If you like this lesson, definitely check out www.zombieguitar.com/ It is a one of a kind site dedicated to teaching guitarists to understand the fretboard inside and out!!
Ok Brian now I have homework. I need to watch the video and try it out, good lesson and explanation as usual. I wonder what next week will bring ? . Just an observations Brian, don’t know if it’s my iPad or WiFi but the picture looked slightly blurry. That’s not criticism but helpful observation. Take care Brian, be well, be safe, peace. G
Thanks Brian, brilliant as usual. Trying with other chord combinations, would I be correct in stating "playing a ii over the V" would give a dominant 9th flavour ? (eg Dm over the G)
Yes absolutely! If you want to think of it that way, that works just as well. Now you know that playing a "ii chord" over the "V chord" in any key will result in the "dominant 9 sound" 😁
@Jeff Halfordguitar no, your logic isn't flawed at all. It's exactly right! I was just saying that if you prefer to think of it as "ii chord" over the "V chord"...or even "minor chord that is a 5th above a major chord"...these are all other ways of thinking than "minor chord played 2 spots counterclockwise from the starting major chord on the circle". All of these ways of thinking give the same result and will apply to any major chord that you are starting with!
Great vid!!! Have I got this theory right? Following the circle of fifths for a A minor rhythm if I was to play a B minor arpeggio it would make an A minor 13th?
Am: A C E Bm: B D F# Superimposed: A C E B D F# Yup, that will give you the m13 sound since the F# is in there. It won't be a full m13 chord since the 7th isn't present though. The important voicings in any extended chord are the 3rd and 7th, so a true Am13 would be: Am13: A C E G B D F# But it's close enough!!
@@zombieguitar Thanks for clarifying that for me, I was beginning to make some real weird sounds out of my guitar. Think I'll stick to 7ths and 9ths when I'm feeling brave as 13ths are quite a feat on a fretboard lol. ✌😁👍
What's the difference between major and minor arpeggios? They both seem to start from sharp to flat. I though a major is sharp to flat and minor is flat to sharp...?
A major arpeggio is just the notes of a major chord, and a minor arpeggio is just the notes of a minor chord. A C major arpeggio for example would have the notes C E G, and a C minor arpeggio would have the notes C Eb G 😃
@@zombieguitar @Brian Kelly thanks Brian. I'm still trying to get my head around differences with pentatonic shapes in major and minor versus arpeggios. I noticed that for major it goes from sharp to flat and vice versa for minor. I thought this would be the same but it's different as it's not related to shapes but more so root notes from the key of fifths.
@@scratchpadski9094 you're all over the place my friend! Start here: www.zombieguitar.com/understanding-diatonic-chord-progressions-triads-and-7th-chords/
You explain well, I've followed a few of your videos. The production value doesn't bother me too much, the quality of the content is the really important bit ;)
Thank you for that explanation on rhythm and lead in dealing with the circle of fifths. Just broke out some backtracks, it definitely adds a new dynamic in thinking and sound. Very enlightening.
Another thing to try I have not even heard off. You are the bollocks and the only thing that surprises me about your subscriber count is that it is not a lot more. Thanks again.
Hi Brian ! Very cool video ! Thank you for teaching this , Now I’ll never wonder again. You helped me learn something worthwhile today 🤙🏼early congrats 🎉 on your 100k! Tip of the hat to you🏆
The best teacher ever, the best channel. Thanks a bunch. The video quality, light, sound all good. Presentation, diagrams, chords and notes visualisation on neck - all good. Spare cash, don't need any studio hardware upgrades. The value is in you and the way you explain complicated things, at least the other teachers make them complicated.
Brian, yet again a great tutorial! You explain concepts clearly, you get to the point, throw in some theory, play a few examples and share the knowledge. Amazing teacher! Thanks and sunny greetings from the UK :) ETA: shiny new cameras & recording equipment may be nice but your content quality shines through, regardless!
Brian, congrats on 100k from Miami. Rick Beato has a video with Larry Carlton discussing his Kid Charlemagne solo. He talks about something like this for playing over dom7 progression, which arpeggios would work?
Hmm...if you are confused about modes, I wouldn't look to superimposition. This is something different. For an in depth look at modes, check out my 3-part series: www.zombieguitar.com/how-to-solo-across-the-fretboard-using-modes/
If you like this lesson, definitely check out www.zombieguitar.com/
It is a one of a kind site dedicated to teaching guitarists to understand the fretboard inside and out!!
Congrats Brian, I just noticed that you've clocked over 💯 K subs. Well deserved.
@@jeffhalfordguitar5056 thanks Jeff!!
@@zombieguitar You might have addressed this already, can you explain this magic between the major and dominant 7th? Why and what's the sauce?
Thank you
I do NOT watch ads for anyone. I fully watch ads for this channel...given they are not an hour long (which happened)...lol
The comment section in most of Brian's videos are friendly and very appreciative..making learning guitar much more fun..😊
Awesome stuff man...i needed to hear this...! Thx and best of luck in your new endeavors of the cams, your new place and updating/tweaking things!
Awesome, man... cool! Thx!
Good stuff. Thanks!
You have the best channel Brian! But better then that you are a great teacher!
Your chennel will be with me till I can"t play guitar any more. Thank you My teacher.
Liking the thumbnail image!
Haha thanks 🤣
Ok Brian now I have homework. I need to watch the video and try it out, good lesson and explanation as usual. I wonder what next week will bring ? . Just an observations Brian, don’t know if it’s my iPad or WiFi but the picture looked slightly blurry. That’s not criticism but helpful observation. Take care Brian, be well, be safe, peace. G
Thanks George! Ya, I get that blurry thing too. I'm not sure exactly what causes it. That's one of the things I'm looking to fix 😁
Thanks Brian, brilliant as usual. Trying with other chord combinations, would I be correct in stating "playing a ii over the V" would give a dominant 9th flavour ? (eg Dm over the G)
Yes absolutely! If you want to think of it that way, that works just as well. Now you know that playing a "ii chord" over the "V chord" in any key will result in the "dominant 9 sound" 😁
My (potentially flawed) logic : adding the Dm (D F A) to the G (G B D) gives (G A B D F) = Root, 9th, 3rd, 5th, flat7th = Dominant 9th.
@Jeff Halfordguitar no, your logic isn't flawed at all. It's exactly right!
I was just saying that if you prefer to think of it as "ii chord" over the "V chord"...or even "minor chord that is a 5th above a major chord"...these are all other ways of thinking than "minor chord played 2 spots counterclockwise from the starting major chord on the circle". All of these ways of thinking give the same result and will apply to any major chord that you are starting with!
Great vid!!! Have I got this theory right? Following the circle of fifths for a A minor rhythm if I was to play a B minor arpeggio it would make an A minor 13th?
Am: A C E
Bm: B D F#
Superimposed: A C E B D F#
Yup, that will give you the m13 sound since the F# is in there. It won't be a full m13 chord since the 7th isn't present though. The important voicings in any extended chord are the 3rd and 7th, so a true Am13 would be:
Am13: A C E G B D F#
But it's close enough!!
@@zombieguitar Thanks for clarifying that for me, I was beginning to make some real weird sounds out of my guitar. Think I'll stick to 7ths and 9ths when I'm feeling brave as 13ths are quite a feat on a fretboard lol. ✌😁👍
@@matildastanford7019 haha yes 13s can sound very dissonant. I'm not a huge fan of the sound. You can't go wrong with 7ths and 9ths though!
can it be applied to fast key changes like giant steps?
Yes, it can be applied to any situation!
What's the difference between major and minor arpeggios? They both seem to start from sharp to flat. I though a major is sharp to flat and minor is flat to sharp...?
A major arpeggio is just the notes of a major chord, and a minor arpeggio is just the notes of a minor chord. A C major arpeggio for example would have the notes C E G, and a C minor arpeggio would have the notes C Eb G 😃
@@zombieguitar @Brian Kelly thanks Brian. I'm still trying to get my head around differences with pentatonic shapes in major and minor versus arpeggios. I noticed that for major it goes from sharp to flat and vice versa for minor. I thought this would be the same but it's different as it's not related to shapes but more so root notes from the key of fifths.
@@scratchpadski9094 you're all over the place my friend! Start here: www.zombieguitar.com/understanding-diatonic-chord-progressions-triads-and-7th-chords/
@@zombieguitar 😊
Lovely job. Wonderful teacher. By far the best. Hello from scotland my friend 🏴
You explain well, I've followed a few of your videos. The production value doesn't bother me too much, the quality of the content is the really important bit ;)
Brilliant! Very knowledgeable! Great teacher,thanks Bryan.
Great teaching, Sir
Hello from Chandigarh, (India)
Thank you for that explanation on rhythm and lead in dealing with the circle of fifths. Just broke out some backtracks, it definitely adds a new dynamic in thinking and sound. Very enlightening.
Thank you Brian for the time & lessons you've shared on triads & playing their arpeggios! 👍🏽👍🏽🙏🏾
Another thing to try I have not even heard off. You are the bollocks and the only thing that surprises me about your subscriber count is that it is not a lot more. Thanks again.
Hi Brian ! Very cool video ! Thank you for teaching this , Now I’ll never wonder again. You helped me learn something worthwhile today 🤙🏼early congrats 🎉 on your 100k! Tip of the hat to you🏆
Glad you liked it. I love your vids man 🤘
Congratulation on 100K subscribers.
Thank you!!
I'm "superimpressed" Brian .... great tutorial.
The best teacher ever, the best channel. Thanks a bunch. The video quality, light, sound all good. Presentation, diagrams, chords and notes visualisation on neck - all good. Spare cash, don't need any studio hardware upgrades. The value is in you and the way you explain complicated things, at least the other teachers make them complicated.
I appreciate it man, but it definitely can't hurt to use better equipment!
Brian, yet again a great tutorial!
You explain concepts clearly, you get to the point, throw in some theory, play a few examples and share the knowledge. Amazing teacher!
Thanks and sunny greetings from the UK :)
ETA: shiny new cameras & recording equipment may be nice but your content quality shines through, regardless!
Thanks Joyce! I appreciate the words 😀
This is genius! Thanks, Brian!
The content of the video is what counts, yours is among the best.
Brian, congrats on 100k from Miami. Rick Beato has a video with Larry Carlton discussing his Kid Charlemagne solo. He talks about something like this for playing over dom7 progression, which arpeggios would work?
Hi! Brian I learned so much from your arpeggio lessons thanks🎸
You make the complex things simple. That alone makes you a genius in my opinion. Much love my man :) 🙏❤
Brilliant teacher!!
The loneliest cowboy zombie says your cooler than an iceberg so bring on your heat and melt our world
Thank you for all what you do..
You are the man..
Interesting concept, sounds great.
Great lesson! so that means I can solo using an Em penta over an Am chord? Congrats on the 100K
Yup, that would result in an Am11 sound.
Am: A C E
Em pentatonic: E G A B D
Superimposed: A C E G B D
😀
My man✊
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
:)
Wait... Superimposition and modes seem like they have a lot in common.
Hmm...if you are confused about modes, I wouldn't look to superimposition. This is something different.
For an in depth look at modes, check out my 3-part series: www.zombieguitar.com/how-to-solo-across-the-fretboard-using-modes/
Brian is this the same as “upper structures” in jazz? Thanks-James
Yup 😁
Thank you for the very clear practical application of upper structures.
We love you man!!
first
Ah you beat me!