to the next level if you are serious about it. It won't help you to write a song, but you will achieve the weedily weedily noodling.
Vinnie's two vids, changes my playing forever. I got tape 2 first because i didn't know tape 1 existed until a friend let me borrow it. Took my playing to another dimension. Thank you, Vinnie.
Thats the holy grail for all Guitar players out there how to do it in the right way like Vinnie does... Thanks for this amazing Vid. I´ll never forget how i start to play the first notes in the different modes or the triplets and so on...like he explain here. Great memories since then.
Que puedo decir, Vinnie Moore es mi guitarrista favorito. Aprendí mucho de sus 2 videos Advanced Lead Guitar y Speed and Accuracy. Y lo que he aprendido de sus discos y canciones. Un guitarrisa absoluto, vistuoso, musical, teórico, con mucho groove y feeling y un gran compositor. Impresionante y legendario
His pivoting notes are amazing. Something I still can’t do well after 20 years playing. One downside, when many guitarists master sweep arpeggios they over use them to death.
one of the best things i have EVER seen in my life, and i use to take these videos home back in the 80's ,,,,,,,,,,, when i worked at a music store ........
Im always amazed with the articulation that this guy plays, even at lightning fast speeds everything stands out. Vinnie, Paul Gilbert, Greg Howe, Nuno Bettencourt all these guys took the guitar to new heights.
1971SuperLead I was just telling someone today about how it was because of this VHS I had as a teenager that I FINALLY understood modes. His way of relating them to feelings and themes is something I use to this day
Vinnie Moore is so underrated it's amazing. And his development over the years is also amazing, also his melodic licks he plays are beast. I MEAN CMON how nobody knows him or compares him to the best? He's defenitly one. Just listen to this man, you will be hypnotized in my opinion, any video. Just do it :O
Can anyone tell me what I'm hearing in his intro solo that sounds so good and almost "clicky". 1:40 I tried looking up his gear back then seeing he had two dimarzio double whammy pickups and a Ibanez edge ii bridge (sometimes a bridge can make a big difference) I finally seemed to settle on him using a good amount of slapback delay in his mix causing the tone color I love some much in this intro solo. Looking up Vinnies pedals he used an mxr carbon copy, a boss dd3 and later a TREX delay pedal. They seem to be set up for fast slapback delay like used in rockabilly/1950s music. Nowadays he seems to run two separate delays at once. I would guess one is set for just slapback delay and mostly left on in his mix and the second delay pedal is probably for longer delays as needed from time to time in his set. To any Vinne Moore experts out there....Is the slapback delay effect he leaves on for the entire lesson the secret ingredient that's been driving me nuts to find ? Do the dimarzio double whammy pickups play any large or small part in his amazing tone in this lesson ? I tried looking up some people playing them and I didn't find anything had anything close to Vinies tone in this lesson video and his other lesson video. But then again you can't find much on double whammy pickups and the sound quality of the few people playing some were poor at best. Any help would be greatly appreciated
Really influential video right here . Very useful sequences, and string grouping 6s, and 3s, between 1, 2, and 3 strings,and over all 6 strings as well. Then the Legato section at the end, shows a 7 note sequence, and a Satriani like 8 note sequence, also a pivot note riff that can be used in all positions, relatively easily. Great video. vinnie has to go, "See ya next time, bye!"
If I were to ''steal'' a talent from a Rock/Metal guitar player, that would be this guy.....he just sounds so articulate and fluid without any struggles ..... damn
Though I'm not a huge van of Vinnie's music (it sounds a bit cheesy to my ears), his playing is incredibly clean. Try finding sheet music for one of his songs, and play along with it - you'll see what I mean.
I went to a Vinnie Moore clinic in this tiny music shop when his first album came out. Of course His technique was top notch,but I was already shredding everything in sight by this time. His melodic sense is what really grabbed me.
I purchased this video years ago...bit to fast for me but took some things on board..helped hell of a lot when coming to finger strength ect..nice one to see this again.
I bought the VHS version back in 91-92.I had no clue who Vinnie was, but the store had it on their TV in a loop, and I said to myself it couldn't hurt. It helped me improve my legato licks by a mile, and the 3 note per string on 2 strings was a revelation. It is however a bit sterile and clinical as far as instructionals are concerned. Thx Vinnie.
That's so nice isnt?! When you see someone with great runs on diferent patterns (like the 3 notes/2 strings). Discovering those new patterns from people who had the time and made them great to use is a feeling of pure bliss. From night to day you start to play A LOT better... is almost if it was already there but you couldnt advance yet.
I remember being 14 and watching, rewinding, replaying, stopping, rewinding again and working on each section I liked..It's amazing we all watched this type of video quality before HD and didn't question how fuzzy and horrible it was :)
Это видео я увидел когда учился в школе во времена СССР. И это было первое в моей жизни живое подтверждение чуда. Я смотрел его на видеомагнитофоне через маленький телевизор с кинескопом, который мерцал через каждые пять секунд. От начала и до конца я не мог ни моргнуть, ни закрыть рот. В будущем я пересмотрел его не одну сотню раз (пока в нашем дворе не появилась школа Мальмстина)). И сейчас слушая начало этого соло, я помню каждую, мать ее, ноту. Они вшиты в мое сознание, которое Вини Мур захватил еще в школе и изменил мою жизнь.
Just look how many dislikes has Vinnie in all of his youtube videos and compare it with Malmsteen's for example...The man is genious. What can I say? Hats off to the Grande Maestro. God bless you Vinnie!
I don’t get it either. In the slow segment he’s moving his wrist up and down 3 times for a triplet but at fast speed it’s just up-down. He never actually explains what he’s doing different.
There is a musicality and continuity in Vinnie Moore playing, just not a lot of notes that don't seem to go together. his songs and albums just sound good.
I remember back in the day watching this video in some local music store, particularly the intro shredding part. I looked over at another guy in the store, and his jaw hit the floor when Vinnie effortlessly went from distorted shredding to that clean, jazzy, chordal playing. It seemed to us at that fleeting moment that Vinnie achieved what was impossible to mere mortals! The truly great players always seem to fly under the radar for some reason, and Vinnie is no exception.
I love how he pronounces _ascending_ as _ass-ending._ _"This is an ass ending triplet."_ Yea, it ended my ass in a hurry. I'm just not that fast these days🤣
Memories of my youth are upcoming when I see this digital version, formerly were VHS copies the only possible medium to catch some extraordinary tutorial material. Thanks to RUclips it is still alive and available! ;-) I find the hairstyle extraordinary - poser times! By the way Vinnie Moore's guitarwork is still extraordinary and probably one of the best in neoclassical style!
Pepsi thing at 7:53 onward - He says it's in Am (mostly is) but in the second and final positions the last note in the group of six is an F#. On screen tab shows it incorrectly as F natural. The world has been waiting now for countless centuries for someone to publish an error free tab of anything. (Its also been waiting for the day a computer question posted on a forum actually gets resolved :-)
+mcquinn01 Probably just the the fact that most guitar players know the Am and Em positions so imprinted thoroughly across the neck in all positions. Hell, even I to this day, think of other keys/modes as a transposing of Em/G to a different position in 95% of the songs I play. With Am/C being the 2nd most comfy in that thought process.
Man I can't believe how great this guy is, to my shame this is the first time I've ever seen him play.WOW !! a monster, he reminds me a bit of Eric Johnson but I am not comparing them, they are both killer players in their own style. TASTE,accuracy, tone and speed are all important. Knowing what to play and when to play NOTHING are skills very few players seem get, Who's the best ?? is a stupid question. Is he any relation to Scotty Moore ? the founding father of Rock guitar.
Ohh..Super,very very dear,speed,guitar-school!!! Thank-you very much dear ,respecting Teacher-for the Super-respecting-guitar-player-school!!I`love you!!! Dear!!! Realy Happiness!!!! Your!!!
around 83 or 84, i walked into a store in my neighborhood called "mid atlantic music". i went there to buy a guitar. i picked up a pointy hondo off the wall and began butchering a motley crue song. some guy walked up behind me and said "wanna learn the right way to play that?" i passed him the guitar and he showed me how it was done. he passed it back, i played it like he showed me. i thanked him, and he walked away. i took the guitar up to the counter, and pulled out my wallet. the guy behind the counter said something to the effect of "pretty cool getting a quick lesson from a famous pro, huh?" i had no idea what he was talking about. he says to me "the guy that just gave you that lesson was vinnie moore". back then, if you didn't read the teen mags, you didn't know what anyone looked like. no internet. anyhow, i never forgot that a famous pro took the time to help me suck just a little less.
Wow! That’s awesome! 😎😎😎
This is amazing to hear about someone running into this guy and not knowing who he was. I've never heard of him until today.
Very cool! What's great is he came off really genuine too- not big ego and all- just big hair!
Not sure if you can say Vinnie was a famous pro in 83 but I guess he did play on vicious rumors 84
@@vanguard4065 it's possible i have the time wrong, but here in delaware, he was well known. either way, it's been more than 40 years. if i was off by a year, it wouldn't be unusual
Awesome. 30 years later I get to watch all the instruction vids I couldn't afford as a kid in the late eighties for free now!!
These videos, to me as a kid, were like the secret to unlock shredding powers but only if you could afford it!
You now have the keys to the Ferrari.
When people say that shredding is shit, it has no theory no principle, no feeling, i respond with two words: Vinnie Moore.
Agree. He seems to have such a way of showing the best possible examples of what study, practice, and experience with many forms of music can produce.
Consumed by deceit
Best comment I have read in months
Consumed by deceit TRUTH! ❤️
This video is from 93 or 95, As good as you wanna make him Vinnie is totally irrelevant today.
Totally off! Vinnie is one of the most influential guitar players ever. I'm a guitarist, I'd know ;)
I paid a lot of money for this video back in the 90’s and here it is free on RUclips
But it’s still so inspiring that I watch it over and over Thanks VinnMan you rule
Think i paid $50 for this in the 90's
Lol same here! That was like 125-150 back then at least for us kids
I remember that I had bought this too , it was my first instructional video
Was still worth every dime I bet
@@butterfinger4393 Yes it was worth it still watch it
The guitarists from the 80ies were special.The sad part is we will never have guitarists like them anymore.The Melody lines and everything else was amazing.Vinnie Moore will always be one of my favorites of all time along side Jason Becker,Yngwie,Marty Friedman
Trevor, i dont know go check out chick schredders alizee defan
Seems every 10 year old can shred malmsteen or Jason Becker which was not the case in the 80s, but yes 80s players were special
@@ianpearce7121 .I agree.Hats off to the 10 years old talents but I doubt if anyone from this new age musicians could create such memorable stuff as the musicians from the 80s.RUclips is filled with covers but to create something so melodius and epic I doubt.
True but they didn't grow up with the internet and tabs and free lessons on you tube.there was no yoy tube!!these kids have all kinds of short cuts.lol....
David T. Chastain
Go watch ichika nito you’ll change your mind
Guitarworld article said this video was filmed in virtually one take with almost no cuts....unreal
Also, on Mind's Eye, from the man himself: "Minds Eye was recorded and mixed in 11 days. I had 4 days to do all rhythms, melodies, harmonies and solos." The man is a very efficient player.
Yea, there is a clock behind him on the wall
That was his first Hot Licks Video; not sure about this one
@@shredguitar7680yeah, that goes for the first one only
Part of me is extremely jealous of how much incredible material is available to anyone who wants to learn guitar online..
Back when I first picked up guitar in the early 80's there was only one or two guys who gave lessons in my hometown and it was limited, but then again in a way it made all of us who I knew were on the same path more passionate about learning and discovering new things.
+1
true....... we had to slow down vinyl in the day.... pain in the azz.... no videos...no tab.... nothing back then
it makes you give total respect to guys like Eddie and Malmsteen.... they had no point of reference for what they did.
At least we had their records... No you have all these videos for free
James Rockford Yeah man. 80's were both tough and magical times for guitar players. I remember having to slow down and replay lines on vinyl. As well as having just ONE of everything (guitar, cheap amp with one sound, and one cheap generic distortion box) and guitar magazines as reference. I wonder how we got through those times that by now seem so painfully obviously boring now that we have access to unlimited material and references, tones, amps, modeling amps, guitars, etc. Guitars that are considered budget by todays standards would seem like premium ones in our time. and forget the fact that I now own about 10 different amps both Solid State and tube and even a rare Crate GT80 hybrid quad-channel as well as every amp app on my ipad.. we live in better times now dude, and I'm envious of what these kids have that I didn't. may have made a difference in my ability to play guitar better than how I do currently. Though it's never too late, I still look and feel young for my age and am happy to be a small part of this technology =-)
gscgold I agree with you 100%. It's amazing what our current generation (and everyone else on earth right now) has in terms of knowledge sharing with this easily accessible network and way of life. But this goes beyond just being prolific at playing the guitar. Imagine if our entire society used this encyclopaedia of knowledge to be the best at EVERYTHING. Ahhh
gscgold I agree, it's so de mystified now, almost means nothing....
+Jeremy's toaster
The Wizard age is over!
Welcome to the Internet,
social media age.
I keep coming back to this video every few years, its still super good and I can actually play stuff from it now
Yeah man he da man still
Notice how he's playing without heaps of delay or loud backing tracks, unlike many other top players on youtube.
Does that mean he is the shreddiest?
This is so GIT in the nineties - and I was there!
Beautiful!
Getting to meet Vinnie was a highlight of my life.
One of the best instructional videos ever made. Not for the licks or exercises, but for the priceless information he gives in the Legato/Left Hand section. He warns that you will be sore, that you need to push it and that it requires A LOT of strength.
If beginners and intermediates pay attention to this, they'll avoid all the snake oil BS on the internet these days where everyone has a "secret tip" or a "life changing" tip for x technique.
55:46 - nice pentatonic patterns 58:26 cool legato pattern.
The most accurate and cleanest electric guitar player
ever! and jason becker!
You spelled Steve Morse wrong
Govan too
Right after Paul Gilbert yeah
And nobody commented on the clean jazz he played? That was just as good as the shred.
Yes, 1:38 great playing!
Right on.
No, it wasn't. It was a shredder attempting to sound jazzy.
@@bravinneff1 No, it sounds quite jazzy to my ear, I guess music is subjective.
Awesome jazz chords
Had this video on VHS when I began to play more than 30 years ago... and that was too crazy and fast for me as a beginner!! Lol! Thanks a lot for this video and great memories :)
I came from Holdsworth to this. I'm sorry, but this sounds so musical by comparison. Vinnie sound was forged on the masters such as Bach. His albums are out of this world. Vin is one of the best.
KillertoneLabs I think Holdsworth is extremely musical. Vinnie is better at melodies but I’d say Holdsworth writes more interesting lines.
One of my best teacher since 1986!Thanks Vinnie for so great guitar playing!
No one can play this.... no one can do any of this... but Vinnie..... thanks for crushing spirits since 1986.
he copied a lot of those licks from Yngwie
Easy to say for the uninitiated.
part 1 Triplets
1 4:33 2 5:24 3 6:21 4 6:58 5 8:05 6 9:13 7 9:48 8 10:27 9 11:12 10 13:29 11 14:55 12 15:48 13 16:18 14 16:53 15 17:53 16 18:20 17 19:00
licks
1 52:11
2 53:31
3 54:20
Pentatonics
4 55:56 5 56:18 6 56:54 7 57:37 8 58:30
Gracias
I used to practice and play along to this vhs every day for months. It really does help you to the next level if you are serious about it. It won't help you to write a song, but you will achieve the weedily weedily noodling.
it is just incredible how this video can help
Vinnie is one of the best electric guitar players period,definitely in the top 5 of all time
Vinnie's two vids, changes my playing forever. I got tape 2 first because i didn't know tape 1 existed until a friend let me borrow it. Took my playing to another dimension. Thank you, Vinnie.
Thats the holy grail for all Guitar players out there how to do it in the right way like Vinnie does... Thanks for this amazing Vid. I´ll never forget how i start to play the first notes in the different modes or the triplets and so on...like he explain here. Great memories since then.
Que puedo decir, Vinnie Moore es mi guitarrista favorito. Aprendí mucho de sus 2 videos Advanced Lead Guitar y Speed and Accuracy. Y lo que he aprendido de sus discos y canciones. Un guitarrisa absoluto, vistuoso, musical, teórico, con mucho groove y feeling y un gran compositor. Impresionante y legendario
Hola Gabriel. La verdad concuerdo con vos. Es un guitarrista impresionante... No sabes que modelo es la ibanez que usa?
@@jonathanzamudio2431 Hola Jonathan, no sé la verdad. Está muy pro esa ibañez
His pivoting notes are amazing. Something I still can’t do well after 20 years playing. One downside, when many guitarists master sweep arpeggios they over use them to death.
Sweeps sound so much better anyways when they’re just casually slipped in a solo in my opinion
Dude. That intro was so awesome and turned beautiful so quickly.
Love Vinnie so much! Such a seasoned and tasty shredder. Such a nice cat too. I wore this VHS out back in the day...
one of the best things i have EVER seen in my life, and i use to take these videos home back in the 80's ,,,,,,,,,,, when i worked at a music store ........
I had this on VHS and remember sitting there going WTF ? It felt like it was my 1st day trying to play guitar.
Me too😂
I brought this video when it came out and I still can’t play any of it
Hello, I am sharing this for fans of Greg Howe and Gambale.
and instrumental metal.greetings have a good 2024
ruclips.net/video/0Issoi4f8OE/видео.html
Literally, the guitar lesson of a lifetime. If you could only learn one, learn this one. 30+ years after, so grateful for Vinnie Moore! \m/
Im always amazed with the articulation that this guy plays, even at lightning fast speeds everything stands out. Vinnie, Paul Gilbert, Greg Howe, Nuno Bettencourt all these guys took the guitar to new heights.
Hello, I am sharing this for fans of Greg Howe and Gambale.
and instrumental metal.greetings have a good 2024
ruclips.net/video/0Issoi4f8OE/видео.html
My childhood guru. Just by hearing I have learnt a lot.
FINALLY a lesson on modes that makes sense!
1971SuperLead I was just telling someone today about how it was because of this VHS I had as a teenager that I FINALLY understood modes. His way of relating them to feelings and themes is something I use to this day
1971SuperLead actually his take on modes is not the best Frank G. has the real info
***** Explain yourself or get removed and banned for life and beyond.
This was the first artist I was fortunate to see live. Started me on my life long journey of learning to play guitar.
Vinnie Moore is so underrated it's amazing. And his development over the years is also amazing, also his melodic licks he plays are beast. I MEAN CMON how nobody knows him or compares him to the best? He's defenitly one. Just listen to this man, you will be hypnotized in my opinion, any video. Just do it :O
If there was ever such a thing as a beautiful playing shredder Vinnie Moore was it..
VinnieVic Jones Guthrie Govan, check out Buckethead. specifically Pike 65
Have we all forgotten about Randy Rhoads?
While you're at it, check out Gus Drax
Tony Macalpine.
Very competent musician. Great melodies not only shred...and nice hair!
Can anyone tell me what I'm hearing in his intro solo that sounds so good and almost "clicky". 1:40 I tried looking up his gear back then seeing he had two dimarzio double whammy pickups and a Ibanez edge ii bridge (sometimes a bridge can make a big difference) I finally seemed to settle on him using a good amount of slapback delay in his mix causing the tone color I love some much in this intro solo. Looking up Vinnies pedals he used an mxr carbon copy, a boss dd3 and later a TREX delay pedal. They seem to be set up for fast slapback delay like used in rockabilly/1950s music. Nowadays he seems to run two separate delays at once. I would guess one is set for just slapback delay and mostly left on in his mix and the second delay pedal is probably for longer delays as needed from time to time in his set. To any Vinne Moore experts out there....Is the slapback delay effect he leaves on for the entire lesson the secret ingredient that's been driving me nuts to find ? Do the dimarzio double whammy pickups play any large or small part in his amazing tone in this lesson ? I tried looking up some people playing them and I didn't find anything had anything close to Vinies tone in this lesson video and his other lesson video. But then again you can't find much on double whammy pickups and the sound quality of the few people playing some were poor at best. Any help would be greatly appreciated
Really influential video right here . Very useful sequences, and string grouping 6s, and 3s, between 1, 2, and 3 strings,and over all 6 strings as well.
Then the Legato section at the end, shows a 7 note sequence, and a Satriani like 8 note sequence, also a pivot note riff that can be used in all positions, relatively easily.
Great video. vinnie has to go, "See ya next time, bye!"
I had this on vhs, and i used to rewind and watch the intro playing constantly.
one of the cleanest shredders out there
I used to play guitar. Loved the shredders back in the day :)
If I were to ''steal'' a talent from a Rock/Metal guitar player, that would be this guy.....he just sounds so articulate and fluid without any struggles ..... damn
The king Vinnie moore
Who plays cleaner than this guy..... AWESOME!!!!!!!
metaloutlander Paul Gilbert that is
tokutoshi Yeah Paul is faster but it's too close to call on who is cleaner. Both are amazing!
Guthrie Govan
Though I'm not a huge van of Vinnie's music (it sounds a bit cheesy to my ears), his playing is incredibly clean. Try finding sheet music for one of his songs, and play along with it - you'll see what I mean.
Andy James!!!
I went to a Vinnie Moore clinic in this tiny music shop when his first album came out. Of course His technique was top notch,but I was already shredding everything in sight by this time. His melodic sense is what really grabbed me.
I purchased this video years ago...bit to fast for me but took some things on board..helped hell of a lot when coming to finger strength ect..nice one to see this again.
I bought the VHS version back in 91-92.I had no clue who Vinnie was, but the store had it on their TV in a loop, and I said to myself it couldn't hurt. It helped me improve my legato licks by a mile, and the 3 note per string on 2 strings was a revelation. It is however a bit sterile and clinical as far as instructionals are concerned. Thx Vinnie.
That's so nice isnt?! When you see someone with great runs on diferent patterns (like the 3 notes/2 strings). Discovering those new patterns from people who had the time and made them great to use is a feeling of pure bliss. From night to day you start to play A LOT better... is almost if it was already there but you couldnt advance yet.
I remember being 14 and watching, rewinding, replaying, stopping, rewinding again and working on each section I liked..It's amazing we all watched this type of video quality before HD and didn't question how fuzzy and horrible it was :)
Это видео я увидел когда учился в школе во времена СССР. И это было первое в моей жизни живое подтверждение чуда. Я смотрел его на видеомагнитофоне через маленький телевизор с кинескопом, который мерцал через каждые пять секунд. От начала и до конца я не мог ни моргнуть, ни закрыть рот. В будущем я пересмотрел его не одну сотню раз (пока в нашем дворе не появилась школа Мальмстина)).
И сейчас слушая начало этого соло, я помню каждую, мать ее, ноту. Они вшиты в мое сознание, которое Вини Мур захватил еще в школе и изменил мою жизнь.
Just look how many dislikes has Vinnie in all of his youtube videos and compare it with Malmsteen's for example...The man is genious. What can I say? Hats off to the Grande Maestro. God bless you Vinnie!
Had this video 30+ years ago. Still can't play anything this....!! :)
Your not alone i had it bout 30 years ago as well
Interesting... when he plays slow his movements are from wrist... but when he speed it up he lock his wrist and use movement from elbow...
I noticed that too, it baffles me to no limit that he can make that method work.
thats what she said
I don’t get it either. In the slow segment he’s moving his wrist up and down 3 times for a triplet but at fast speed it’s just up-down. He never actually explains what he’s doing different.
Coz he's a genius lol
@@stonehouseguitars3869 this is one of the best instructional vids ever recorded you fucking clown stfu
04:14 The whole first segment on triplet-based licks is really useful.
I still listen to Minds eye.. what an incredible album
Yep it's great! It used to be one of my favourites until I went back and actually listened or yngwie's early work (rising force). It's the ultimate.
Thank you, Mr. Moore, now it's getting clearer.
Vinnie was a visionary.. certainly a wizard with his axe. Overshadowed by Yngwie, but melodically and overall better in my personal estimation.
There is a musicality and continuity in Vinnie Moore playing, just not a lot of notes that don't seem to go together. his songs and albums just sound good.
That's a great definition....Vinnie Moore playing is just that!
The 1:35 - 1:40 mark is such a perfect transition and its just getting started
Dudes clean! Nice tone too.
Never bothered playing fast until I watched this just then! And now I have another task included in my learning list 🤦🏻♂️
This is glorious. Totally see now why people praise this guy. Never listened to him before this.
I remember back in the day watching this video in some local music store, particularly the intro shredding part. I looked over at another guy in the store, and his jaw hit the floor when Vinnie effortlessly went from distorted shredding to that clean, jazzy, chordal playing. It seemed to us at that fleeting moment that Vinnie achieved what was impossible to mere mortals! The truly great players always seem to fly under the radar for some reason, and Vinnie is no exception.
Che fortuna ho avuto a vivere quegli anni con tutti i chitarristi fantastici dal 1960 al 1995
Omg, what a great lesson!
3:03 introduction
3:09 tuning
3:25 triplet picking ideas
20:06 modes
Wow great sounding licks, love it! You got me thinking outside the box again, thank you!!
Another yngwie baby just kiddin awesome rock on
Hello, I am sharing this for fans of Greg Howe and Gambale.
and instrumental metal.greetings have a good 2024
ruclips.net/video/0Issoi4f8OE/видео.html
I love how he pronounces _ascending_ as _ass-ending._
_"This is an ass ending triplet."_
Yea, it ended my ass in a hurry. I'm just not that fast these days🤣
sencillo carismático, con sentido y natural. ,, no egoísta,, comparto tu opinión desde México.
This man is so pure of a guitarist
Vinnie Moore is king no one can touch his articulation
W.O.W! That is some of the cleanest work I've seen in a long time. Incredible finger dexterity.
Wish I knew about this video back in the day when I was learning. Wow. Just a pool of knowledge
I really like Vinnie Moore, speed and clear, but also so smooth
I love the way the the Major Phyrigyian sounds....sounds very similar to the Minor Harmonic scale
phrygian major is the fifth mode of harmonic minor
WoW what memories of being a kid watching this
Memories of my youth are upcoming when I see this digital version, formerly were VHS copies the only possible medium to catch some extraordinary tutorial material. Thanks to RUclips it is still alive and available! ;-) I find the hairstyle extraordinary - poser times! By the way Vinnie Moore's guitarwork is still extraordinary and probably one of the best in neoclassical style!
Clean, very clean! Vinnie’s playing here is killer! ;-)
This guy is a cool guy and great guitarist. Great lesson...
This was a gem of an instructional video👍🏻🤟
Pepsi thing at 7:53 onward - He says it's in Am (mostly is) but in the second and final positions the last note in the group of six is an F#. On screen tab shows it incorrectly as F natural. The world has been waiting now for countless centuries for someone to publish an error free tab of anything. (Its also been waiting for the day a computer question posted on a forum actually gets resolved :-)
+mcquinn01
Probably just the the fact that most guitar players know the Am and Em positions so imprinted thoroughly across the neck in all positions. Hell, even I to this day, think of other keys/modes as a transposing of Em/G to a different position in 95% of the songs I play. With Am/C being the 2nd most comfy in that thought process.
dude shut up lol
You can have an F# in A minor. That would give a Dorian sound.
I really love the way he plays this instrumental soloing! Excellent!! 👈〰👦
So clean .. wonderful joyous player
I might've already written this on here, but modes made ZERO sense to me until I saw Vinnie's simple, great explanation in this video many years ago
Monster left hand -- Moore is capable of unbelievable legato runs in addition to his amazing picking technique
Amazing -- that first 1:45 is my exact warm-up!
one of my fav vid tutorial 20 years ago
I love Vinnie Moore, I even had that same Model VM1 which I sold for $500.00, yes I am an idiot.
Man..i had this video..must have worn out the tape trying..and trying..
Great guy,teacher,guitarist..great hair!
Met Vinnie in Knoxville Tn in a guitar shop selling his album minds eye,he sat down and played a session playing an Ibanez,1986
21:35 Is this stand up comedy!? "Some guy came up with the name 1000 years ago to confuse us guitar players" Lmao
Man I can't believe how great this guy is, to my shame this is the first time I've ever seen him play.WOW !! a monster, he reminds me a bit of Eric Johnson but I am not comparing them, they are both killer players in their own style.
TASTE,accuracy, tone and speed are all important. Knowing what to play and when to play NOTHING are skills very few players seem get, Who's the best ?? is a stupid question. Is he any relation to Scotty Moore ? the founding father of Rock guitar.
I definitely feel you on the Eric Johnson vibe !
Some phrasings really remind me of last lick from the cliffs of dover intro. Wonderfull!
No one I know is aware of Vinnie Moore and it should be punishable by law.
So underrated.
やっぱりVinnie Mooreは凄い、完璧なテクニック、すばらしい。
59:18 PLAY A TUNE ! Poor guy...
Wow! you are the best solo guitarist in the world no one can play as you
Ohh..Super,very very dear,speed,guitar-school!!! Thank-you very much dear ,respecting Teacher-for the Super-respecting-guitar-player-school!!I`love you!!! Dear!!! Realy Happiness!!!! Your!!!