Scalloped Guitars Sound INCREDIBLE (ft. VERY special guest)

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 2 тыс.

  • @TheEngarn
    @TheEngarn Год назад +894

    Love Yngwie. He even filmed himself with a Nokia 3310 for this episode. A true vintage.

    • @SamLazier
      @SamLazier Год назад +78

      More like webcam from 2006. 3310 didn't have a camera. And yes, I actually am fun at parties.

    • @marziograva
      @marziograva Год назад +10

      Oh man I've just read it. I would say 'it's a wooden camera from 1897' :D

    • @robertb8673
      @robertb8673 Год назад +4

      More like a 7650.😂

    • @umitanonymous3400
      @umitanonymous3400 Год назад +2

      😂

    • @rebirthmachine
      @rebirthmachine Год назад +5

      A potato 🥔

  • @FlyingIceman198
    @FlyingIceman198 2 года назад +539

    “I got all the time you want” hearing that from a guy like Yngwie just hits different

    • @Aethelvlad
      @Aethelvlad 10 месяцев назад +5

      and this goober made a 9 minute video. yngwie has done 2 hour long interviews, no idea why this guy got all start stuck and nervous and "didn't want to keep him too long" this video was totally pointless

  • @hectorguzman8435
    @hectorguzman8435 11 месяцев назад +29

    “Blood, sweat and tears. No shortcuts” Couldn’t have said it better

  • @craiglizt8074
    @craiglizt8074 2 года назад +523

    Is it me, or has Yngwie mellowed out a tad over the years into a super cool dude? Awesome video on a fantastic artist!

    • @zeronyne
      @zeronyne 2 года назад +78

      He has definitely mellowed. What’s funny is that his message has never changed. He’s so consistent.

    • @zacm9747
      @zacm9747 2 года назад +12

      @Drewblues wtf I mean he's from Sweden but ok 😂

    • @TheRemyWagner
      @TheRemyWagner 2 года назад +8

      @@zacm9747 He is from Sweden indeed, but he moved to US to live his musical dream.

    • @heuxheux
      @heuxheux 2 года назад +23

      Less coke

    • @4spbiz
      @4spbiz 2 года назад +48

      He's still a douche but he's an approachable douche now. The main thing Yngwie is aware of that drives him crazy about almost everyone else is that he knows that the only way to become as good as him is to put in a gazillion hours of effort. When someone says "less is more" it drives him crazy and he has to respond with "more is more."

  • @cemsarioglu5947
    @cemsarioglu5947 Год назад +38

    I remember the first time I’ve listened to a Malmsteen record. It was the Fire and Ice CD in the winter of ‘93. Every single metal and rock music lover kid in my school wanted that CD from me because it was not for sale in Istanbul. My friend bought it for me from USA as a gift. So I copied that CD at least 40-45 times to cassette tapes for my friends in high school. Yngwie was my favourite musician for a veery long time. Huge respect and love for Yngwie. Cheers from Istanbul.

  • @TylerJohnstonGuitar
    @TylerJohnstonGuitar 2 года назад +2351

    Tyler died inside when Yngwie said “Frets not scalloped, it’s the BOARD”

    • @TylerJohnstonGuitar
      @TylerJohnstonGuitar 2 года назад +94

      @Jeffry Thiele His face says it all.

    • @aesop2733
      @aesop2733 2 года назад +218

      Yngwie has probably been correcting people for that his whole career lol

    • @johnberger55
      @johnberger55 2 года назад +14

      I guess I know more than I thought. feels good man

    • @TylerJohnstonGuitar
      @TylerJohnstonGuitar 2 года назад +47

      @Jeffry Thiele Yeah that’s like Einstein correcting your math.

    • @MusicisWin
      @MusicisWin  2 года назад +527

      Had to leave it in, gotta stay humble plus I thought it was something maybe a lot of people mistake 😅

  • @jaykoblz1
    @jaykoblz1 2 года назад +262

    I really like the shadows and reflections the scalloped neck casts. It's subtle, but it looks really cool.

    • @aesop2733
      @aesop2733 2 года назад +1

      When that works I feel like it helps see people's finger placement. Helpful for the nerds during a live performance👍

    • @kagenotatsumaki
      @kagenotatsumaki 2 года назад +5

      THAT'S what's up with them! I always knew they looked a little different but could never quite put my finger on it.

    • @Casey3-P-O
      @Casey3-P-O 2 года назад +2

      Maple fretboards look really cool too because of the way the light hits it sometimes.

    • @TheMusicalMedic
      @TheMusicalMedic 2 года назад

      Now that you mention it, it does look sick

  • @maxchacon6386
    @maxchacon6386 2 года назад +912

    No way, you’ve played Kirk Hammet’s guitar, James Hetfield’s guitar, Eric Clapton’s guitar, Eddie Van Halen’s and now an Yngwie Malmsteen replica!!! Love your content, can’t wait to see who’s guitar you’ll play next

    • @Ayden1177
      @Ayden1177 2 года назад +17

      And billy gibbons les Paul to

    • @hellbentofficial9930
      @hellbentofficial9930 2 года назад +21

      It would be super sick if he played dimebags guitar

    • @maxchacon6386
      @maxchacon6386 2 года назад +7

      @@hellbentofficial9930 definitely

    • @Blaatann53
      @Blaatann53 2 года назад +17

      Jimi's woodstock guitar👀

    • @davidmcaninch4714
      @davidmcaninch4714 2 года назад +33

      Are you ignoring the fact that he’s talking to Yingwie Malmsteen himself?????????????

  • @DoctorDave5
    @DoctorDave5 2 года назад +209

    I have to admit I really like Yngwie. How can you not admire his dedication to his craft? I could never play like him in a million years but I reckon if you like music and playing guitar in particular (no matter what style), you have to take your hat off to him.

    • @Bazonthebass
      @Bazonthebass Год назад +7

      Yngwie has incredible talent as well. No amount of practice would make a run-of-the-mill guitarist that good.

    • @Turboy65
      @Turboy65 Год назад +5

      You COULD play like him in just a few years if you dedicated eight hours a day to it, every day for years on end. I know I'm not going to do it.

    • @DoctorDave5
      @DoctorDave5 Год назад +1

      @@Turboy65 same🤣

    • @Bazonthebass
      @Bazonthebass Год назад +1

      @@Turboy65 Fair point.

    • @BenedictHarris
      @BenedictHarris Год назад

      Yes, I respect him, even though there is no planet currently habitable where I would put on one of his songs.

  • @PrinceWesterburg
    @PrinceWesterburg 2 года назад +24

    I scallopped a few guitars 30 years ago and it really sorted my playing out - its just you and the string, like playing air, you cannot put too much pressure in the string and that not only saved my left forearm but gave me a much better technique. I still have one scallopped guitar from those days, must play it this weekend! Amazing to see Yngwie!

    • @J_Braz_
      @J_Braz_ 2 года назад

      What gauge strings are best? Seems like thick strings would be easier to play with worrying about finger pressure. Light strings would require a very light touch I would think.

  • @olivermorrow8417
    @olivermorrow8417 2 года назад +717

    Can’t believe you were able to secure nick jonas as the special guest, love his style

  • @Mr.Goldbar
    @Mr.Goldbar 2 года назад +976

    Yngwie is the definition of a gutiar villain. He needs an episode on the Guitar Villains podcast

    • @ashcreekAER
      @ashcreekAER 2 года назад +7

      What's the definition of a guitar villian? Jw

    • @way2sh0rt07grad
      @way2sh0rt07grad 2 года назад

      @@ashcreekAER A guitarist who wants to rule the world and hates every other guitarist.

    • @jacobdowler1
      @jacobdowler1 2 года назад +141

      @@ashcreekAER Yngwie Malmsteen

    • @morehumanity
      @morehumanity 2 года назад +3

      This for sure

    • @jonesyfromtheblock9635
      @jonesyfromtheblock9635 2 года назад +3

      A god you mean?

  • @AverageArdvark
    @AverageArdvark 2 года назад +106

    One of Yngwie's sayings has propelled me through creative hardship ever since I first heard it and it will stay with me til I die. "If it sounds good, it's good." That's it. Nothing else matters.

    • @michaelkarlsson5966
      @michaelkarlsson5966 2 года назад +5

      yes, I like that qoute too. But at the same time Yngwie knows his theory...

  • @Forestduck1
    @Forestduck1 2 года назад +46

    Not only a scalloped fret board but also a brass nut and custom pick up wiring setup! Yngwie's strat is just awesome!

    • @MrJohnnyDistortion
      @MrJohnnyDistortion Год назад +2

      And his strats have brass sleeves where the bolts go through to join the neck.

    • @v3rlon
      @v3rlon 7 месяцев назад

      Machine screws on the neck (necktite sells a kit)
      Brass nut
      Custom pickups (he went through 46 iterations to get it right)
      Custom wiring with no load tone (though he said he just leaves tone maxed and knobs disconnected in Rick Beato interview)
      3 position switch (I think he only uses 1 & 3 though)
      Dunlop strap lock kit
      Vintage bridge
      Scalloped fretboard
      Sadly, no longer available in red.
      I would prefer locking tuners, the modern 2 point tremolo with pop in arm and color options, but fender didn’t ask me.

    • @sirspongadoodle
      @sirspongadoodle 4 месяца назад

      @@v3rlonpickups dont alter distorted tone though

    • @v3rlon
      @v3rlon 4 месяца назад

      @@sirspongadoodle I am not sure what you're trying to say. What I am reading is wrong, so I don't think you meant that. If the original tone of the pickup is different, the distorted tone is also different. For a really obvious example, just compare humbucker to classic single coil. Given that most players today have some amount of distortion, there would be no need for different pickups of any kind. Now, I refuse to believe anyone watching this video on purpose would make that claim, so could you clarify it for me?

  • @alexbutler1944
    @alexbutler1944 2 года назад +29

    Damn dude. Sweep picking is the thing I've always fallen short of, and I realize why now. I simply haven't put the time in. That alone is honestly a huge inspiration. Hour one begins tonight.

    • @Francisco-Danconia
      @Francisco-Danconia Год назад +2

      How are your sweeps coming along?

    • @karmaceutical3963
      @karmaceutical3963 Год назад

      thats what it comes down to, i played guitar for 15 years before i figured it out, was decent, but always assumed i just didnt have whatever innate ability the "shredders" had, finally put all that doubt aside and decided to practice some satriani/vai/ygnwie until gains couldnt be achieved anymore, and no such ceiling has occured, bumps and roadblocks come up but theyre always able to be overcome, the challenge is how much time spent doing other things is one comfortable sacrificing to get there, time in = quality out full stop, im convinced anyone can play just about anything if they spend enough time practicing with efficiency

    • @LokiAnderson7
      @LokiAnderson7 Год назад +1

      @@karmaceutical3963 ive been playing for about 5 years now and I only just started getting into learning this type of sweeping and diminished scale runs. I think its all about practise. Luckily for me, im still very much in my teen years and therefore have so much time to constantly practise. I honestly think its just all about running it over really slow. I always hear people say "practise it slow then increase the speed" and never really paid attention to it, but i have this one guitar teacher who really showed me, even though its going to sound horrible, its all about muscle memory and precision. Once it is really tight and your fingers start to get really used to that shape its so much easier to pick up the pace with it. Half the time i just do little exercise or even just let my fingers run wild in whatever key, but i at least try to set a bit of time away just to practise techniques. Honestly i know its hard to stay dedicated, but i feel like i have the mentallility for guitar that guys have for the gym, even though it sucks you have to get through it to get better.

    • @whatabouttheearth
      @whatabouttheearth 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@Francisco-Danconia
      He met a stripper after posting that comment and recently sold his guitar to pay child support on three kids and a dog.
      No, just kidding 😏, his guitar got stolen by a crackhead and now he's in prison for unrelated events.

    • @tamask7749
      @tamask7749 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@karmaceutical3963 i used to make excuse for not putting the time to do sweeps, until i started getting into gen-z rock guitarist like henson and manuel fernandes.
      Sweeping became not so daunting anymore compared to their polyrythimic taps and multi layered chicken picking..
      True enough, after 3 months of just grinding sweep picking exercise, i can play some ohmura and yngwie style sweeps because the alternative to doing what polyphia is doing seems way too hard for this old man..

  • @guyontheflyflyfishing7778
    @guyontheflyflyfishing7778 2 года назад +35

    My grandfather (RIP) got me an Yngwie strat as a HS graduation present and 10 years later I still play it at all of my gigs and have used it from playing jam festivals to country music at the local waterin' hole to metal shows at a skate park to everywhere in between. I even got it signed by the 5 Generation Axe members! Other than being a gift from my late grandfather, I've used it for so long because of how "overbuilt" it is and how playing a scalloped fretboard for so long has surely aided in helping my fretting hand with soreness and fatigue - not sure where I'm going with this but Yngwie truly built a workhorse of a Stratocaster and I'll proudly play it for as long as I'm able to play! 🤘

    • @stringlocker
      @stringlocker Год назад +2

      I scallop my own necks. I leave the first four Frets alone. Because I tend to squeeze the open chords Sharp. Especially the D chord. Did you adjust your playing.

  • @GuitarTotality
    @GuitarTotality 2 года назад +91

    A scalloped fretboard is the way to go. I had a 1992 candy apple red U.S.A Yngwie Strat for over 20 years. Now, I have a 1980's Fender neck-through Strat that I customized myself - all new Fender parts with YJM Fury Seymour Duncan pickups. I hand-scalloped the fretboard myself very deep and used non toxic wood dyes and a tung oil finish.
    Yngwie is a REAL expert/master on what he knows and does. Thanks for showing him respect,Tyler!
    In 2003, I brought 12 of my guitar students to the G3 concert in Minneapolis. Yngwie's wife, April was kind enough to let us ALL go backstage to chat with them, without meet and greet passes! Joe Satriani was feeling sick and was not backstage. Steve Vai and Billy Sheehan were there along with Yngwie and April. Yngwie was so cool and funny. He chatted with us and signed things. Me, my wife and students all had quite a field trip!
    🌎✌️🌱🎶

    • @ShiroiTengu
      @ShiroiTengu 2 года назад

      April. And thats the first time I've ever heard of her ever doing something nice for someone else!

    • @GuitarTotality
      @GuitarTotality 2 года назад

      @@ShiroiTengu Thanks for the correction. I edited my comment with April's name. Amber was Yngwie's second wife who I heard cheated on him with Michael Vescera (singer on "Seventh Sign" and "Magnum Opus") - not so "nice". April was very kind and professional, as was Yngwie.

  • @rodfotografia
    @rodfotografia 2 года назад +455

    You can "hate" Malmsteen but you can't ignore him. No guitar player can. He is a true master of his craft. Thank you for this.

    • @2good2betrue3
      @2good2betrue3 2 года назад +20

      Indeed, he is like no other, watching him makes your jaw drop, the speed and the godly vibrato is untouchable.👍 he's the most dominating guitarist on stage, his stage presence is like no other, seen him share the stage with other greats (Vai, Satch, Nuno, Tosin, Zakk, etc) and he just stole the show. The "Yngwie" experience is must for every guitarist.🤘

    • @Pit_Lord
      @Pit_Lord 2 года назад +18

      I don’t know. Every few years I forget he exists. He’s a master at a specific type of guitar playing, but his real talent lies in being a giant douche that manages to piss off anyone who spends 5 minutes with him.

    • @2good2betrue3
      @2good2betrue3 2 года назад +17

      @@Pit_Lord just a bit of history: I think that reputation is just blown out mainly from (that "doughnut incident" with Dime). Yngwie once told in a Guitar World interview that he "purposely" did that (acting douchey) in his younger years to gain recognition, it's just a "front". Which I think worked for him. (Just like in WWE, - a good example is the Undertaker who "purposely" played a bad villain in his early years but as decades past transformed into a "good guy" wrestler that millions of fans loved)...Nowadays Yngwie is soo cool, funny and mellow and nice!. He's also very kind to fans like me once you meet him, He will sign your guitars without hesitation.👍

    • @hexchad765
      @hexchad765 2 года назад +4

      @@Pit_Lord All of which is hearsay, but it's fun to jump on the hate bandwagon, eh?

    • @rollbackmotte
      @rollbackmotte 2 года назад +3

      He is not a guitarist. He is an harmonic minor scale obsessed guy.
      I can't get what ppl like about him, for real.

  • @_pic_7571
    @_pic_7571 2 года назад +14

    Never seen an interview with him before. He seems like a genuinely nice dude. A guy that would just hang out with anyone that likes music. 🤟 Cheers Mr Malmsteen.

    • @2good2betrue3
      @2good2betrue3 2 года назад +2

      Yeah, He's really very nice, cool and funny when you meet him. He signed my guitars and will take a pic with fans. very charismatic guy.😃

    • @ronniestoneguitar
      @ronniestoneguitar Год назад +3

      This whole 'Yngwie is an asshole' thing comes from the fact that he has a very clear vision on how he wants to make/play music. So he is a bit hard to work with sometimes. When he's not on stage or in the studio I've heard he's a really fun guy to hang out with. But when he's on stage or making an album or w/e he wants things exactly how he wants them which is where the reputation comes from.

  • @thesarratum
    @thesarratum Год назад +1

    Maybe it is just because I got older but when the interviewer is honest and respectful, i enjoy watching the interview a lot more, thank you very much.

  • @danriley5848
    @danriley5848 2 года назад +82

    Yngwie is a legend, I remember meeting him a long time ago and at the time he wasn't really very pleasant to be around but he has humbled over the years and he's a force of nature and a phenomenal guitarist.

    • @Squidz66
      @Squidz66 2 года назад +8

      It’s true. He had a bit of a reputation. Seems to have mellowed out lately. Good to see.

    • @vorpalblades
      @vorpalblades 2 года назад +8

      You didn't try giving him a donut?

    • @powerbuilder1019
      @powerbuilder1019 2 года назад +9

      He's actually very kind, fun, jolly and mellow nowadays.🙂 He signed my guitar and shook my hands...I did not wash it the whole day hoping that touching his fingers would a bit transfer just a bit of that phenomenal skill and legendary talent on my hands.😅🤘

    • @rrevh12345
      @rrevh12345 2 года назад +2

      @@vorpalblades maybe his hatred for donuts has also mellowed out 😂

    • @fernando651
      @fernando651 2 года назад +2

      yeah i wasnt crazy about yngwie because he was so cocky. glad to see he's more down to earth now.

  • @SpectreSoundStudios
    @SpectreSoundStudios 2 года назад +93

    NICE episode, Tyler! Well done!

    • @hamabrewer
      @hamabrewer 2 года назад +2

      Omg It’s that guy with the hair!!

    • @hamabrewer
      @hamabrewer 2 года назад +4

      I love you hair guy ❤️😍

  • @torgo4ever
    @torgo4ever 2 года назад +193

    Say what you want about Yngwie but he said something in one of his instructional videos that I think is one of the most AMAZING tips for guitar players or ANY player of ANY instrument. He said , quote : " ...if it sounds good , it's right. " For a guy who seems so heavy on theory/scales/inside playing , this is a magical thing to understand about playing music.

    • @scottschlemmer4787
      @scottschlemmer4787 2 года назад +3

      Thats like a chef saying "if it tastes good its good." Real good friend of mine who can outplay me by a mile is stuck on rules so he aint loose. Which means its unlikely you will develop a signature sound, "the Holy Grail". Imagination knows no rules....

    • @lt_johnmcclane
      @lt_johnmcclane 2 года назад +2

      That’s not really that amazing of an insight but glad it resonated with you so much

    • @StratMatt777
      @StratMatt777 2 года назад +1

      Krist Novoselich told me the EXACT same thing when I was sitting next to him on a Southwest Airlines flight in 2011 and asked (being an overly-analytical perfectionist), "How do you come up with a good chord progression?"
      He thought for about one second and said, "If it sounds good, it's good".

    • @ericmork630
      @ericmork630 2 года назад

      Yes, but this is coming from one of the most particular and precise guitarists of all time. If it sounds good to him, it's definitely right. If it sounds good and right to you and me and most players, then send it to Yngwie, and it's most likely quite wrong lol.

    • @dm8579
      @dm8579 2 года назад +1

      @@ericmork630 What sounds good or not is a matter of taste.

  • @canadam1983
    @canadam1983 Год назад +2

    I love how Yngwie gets excited talking about music. No bs, no shortcuts, no weird abstract stuff, you just practice there is no magic trick. You can see he loves his craft after all those years and to me that's the most beautiful thing you can have!

  • @MichaelCoffin
    @MichaelCoffin Год назад +22

    What I found with scalloped boards with jumbo frets is each fretted note articulates so cleanly. The note's tone is rounder and fuller, and sounds a little more chewy. I initially struggled with the high E string rolling over the outer edge of the frets, so had to lighten my touch to correct for this. I play electric blues and find the YJM Strat to be really dynamic and expressive. It's the best made Fender production guitar IMO. Excellent value and inspiring to play. Happy holidays, all.

  • @CaptnShred
    @CaptnShred 2 года назад +141

    Yngwie's a legend, he'll forever be one of my biggest inspirations.

    • @powerbuilder1019
      @powerbuilder1019 2 года назад +4

      Yes ! such a legendary guitarist, watching him for the first time play, I'm already inspired by those amazing chops and licks, my jaw literally drop if you saw him play live in the late 80's. Especially "Far Beyond the Sun". Which is I think is one of the Greatest instrumental songs ever. 🤟

    • @overkill_716
      @overkill_716 2 года назад +1

      Same

    • @Mikethompson303
      @Mikethompson303 2 года назад +1

      I've always heard negative stuff about him but he couldn't have been cooler in this interview encouraging people to work hard the work hard and just being nice and a gentleman in general hes a great dude!

    • @AutisticVaxtard
      @AutisticVaxtard 7 месяцев назад

      They don't like the Cross

  • @fase1doughnut
    @fase1doughnut 2 года назад +10

    “More is more” is the most Yngwie quote I’ve ever heard. Fucking love it

    • @bernhardtsen74
      @bernhardtsen74 2 года назад +3

      I loved the story behind it too!the lead singer was kinda pissed Yngiwie got more girls than he did, told Yngwie to play less notes, saying that "Less is More!" Yngwie shook his head and said "More is More!"

  • @stepitupandgo67
    @stepitupandgo67 2 года назад +29

    Damn dude...you are living so many guitarists dreams....he was my ultimate 80s guitar hero...some of yngwie's solos are just some of the most wicked licks of all time, to this day, even with Tosin Abasi and Jason Richardson and guthrie govan and the many other incredible guitarists of the modern day....his solo battles with Jens Johannsen are just some of the best improvs ever.. I love his commitment to the art of guitar and his contribution to guitar history...did you really go 20 hrs??? We're going to need proof...wow

  • @paulroggenbeck3129
    @paulroggenbeck3129 2 года назад +11

    Not just phenominally gifted at his craft, but a down to earth man who can be respected for that as well.👍🏻

    • @paulroggenbeck3129
      @paulroggenbeck3129 Год назад +1

      @textofficial_music_is_wino3086 😶 Did I actually win a guitar???? ...oh please don't let it be a dream...⛅ I will play the jam of jams on it, and send it to you. Let me know either way,...Signed,.. possibly greatful!!!

    • @OngoGablogian185
      @OngoGablogian185 Год назад

      Yeah, Tyler sure is great.

  • @simonpark843
    @simonpark843 2 года назад +11

    Okay, I've finally subscribed to this channel. This was awesome. I saw Yngwie live in the 1990's here in Australia, and he was like a one-man riot. Brilliant live performer, brilliant guitarist, one of the best live shows I've ever experienced. He really played his heart out and I can still remember how blown away my friends and I were by his playing and his showmanship. Thanks for making this video, it was excellent.

    • @Thirdfish
      @Thirdfish Год назад +1

      Yep Ritchie was the first.

  • @daviboy4721
    @daviboy4721 2 года назад +85

    Yngwie is my hero! He is the reason I started playing! I knew it was him just by his signature guitar! So freaking cool man!

    • @timz3146
      @timz3146 2 года назад +7

      One of the most recognisable guitars in modern music. You can say it's Yngwie's jut by the color

    • @vethwynwetfeather
      @vethwynwetfeather 2 года назад +5

      Same here Daviboy . I'll never forget the first time I heard the Rising Force album. As a side note I also heard Joe Satriani Surfing with the aliens the same day. It didn't affect me like Yngwie did though. I love Joe, but YJM just hits for me. 🤘

    • @2good2betrue3
      @2good2betrue3 2 года назад +2

      Me too!🙂 Yngwie is such a major inspiration and the first guitarist that made my jaw drop. It's hard to explain but there's something about Yngwie that many of the modern technical speedsters are lacking. It's the "loose vintage feel". Also his stage presence and command is equal to none.
      Seen him play on G5 with (Vai, Satriani, Neil Schon and Petrucci) a decade ago😮 imagine that line-up and Yngwie just stole the stage and show that night, he's a star amongs stars.. He slays at the guitar.🤟

  • @PPioner
    @PPioner 2 года назад +7

    so cool that you got to interview him

  • @ChadwickRider
    @ChadwickRider 2 года назад +34

    Yngwie is right, there's no shortcuts... I've looked for them, none have been found 😁 Good content creators are inspiring. Keeps us involved in music, talking about music, talking about ideas, learning about ideas... it's easy to get lost in day-to-day life and good content really helps keep you involved, living it. Thank you!

    • @onemoremisfit
      @onemoremisfit Год назад

      The "shortcut" is having gifted level talent. Every player must practice endlessly but the higher your natural talent the greater dividend your practice pays. This is why you see such things as a 9 year old concert pianist playing Mozart concertos with world class orchestras, while other pianists who also studied and practiced hard from childhood never got past being a pretty good player well into adulthood. The 2 different outcomes were not because one of them failed to practice hard enough. And it's not because one had a better teacher, even though teachers tend to take credit. It's because one student yielded a lot more progress per given hour of practice. And that's not because one had a better practice method, it's simply because everything came easier to one of them.

    • @onemoremisfit
      @onemoremisfit Год назад

      @@kimhoffmannandersen5477 Don't hand me the "You have no science" bullshit when you don't have any either. You are just somebody on the internet with an opinion, as am I.
      You didn't even read carefully enough to notice I didn't reference Yngwie. I wrote about the phenomenon of child prodigies who haven't even lived long enough to log the 10K hours claimed by "science" from some guy who wrote a book and came up with that arbitrary number. These child prodigy cases defy scientific explanation, and while they are extremely rare, they are a "thing" as you so hipster-ly say.
      You are pissed? You sound like the typical over-emotional open wound kid who goes looking for reasons to be offended and lashes out at relatively innocuous statements. Please get over yourself ... Yeah? Yeah.

  • @2good2betrue3
    @2good2betrue3 2 года назад +5

    Wow!, nice Tyler😃...thank you for featuring my ultimate guitar Idol and 1 of my top 5 all time favorite guitar player, the one and only, the legendary shred king Yngwieee Malmsteen.😊👏 Scalloped Yngwie Strats is the best Fender signature out there.🤟 Cheers!

  • @anthonyjohnson4734
    @anthonyjohnson4734 2 года назад +6

    I seen him in Columbus last December and it was insanely badass. I was so motivated after the show and that surprised me. After seeing someone that talented you think you would just want to just hang it up but no. Legendary interview Sir congratulations

  • @aesop2733
    @aesop2733 2 года назад +93

    Scallops look like they make room for some interesting bend inflections because it's more dependent on the amount of pressure you use. Now that I think about it, that probably helps with tone because every time you fret a note it has to be precise in that way. Probably less fatigue in the way of keeping in tune because of it. Imagine SRV playing a scalloped board lol.

    • @CatsInHats-S.CrouchingTiger
      @CatsInHats-S.CrouchingTiger 2 года назад +8

      Malmsteen has said uses 8 gauge strings! A pretty light gauge and manages to pull out a lot of power from them. He says it’s good to practice on heavier gauge, to strengthen the hand, and then of course that means when he goes down to an 8 gauge, he can fly over the strings. So he barely needs to touch them! 😝

    • @johncantu2555
      @johncantu2555 2 года назад +1

      Nice pfp. Aes’ best work by far

    • @SilverMusicAndGaming
      @SilverMusicAndGaming 2 года назад +4

      @@CatsInHats-S.CrouchingTiger I'd only do that if you're already good at playing lightly. You'll end up barring down too hard on your frets if you practice on thick ass strings then go to 8s

    • @BigHairyFenian
      @BigHairyFenian 2 года назад +1

      Check out Nile for some crazy bends, Karl Sanders has all his guitars scalloped, was bummed to find out his signature Dean V doesn't come scalloped, that thing looks amazing.

    • @user-pc8vn6ym7r
      @user-pc8vn6ym7r 2 года назад +1

      I plan on taking one back in my time machine to Jimi. Bwa ha HA!

  • @Godeseternal1
    @Godeseternal1 2 года назад +5

    I play a Strat with a scalloped neck that I put together using a Warmoth body and neck. One thing about the scalloped neck is that when played unplugged, is the acoustic volume it puts out. Almost like a hollow body electric guitar. 🎸
    Enjoyed your video. Also Subscribed

  • @Obxhatman
    @Obxhatman 2 года назад +63

    I have followed Yngwie for over 40 years. Dude has seriously accurate intonation and seriously accurate notes , that being said , he was actually a lot more accurate before his car accident and he got worse , a lot worse but today he is almost on equal status as before his accident. That being said , there is something scalloped fretboards gives you that regular does not. The ability to more easily go up to a sharp note without a bend which can allow for smoother transitions between patterns. Just press down harder versus bending and then when you release and move positions there is a more definitive transition and a less likely hood of a dragged string you have to mute. It makes for much more cleaner sweeps and gives more flexibility with economy of motion.

    • @2good2betrue3
      @2good2betrue3 2 года назад +5

      Yes, very much agreed with what you said.👍 Also the scalloped fretboard is a hard beast to tame atleast for the novice players. It requires a mastery of the "soft touch" which only a virtouso like Yngwie has total command. It feels weird at first that your fingers seems to be floating and not touching the fretboard. But once you get used it's one of the greatest experience and discovery as a guitar player IF you know how to control it.🤟

    • @MrClassicmetal
      @MrClassicmetal 2 года назад +1

      This is something that I've heard before and I can't agree with that.
      He sounds uninspired on post 2000 albums and the production of his albums since then has been subpar. And it doesn't help that he insists on singing himself.
      That's likely why that persistent rumour about losing his touch because of the accident started.
      Because his playing was in top shape in the mid 90s. The Seventh Sign, Magnum Opus, Inspiration, and Facing the Animal feature some of his best performances.

    • @Obxhatman
      @Obxhatman 2 года назад +1

      @@MrClassicmetal well , I think he is significantly better , technically than he was then. Now , I will agree , since the 2000's his music is not as entertaining but I chalk that up to him not changing his style a little over the years. In the 80's and early 90's he was still considered a fairly new discovery and while his licks were still the same , it still felt newish. After a while , its just the same Yngwie. So I stopped listening after the 90's just cause I felt like I heard the same shit the previous 20 years. I was over it. Technically though , he does seem more accurate and more driven today than even 5 years ago. Just my thoughts.

    • @Polentaccio
      @Polentaccio 2 года назад

      Even in the years after his accident I still think he ripped! Sadly I feel now he's gotten sloppy because he is jamming way more notes in. At the beginning of his career , everything was so clear. Now his timing suffers a bit. But yes he is playing better than say his 2008 - 2015 run.

    • @ray.a7343
      @ray.a7343 Год назад

      @@MrClassicmetal I don't know about that baroque and roll is as sick as trilogy suite .that song is a beast

  • @chasmenear7130
    @chasmenear7130 Год назад +13

    Lol.. I don't play much electric anymore, but back when I used to do hefty 'psychedelic shred ', I had the pleasure of owning a Hamer Virtuoso - which was rather rare, and had a 36 fret scalloped board - It sounded like an electric tree!

  • @seancurtin5131
    @seancurtin5131 2 года назад

    Amazing, sending a message above to say a mega thank you and acknowledgement of that prize. ROCK ON!!!!!

  • @JoeTalaga
    @JoeTalaga 2 года назад +6

    I’m surprised you haven’t ventured into scallop land before! It took me about 20 years myself, and got my first scalloped guitar in 2018 (YJM Sig) and totally fell in love. Scalloped fingerboards are now my preference.

  • @RC32Smiths01
    @RC32Smiths01 2 года назад +21

    A huge peak for you my man. Yngwie was such a heavy influence on me, so this would truly mean a lot to me. The legends you meet are not to be understated.

    • @2good2betrue3
      @2good2betrue3 2 года назад +1

      Indeed, Yngwie also influenced me the most and he's simply Legendary.🙂

  • @smalpree
    @smalpree Год назад +6

    I bought the Ritchie Blackmore signature strat with scalloped fret board and it has enabled me to push my playing to the next level, getting tone and bends like never before.

    • @AspiringSpaceWizard
      @AspiringSpaceWizard Год назад

      What are slides like ?

    • @124marsh
      @124marsh Год назад

      @@AspiringSpaceWizard L O L I don’t think Blackmore played slide guitar.

  • @Svellse
    @Svellse 2 года назад +6

    thank u so much for this episode! YNG no matter how many guitarist there is in the world that is virtuoso, u can't be forgotten forever! thanks

    • @2good2betrue3
      @2good2betrue3 2 года назад +1

      Yes, seen hundreds of shredders thru the decades but Yngwie still has no equal, that "vintage feel" and "vibrato" is just godly. simply the best!🤘

  • @garethwardle6157
    @garethwardle6157 2 года назад +10

    You love to see Malmsteen still using his webcam from the early 2000's 😂😂

  • @MarkBreton
    @MarkBreton 2 года назад +4

    Dude!! Amazing interview, even for being brief. Yngwie is so inspirational in his approach and advice. And you proved it right in the video. Props you to you, for the win!!

    • @2good2betrue3
      @2good2betrue3 2 года назад +1

      Indeed!, amazing and inspiring interview from such a legendary shred guitarist.🤘

  • @sholland42
    @sholland42 2 года назад +4

    Rising Force blew my mind back in the 80’s, I absolutely love Yngwie’s playing.

  • @hermanodejesus7264
    @hermanodejesus7264 Год назад +1

    👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 you got to interview the pioneer, the master, the Neoclassical Guru himself 🎸🎸🎸 THANKS

  • @jaqueslagerweij6882
    @jaqueslagerweij6882 2 года назад +2

    Wtf dude! Amazing video with Yngwie!

  • @ButterBallTheOpossum
    @ButterBallTheOpossum 2 года назад +909

    "Yngwie Malmsteen is the greatest guitar players to ever live"
    -Yngwie Malmsteen

    • @sackson2025
      @sackson2025 2 года назад +47

      He never, ever said that. He obviously thinks of himself as a good player, and he is. Is that wrong?

    • @ButterBallTheOpossum
      @ButterBallTheOpossum 2 года назад +58

      @@sackson2025 it's a joke bro.

    • @sackson2025
      @sackson2025 2 года назад +17

      @Russell White The only joke here is people like you who are obviously sour and envious. I know your type. Yngwie isn’t infallible as a person, nor is he my personal #1 player, but he has the right to be proud of his accomplishments as does anyone else, even if it makes people like you feel inferior.

    • @ButterBallTheOpossum
      @ButterBallTheOpossum 2 года назад +59

      @@sackson2025 I can't believe you are that butthurt over the most mild joke ever. Is Yngwie your boyfriend? You are thinking way too much into this bro. Yeah Yngwie is an unbelievably good guitar player. Definitely better than I'll ever be. But that goes for 99.99999% of the population too. I can't tell a mild joke without being envious and jealous? Are you in middle school? You sound like you are projecting hard-core lol🤣

    • @sackson2025
      @sackson2025 2 года назад

      @@ButterBallTheOpossum I wasn’t talking to you, man.

  • @Timliu92
    @Timliu92 2 года назад +48

    Out of topic, but Yngwie's vibrato is one of the best I have ever heard. It is very in tune and controlled but emotional all at the same time, for lack of a better word.

    • @JobForAMaxboy
      @JobForAMaxboy 2 года назад +3

      ive always loved ygnwie, dimebag and Ritchie Blackmore s vibrato. there's something about those 3 that had as much chaos as control in their vibrato

    • @preston2636
      @preston2636 2 года назад +1

      @@JobForAMaxboy Jeff loomis has a very good vibraton as well. You know who doesn't? Sinister gayes. His vibrato is a perfect example of bad. Ew it sounds like a screeching baby

    • @BooleanError9
      @BooleanError9 2 года назад

      @@JobForAMaxboy All great players, but take a listen to Paul Kossoff for vibrato.

    • @JobForAMaxboy
      @JobForAMaxboy 2 года назад

      @@preston2636 ive always thought Jeff's is a bit uninspiring personally, but 100% agree with synyster gates. A great guitarist otherwise, but his vibrato really lets him down massively. Similar to Kirk Hammett vibrato I'd say

    • @alexcunhapinto
      @alexcunhapinto 2 года назад +1

      Spot on that with vibrato. Ultra human.

  • @murfdog19
    @murfdog19 2 года назад +3

    My guitar heros were Kossoff, Clapton and Frusicante. I was never into shredders, but Yngwie is on a different level. His shredding is raw emotion.

  • @dougstewart6581
    @dougstewart6581 2 года назад

    Can I just note how beautiful it makes the fretboard! The way the light catches it!

  • @Ric_1985
    @Ric_1985 3 месяца назад

    He's so honest about how hard it's to become a legend, no short cuts the only way its to put the time into it.

  • @destianpatrianagara1119
    @destianpatrianagara1119 2 года назад +11

    "More is more" Classic! 🤣🤣

  • @paularikwagener1054
    @paularikwagener1054 2 года назад +6

    I thought like wait... is this the Malmsteen signature guitar? And there he is. Amazing

  • @VelezBiH
    @VelezBiH 2 года назад +16

    I played his signature strat at a local guitar shop. It was the first time I had played scalloped neck guitar. What I remember is how much different it felt to normal strat. I’m primary a strat player and I know the strat feel very well. One thing I remember that was much better on scalloped neck is the ability to really grab the note and vibrato and have a much better control over it. You could really micro adjust the bands on scalloped neck much easier. The negative for me was the feel of the neck and how easy it was to go Sharp when playing. I’m sure I could get used to it if I put enough time, it definitely requires lighter touch. Overall great guitar and definitely has some pluses compared to normal neck. Maybe one day I will own one.

    • @joesatchton212
      @joesatchton212 2 года назад +4

      Hit it on the head - scalloped fretboards absolutely demand a lighter touch, unless you like every note and chord you play to be sharp. A light tough means less unnecessary hand tension and, logically, more overall fluidity. Great observation!

    • @Base612
      @Base612 2 года назад +2

      Thats really interesting. I would have thought that vibrato was much harder on a scalloped neck.

    • @VelezBiH
      @VelezBiH 2 года назад +3

      @@Base612 what makes it “easier” is that fact that you do not have any fretboard slowing you down. Just like in the video you finger just hangs on the string but not making any contact with the wood under. It’s really interacting feel and hard to describe in words. Best is to try it if you can. But to me that was really the biggest plus is the vibrato and band control. When you fret the string you really feel like you have good grib on the string.

    • @nine9whitepony526
      @nine9whitepony526 2 года назад +2

      I said pretty much the exact same thing in my comment. I scalloped my 07 Strat and ultimately quit playing that guitar because of the very reason you just said. I've been playing many many years with what i found out to be a heavy finger. I tried to play lighter but you know what it's like once you start digging into a song.

    • @joesatchton212
      @joesatchton212 2 года назад +2

      @@nine9whitepony526 Yeah man, it's definitely a style thing. And honestly, I do not mean there is any kind of right or wrong with how heavy or how light a touch one has on guitar. BOTH ARE AWESOME!
      Ultimately, one's own style will determine the best fit kind of gear.
      I honestly do not think it is beneficial to force yourself to get comfortable with something just because...I think that kind of mentality is actually counterproductive, especially with how amazing we guitar players have gear these days. There are guitars, frets, strings, picks, PUPs, bridges, scales, etc etc etc for every kind of player type and style.
      So you found out you play with a heavy hand and had to give up on scalloped fretboards. SO WHAT? lol It's all good brotha!
      In my case, I simply just cannot play fat gibson style necks. I don't have small hands but I just feel so much more comfortable on Fender/Ibanez style necks. That's just the way it is for me.
      So no LPs for me. Trust me, I ain't crying one bit over that lol
      Cheers!

  • @cflowers69
    @cflowers69 2 года назад

    Well now I’ve seen it all. Been playing for 36 years now, and I would have NEVER thought that I would see a clip of Malmsteen being nice. lol.

  • @thecentralscrutinizerr
    @thecentralscrutinizerr Год назад

    I met Yngwie years ago when he played HOB in Myrtle Beach SC. After the show, we went out to the tour bus and he came out and hung out with us in the parking lot like a regular local. We talked about life on the road, the techniques of various guitarists, and just had a great time meeting him. Super nice to us.

  • @BFahz
    @BFahz 2 года назад +7

    DAMN IT! Now I need an Yngwie strat!

  • @ckmoore101
    @ckmoore101 2 года назад +11

    I don't think I have gone 7 days since 1987 without listening to at least one Yngwie song. Some goes for Satch. Ynqwie is a great litmus test for if i want to talk guitar oriented music with. If they think he is mindless speed, with no "soul", or "feel'........ how about those Chiefs? :)

    • @taimaishu-nao1922
      @taimaishu-nao1922 2 года назад +1

      Those who say that generally have never heard an Yngwie song in their life. Heaven Tonight was my introduction. You Don’t Remember (I’ll Never Forget) is another absolute banger.

  • @Thechozenmatt
    @Thechozenmatt 2 года назад +10

    Yngwie is the only guy that can make alternate picking sound like a sweep

  • @luckydog-287
    @luckydog-287 Год назад

    Haven't heard of Yngwie until just lately. What a GREAT GUY! God bless the Yngwie!

  • @brunolevasseur
    @brunolevasseur 2 года назад +1

    I' ve scalloped myself my Squier with rosewood fingerboard, what a nice sensation !
    Only 10 seconds after first try to be in the ease of playing.
    It brings some new expressions we discover immediatly, especially the left hand vibrato.

  • @Jimjolnir
    @Jimjolnir 2 года назад +3

    Because of Yngwie, I threatened to scallop one of my guitars, finally dug in around 2019 (only took me about 15 years to do so!). There's no gimmick, it just feels better to me. It's like playing on air. Chords were a little iffy at first, in that you may use more force on some fingers and not others (mostly applies to cowboy chords), but from about the 7th fret up it becomes increasingly impossibly to bend notes into the board (for this reason, some, especially the heavy-handed, will only start scalloping from the 5th or 7th frets). All in all playing scalloped taught me how to play softer and I think has been beneficial to my fretting hand and my playing. I think scalloped should be the standard.

  • @PeterDad60
    @PeterDad60 2 года назад +3

    Scalloped fret boards came about when filing down the frets had to be taken to extremes to have an even fret height. It became necessary to scallop the fretboard in order to have enough fret metal remaining and protruding when your done. I know because I learned from experience. They play nicely together then.
    Edit: The real difference is not how they sound, but rather how they play! It's so much easier to fret notes on a scalloped fretboard!
    In some way's a Guitar with a scalloped fret board is a little like my Sitar and my Veena which have arched frets that are suspended over the neck and with these stringed instruments it is completely impossible to press the strings down unto the neck as the distance is close to 3/4 of an inch under the frets. In other words the strings are suspended about 3/4" above the neck and the arched metal frets are very close, right under the strings. The neck serves as the support of the frets but never is part of the actual playing of the notes. Go and examine a Sitar and Veena here on you tube to get a precise image in your mind so as to better understand them.
    The Sitar and Veena strings only interact against the metal frets and they do so as a way to partition the string into the individual notes. Also keep in mind that string bending on these arched frets is way more accurate that string bending on the mostly flat frets of any guitar. This allows for microtonal notes as a normal way of playing. I like these instruments a real lot! The frets of the Sitar and veena are movable to allow you to preset the intonation and individual scales if you wish. Normally, string bending can accomplish most music. But it's nice to be able to intonate to different scales by simply moving the frets. - Peter age 72

  • @nine9whitepony526
    @nine9whitepony526 2 года назад +6

    I listened to and loved Yngwie Malmsteen when I was a kid starting out on the guitar. That man is just a whole different level of talented.
    Side note* I scalloped my 2007 American Strat a few years ago and I noticed that I pressed too hard on the strings and it would make my chords sound out of tune in contrast with the open strings. I tried changing the way I fret my notes to a lighter touch but you know what they say about old dogs. Ultimately I quit playing that guitar.

  • @chrisg1577
    @chrisg1577 2 года назад +2

    I just saw Yngwie two weeks ago for his final stop. He was incredible!!!

  • @MrRandycollins
    @MrRandycollins 2 года назад +2

    Scalloped my first guitar with a Buck knife when I was 16 before I ever knew it was a thing. Always loved the way it felt. I play modern acoustic now and found a lot of benefits if you have nails and us extended techniques.

  • @aisforapple2494
    @aisforapple2494 2 года назад +19

    I always loved how Yngwie J. Malmsteen used his middle initial to distinguish himself from all of the other Yngwie Malmsteen's of the world. 🙄

    • @2good2betrue3
      @2good2betrue3 2 года назад +2

      Yeah, he has hordes of copy cats in his early days. He simply inspired hordes of NeoClassical wannabees.😂

    • @johnclark1925
      @johnclark1925 2 года назад +1

      Copied Spinal Tap joke from the Hearing Aid sessions… zzzzzzzz

    • @siriusfun
      @siriusfun 2 года назад +1

      I first heard that tired line 37yrs ago.

    • @aisforapple2494
      @aisforapple2494 2 года назад

      @@siriusfun
      Congratulations!

  • @nebakanezer13
    @nebakanezer13 2 года назад +15

    Killer sweep picking in that intro! Great interview. Years ago Yngwie was notorious for being a dick in early interviews. He seems more grounded and cooler now. Your Steve Vai interview was clearly your best. Keep it up. Mad respect for your musicianship.

  • @JuxtaCrucem
    @JuxtaCrucem 2 года назад +20

    Other guitar players changed from the 80's - their image and playing style. Yngwie stayed true to himself.

    • @michaelkarlsson5966
      @michaelkarlsson5966 2 года назад +2

      or he can't change? 🤔

    • @JuxtaCrucem
      @JuxtaCrucem 2 года назад +5

      @@michaelkarlsson5966 Yeah, but I really meant he did'nt get a hair cut to fit in, did'nt wear a sock on his head and change to grunge because it was more profitable. It is more rock n roll to not fit in and go with the flow, especially when you could do better commercially by copying everyone else. He invented a style of guitar playing - neo classical - by doing what he believed in. Few players can lay claim to that.

    • @michaelkarlsson5966
      @michaelkarlsson5966 2 года назад +1

      @@JuxtaCrucem ok, then I understand what you mean. I agree with you on that to 100%. But! Other players in a reasonably comparable situation, I am thinking about Ritchie Blackmore first and foremost, has developed their style and done new things without losing identity or the core of the person/artist. YJM seem to not be able to that or doesn't want to. I personally would like him to go toward classical guitar playing with classical guitar and the classical guitar technique. There's plenty of Bach lute piece transcribed for classical guitar that he could sink his teeth into...

    • @pigwing22
      @pigwing22 2 года назад +1

      @@JuxtaCrucem Imagine Yngwie playing in a grunge band

    • @JuxtaCrucem
      @JuxtaCrucem 2 года назад +1

      @@pigwing22 🤣!

  • @trevorgwelch7412
    @trevorgwelch7412 2 года назад +1

    I had a Custom Shop Malmsteen Strat - Amazing guitar .

  • @TachoSJ
    @TachoSJ Месяц назад

    I inherited two strats with scalloped fretboards from a friend who passed. He was a big Yngwie fan. Those guitars are so awesome to play.

  • @photondebuger45
    @photondebuger45 2 года назад +4

    Best words by him because he is saying everyone can do it but you have to put your heart into it, put in all of your effort to get there. No short cuts is beautiful because everyone tries to like show you a "short cut" when it's really just false hope really to get good quick. You learn a instrument because you love it and are fascinated by it and love music, that's that passion that burns for the motivation to play. You don't play to impress and show off, i saw someone's profile on Facebook he took a picture with a guitar in a guitar center with the big dumb tag on it and holding in like a beginner (i say that because I'm sure he didn't get bit by the guitar bug to buy it and another one and another one and another one...) And well trying to fret an A chord wasn't bad but he was still looking at his hand when they took the picture. That kinda thing really does grind my gears just a little but i cant tell them what to do. But what I can do is try to inspire, that happened with me at guitar center when i was farting around on some guitars where someone was like teaching i think someone how to play. After i was done noodling around he stopped me and asked if i was the one playing on the next side over. Indeed i was but it caught me off guard but he complimented me on how i was playing saying i was really good (I'm not) i have been for some years now but that was nice to hear too. But he asked me how I learned and what i did to get where i am, i did say i was self taught still am but i told him straight up i didn't stop that grind i keep playing because i love the guitar. And he asked me to tell the younger gentleman what should he do and i told him "practice, practice for hours on end anyone is able to master the guitar it's practice is all you need and that drive to what drove to to pick up that guitar and to keep playing" just like yngwie there. I like saying there is no talent, just that you understand the concept of something to an amazing degree but talent make feel some things are unattainable to some. Guitar is one of the many things that get put under that, a master was once a beginner.

    • @2good2betrue3
      @2good2betrue3 2 года назад +2

      Yeah!, wise words from the Master himself, imagine playing until you fall asleep with a guitar in your hands just shows that dedication coupled with talent and "guts" will really take you to places. Also it's Yngwie's DESTINY to grow up and show his talents at a perfect time. (80's- he literally took the bar sooo high)....just have patience, practice and practice., but to balance it, Yngwie also told in an interview in his early years on why there's lot of guitarists who are so eager to be like him and practice day in and day out but still "can't do and shred" the way he does....His answer was a brutal honest dose of truth: "You can only do certain things depending on the limits of your God given talent"...you can improve massively thru practice, but you will hit a plateau where you can no longer progress despite the insane amount of practice, I think only then you have reached the limits of your "talent". it's also a gift, Not ALL can be Yngwie Malmsteen. 😉

  • @Blakk69
    @Blakk69 2 года назад +20

    back in the day, some friend (who was a friend with Yngwie too) told me, that Yngwie can play "Made in Japan" by Deep Purple note per note and with mistakes and improvs by Blackmore...Yngwie was a HUGE fan of Blackmore and copied scalloped neck after him

    • @chrisorrell3066
      @chrisorrell3066 2 года назад +1

      I forgot he did also have or used a scallop neck as well huh? Good call I totally forgot. He is another phenomenal player.

    • @ΣΤΕΡΓΙΟΣΧΡΥΣΟΣΤΟΜΙΔΗΣ2022
      @ΣΤΕΡΓΙΟΣΧΡΥΣΟΣΤΟΜΙΔΗΣ2022 2 года назад +4

      @@chrisorrell3066 Blackmore did it way before Yngwie.

    • @ShiroiTengu
      @ShiroiTengu 2 года назад

      @@ΣΤΕΡΓΙΟΣΧΡΥΣΟΣΤΟΜΙΔΗΣ2022 so did Uli Jon Roth

  • @davids5080
    @davids5080 2 года назад +6

    Mr. "I HATE DONUTS!" Himself! Love to see Yngwie here. Hes so much more friendly when there's no donuts involved.

  • @stephenb3414
    @stephenb3414 Год назад

    yngwie saying the words "blood, sweat, and tears" is very inspirational in the regards to getting literally anything done in your life.

  • @danafoxx6587
    @danafoxx6587 2 года назад +1

    Puts on a hell of a show. Unforgettable. Loud af and trebly-shrill but can't stop listening.

  • @AllegoryofPatrick
    @AllegoryofPatrick 2 года назад +3

    Respect to the Legend 🤘

  • @RezaMatix
    @RezaMatix 2 года назад +3

    Yngwie. A living legend.

  • @elenka.svaliva2
    @elenka.svaliva2 Год назад +4

    The guy who knows most about scalloped guitar is Ritchie Blackmore not Malmsteen. Actually, Malmsteen did it because of Ritchie. 😄.

  • @nasticanasta
    @nasticanasta Год назад +2

    That is what Yngwie was talking about with higher frets or x-jumbo frets, I have an ESP with x-jumbo frets and my fingers don't touch the board. And from what I learned growing up, scalloped fretboards were used for practicing, to make you faster and more articulate. the idea is, and I have read this so many times, is the harder you push on the string actually slows you down, pressing too hard puts the string out of tune so you have to use a light touch which equates to less time spent on the string thusly faster fingering

  • @donmcdonald4874
    @donmcdonald4874 Год назад +1

    Great video! The scalloped neck sounds more lively and fatter. Listen to both strats you are playing in the video and it is so apparent.
    I saw Yngwie for the second time last spring at a small venue in Denver. The first time had to have been 30 years earlier. I have to say it was one of the funniest concerts in my life. Everyone there was completely into Yngwie’s playing. It is so much different to watch him play live than listening to an album. It’s like watching a sporting event live vs. listening to it on the radio.
    Yngwie appeared to be having a lot of fun playing. At one part, when he was playing a more quiet song on an electric classical guitar, I believe maybe a Chet Atkins CE, he had a buzzing guitar chord. A younger Yngwie may have handled it much differently, but he just laughed and shrugged raising his arms like the emoticon and played on. The crowd laughed with him.
    I have a first series Jeff Beck signature guitar with a scalloped rosewood neck and just love it. I will never sell that one.

  • @marcinmcula99
    @marcinmcula99 2 года назад +43

    As far as I know Ritchie Blackmore was the first guy to do it on an electric guitar

    • @EmilianoZap
      @EmilianoZap 2 года назад +5

      Sure but that guy it's really hard person to talk to his ego is bigger than ywngie's and thats already a stretch

    • @igormaxbr01
      @igormaxbr01 2 года назад

      You sure he did before Tommy Iommi ?

    • @zinoliopas
      @zinoliopas 2 года назад +8

      ​@@igormaxbr01 Yes Ritchie was MUCH earlier. He also invented metal because he was much earlier, heavier, faster and more technical.

    • @zinoliopas
      @zinoliopas 2 года назад +4

      ​@@EmilianoZap No he doesn't have any ego. I met him once at a bar and he was so nice! I bought him a beer too and we talked abt lots of stuff including DP, Rainbow, Blackmore's nigh and also abt gear and guitars...super down to earth he was

    • @marcinmcula99
      @marcinmcula99 2 года назад +1

      @@zinoliopas he didn't invent it. You can't really pinpoint the invention of metal. It happened somewhere around 1969/1970 between led zeppelin's and black sabbath's debut albums and deep purple's in rock. As far as technicality you had Alvin Lee (fastest guitarist on earth in 1969), Jan Akkerman from focus, Terry Kath from Chicago, Michael Schenker and Uli Jon Roth and probably other guys I don't know

  • @GrahamsYouTube
    @GrahamsYouTube 2 года назад +31

    Yngwie got bad rap over the years for being a poser, but in fairness he has earned the right to be that way as he is one of the finest guitarists to ever pick one up

    • @FuriousGeorge_
      @FuriousGeorge_ 2 года назад +5

      A poser?? never heard that ... people give him shit for being stuck in the 80's

    • @Murlow-t2k
      @Murlow-t2k 2 года назад

      @@FuriousGeorge_ Nah people talk shit about him because his of is gigantic ego but man he is good on guitar. One of the best guitarists ever

    • @FuriousGeorge_
      @FuriousGeorge_ 2 года назад

      @@Murlow-t2k I mean yeah that too and the fact he never got out of the 80s.

  • @MichaelEMJAYARE
    @MichaelEMJAYARE 2 года назад +16

    Honestly I feel like I can hear the difference. Its a more….hollow sound? Maybe? It is less snappy/clanky, you dont hear the strings snap against the board.

  • @seancurtin5131
    @seancurtin5131 2 года назад

    Thanks for sharing and wow to chat with the great Yngwie, what a treat.

  • @wheelie63
    @wheelie63 2 года назад

    probably the best interview with mr. Malmsteen that i have heard, usually he is not quite so down to Earth, .......and good advice too.

  • @Badomen_5150
    @Badomen_5150 2 года назад +8

    Yngwie still has a webcam from 2007

    • @ckmoore101
      @ckmoore101 2 года назад

      plot twist, this actually was an interview from 2007.

  • @jonlavigne3270
    @jonlavigne3270 2 года назад +5

    Wow, he looks really healthy. I was never a fan of his songs, but you have to acknowledge his skill and dedication.

  • @benwilshire
    @benwilshire 2 года назад +1

    So sick to have the man himself on the show! Epic video Tyler, keep hold of that YJM Strat I regret selling mine!

  • @glfriendliness9793
    @glfriendliness9793 2 года назад +1

    Yngwie used to get his neck scallop work done by Larry Lashbrook of Fort Lauderdale! I'd had adjustment work done by Larry a few times, he's show me his shop. Inside, he had about 5 of Yngwies pale Strats....Ferrari stickers on the backs of every one.
    Awesome!

  • @dnantis
    @dnantis 2 года назад +3

    I am just NUMBED on how small movements his Rt picking hand makes !
    Men his technique is AMAZINGLY GOOD AND FLAWLESS plus he almost always anchors his Rt hand using his pinky finger, which many teachers say it is a fatal error to do that !!

    • @nicholasdorazio10
      @nicholasdorazio10 Год назад

      Do they really say that!?!? whoa!!

    • @differentbutsimilar7893
      @differentbutsimilar7893 Год назад

      @@nicholasdorazio10 I've been hearing that one for years.
      To me, it's not AUTOMATICALLY bad. Anchoring becomes bad when you are 'pushing-off' of the anchor and engaging more muscles connected to your fingers and forearm in situations where using the wrist alone is far more economical. Ideally, just resting a pinky, or the pinky side of your palm on the guitar or bridge for stability is actually helpful in some instances.
      What's important is that you can do it without introducing tension, or moving the 'moment' of your picking action to the fingers. I think you have to let the pinky give, or anchoring will eventually prove problematic. If the pinky is rigid, the wrist can't move. As long as it is your wrist still doing MOST of the picking instead of your fingers or forearm, you're probably fine. I especially like it for super-tiny picking motions that are more timing than speed - you can ride a little on the pinky for a little better timing precision. I like this for hybrid legato runs where I may only pick every third or fourth note. Just makes it easier to 'rack' my hand so that the pick can slowly follow the strings up and down, with a little pinch of the pick topping off the energy in long runs of multiple ascending and descending pivots. It actually KEEPS me from throwing too much forearm in. And you probably won't even see that I'm almost constantly anchoring.
      Sometimes I also anchor to make bigger, more expressive diagonal pick strikes that come in from greater distance. I think for people watching, it just looks more enticing, like you're really getting into it. But practically speaking, it gives me triangulation to AIM that diagonal strike, which to me has its own sort of 'dig' to it that I like to lead sustained bends with.
      The forearm combo is where you get a lot of strain and inefficiency, where anchoring will slow you down and wear you out majorly. Picture someone rigidly planting their pinky on the guitar, locking the wrist, and going basically full forearm. That is where anchoring got a bad rep. Newbies often lean more heavily on forearm because it is just more intuitive, and anchoring can encourage them to keep doing it because again, if your pinky is rigidly planted on the guitar, you actually cannot turn your wrist without lifting the pinky. Meanwhile, limited access to strumming and wrist-alternate picking boxes them in.
      Personally, I see nearly every experienced player alternate on grip, anchoring, etc. There is no 'one' picking motion that works for everything. Part of being a good guitarist is studying and optimizing your OWN movements for the sounds that you want and the hands that you have. For instance, I have long hands with such angulation on my pinky fingers that an orthopedic thought I must've broken them and not had them healed right. They bend outwards and back. Because of this angulation, they extend further when fully open. On the fretboard, this makes chord shapes that are easy for others, harder for me. Meanwhile, I form shapes with stretches that cause other people pain just looking... and yet in 15 years with those shapes, they are ever-painless for me to form.
      There comes a point where you have to asses your own strengths and weaknesses, learn what actually is and isn't a compromise for you in particular. Some will do better anchoring in certain situations. I think the important thing in any guitar-playing motion is to stay conscious of the how and why. If you have a developed technique that intentionally features anchoring, that's very different from just "I started anchoring 2 weeks in because it felt easier, and just never thought about it again."

  • @skeptic_individual
    @skeptic_individual 2 года назад +14

    I recently scalloped my own guitar and it's not that hard it's just time consuming

  • @streetDAOC
    @streetDAOC Год назад +29

    Crazy! A scalloped fret board sounds EXACTLY like an un-scalloped fret board! Wild! Thanks for the video 🙏👍👍

    • @TranceEnd2024
      @TranceEnd2024 Год назад

      you must have really shitty headphones.

    • @donquixote8462
      @donquixote8462 Год назад +1

      Good thing it's about how it plays not the sound.😂

    • @streetDAOC
      @streetDAOC Год назад

      @@donquixote8462 read the title again pal 😂😂😂😂

  • @matarnold1371
    @matarnold1371 2 года назад +7

    the nicest i’ve ever seen him be. although i think he gets a bad rap. he’s like that crazy uncle, a genius but in a way that nobody understands

    • @2good2betrue3
      @2good2betrue3 2 года назад

      He's really very nice, cool and funny when you meet him. He signed my guitars and will take a pic with fans. very charismatic guy.😃

  • @SLO4SpeedBump
    @SLO4SpeedBump 2 года назад +1

    What Malmsteen didn't tell you is when he was much younger he practiced long hours playing to tape recorded music on a recorder that had a gear drive that played the music faster then normal speed. He's an amazingly talented musician..........so are you. Thanks for the video.

  • @WoodsyOU812
    @WoodsyOU812 Год назад +2

    Love Yngwie, total legend. As for scalloped boards I took a gamble and picked up a mid-90's Japanese YJM Strat, which has a shallower scallop than the US models. I love it, so fun to play, would recommend everyone try scalloped boards

  • @billmozart7288
    @billmozart7288 2 года назад +7

    The original neoclassical guitar villain. Now you just gotta be your own tuner