What a really great lesson. you are not only a tremendously talented player but a really goog teacher. you know how to break things down and clearly explain them.
I found this video because I watched the Greer Lightspeed on your pedalboard wich my favorite pedal and then came over this lesson, I’ve been the mediocre guitar player who buys gear but doesn’t play very well, but I can tell I just learned in this lesson what I haven’t in 30 years, thank you so much Corey, God bless you!
You literally just made CAGED click for me. I knew my chord shapes and could play the minor pent in each, but hadn't figured out how to take that final step to connect them together. Now I'm noodling over backing tracks and jumping between shapes like I know what I'm doing, feels amazing
hey man where were you when I was 14? My life would've been completely different. At 60 time to start all over again thanks so much you're a great teacher
Coey, Thank you for your channel and your simple explanations. The most simple connection that I missed all of the sudden comes alive. This rift is now a part of my basic knowledge to build upon. 🤯 thanks again
Hello from Greece. i am a guitar teacher , and doing Progressive rock music with my band. I want to express my opinion on your wonderful chanel, and all the knowledge you provide, both to beginers and advanced musicians. Greetings and keep up with the good work
Corey, just came across your channel by my friend’s recommendation, and this video really helps me to figure out what’s going on in an easy and fun way, suddenly some bits and pieces in my head are connected 😆 Great video
Hi there Corey - Eddie in the UK here. I've heard several Guitar " Teachers " say you can't learn guitar by watching RUclips but this has totally blown all that sh*t away Corey ! Thanks for such great lessons and for the way you put the nitty gritty stuff across in your videos Buddy. I feel I can now make some progress in getting outside the G Minor Pentatonic Box I've lived in for too long ! Keep "em coming please my friend - they are much appreciated ! ! ! Best Regards . . . Eddie.
Great video on connecting patterns across the fretboard. Once you know where the intervals and roots are,, you can go anywhere in any key. My brain still thinks the major pentatonic but it's "relatively" easy to translate this to the minor. Thank you.
Thank you Corey. I am going to watch this again tomorrow. As I am very tired right now and need to sleep. I have been playing guitar for a lot of years. But what you are showing me I can now see what is happening. Light is on. Thank you.
Great lesson! I’ve been playing for over 30 years and touring/gigging for over 25 years. But I’m always looking to learn. Your videos are always fun and eye opening even for experienced players. I appreciate what you do and thank you for all the fantastic content you put out!
Idk why I ignored lesson starts at 10:46....but glad I did! Wealth of knowledge just understanding your teaching method. Thank you. After a year self taught THIS MAKES SENSE! Took me about an hour to watch because I was stopping and going to backing tracks I been stuttering on since 2020 and applying real time..fuck.sir, Ty
Great job dude. It was just a dependent clause, but I guess you're absolutely right: The real secret to get all of this stuff under the fingers is to learn it in small pieces. Step by step. Thanks a lot for your good advice. It's just great to have you as my teacher.
Hi Corey ....you have fixed alot of issues that i have on guitar,your teaching skills are excellent,you also dont go off the script,your a Star ....thanks mate
Dude, I don't know how long you've been on RUclips (I just found your channel tonight!) but you should have like 3 million subs!!! Awesome instruction that even an old drummer can understand!! Thank you!!
and yes it can be moved any where along the fret board... great guitar to... woah old fashioned epiphone to boot as well... bless you you're really helping beginners like myself at 56 lol...
Superb lesson, I've actually learnt something that's simple, fun and can be played around with for many days, weeks and months to come. I love your style and you teach at a pace I can keep up with. Thanks Corey
Hey Corey, thanks for a great video. You helped me learn the notes of the pentatonic scale and how they’re connected really enjoy your teaching with it thanks again.
Thanks Corey one of your best. perhaps a follow up with how to rest in between, I have a problem with resting and to play something other than 1234 1234---thanks again
Great lesson Corey! Loved it. Hey... here's a suggestion for a lesson: Personally I never get it cemented remembering which position goes with which CAGED position. Can you do a lesson that perhaps is the next-step to this one where not only you connect the shapes but also share the chords in each position. So for example if you have some progression like: Am - F - G - Em then how you connect the whole thing in any of the shapes. I hope this is helpful and makes sense. Hopefully some folks can vote up on this idea. Great lesson again man!
First pattern minor pentatonic corresponds with the “G shape” chord. Second pattern goes with E, and so on. I think of D and C as the same position but with a few extra note choices, having a visual in front of you while learning these patterns is a huge help. Learning triads will also help to bridge the gap. Hope that made some sense.
Sagig72. I play guitar but am not a teacher. I did want to mention that the chord progression above is the main riff in Ted Nugent's "Fred Bear", except for the Em which sounds nice since it is the relative minor to the G chord. I think your question is touched upon by Corey towards the end of his lesson, beginning around 18:45. Also, All of your chords are in the key of A minor, so playing in the A minor pentatonic scale works, but you must target the individual notes that are in the chord being played. So when you progress from Am to F, target the C note, as C is in the F chord as well as the Am . Targeting the F will work, but you're leaving the scale and it'll sound different. The A would work too. Use your ear the music will follow. Hope this helps.. Upvoted. Happy strummin'
@@samstamos427 Thanks for both replies!! I actually just made up some random progression, it can be any. What I was trying to suggest is to have a lesson showing all the chords of the progression in any of the shapes so that we understand the transition. So... for example, if there is some progression such as: D-C-G (for example..) then what I find difficult is if I move for example to Position 3 on the C chord then how do I quickly find the G chord that's following in that position so that I don't have to move far enough etc etc.. It's just somehting I personally am struggling with and thought it's a good "next step" to this lesson.
@@sagig72 Sure thing sagig72. Corey reads these posts and I'm sure he's thinking about your idea of finding chord inversions for efficiency of movement. I know you've provided D-C-G as a random example, of course what immediately came to mind was lynyrd skynyrd's "Sweet Home Alabama", except the C is a Cadd9. ;-) Corey live streams every Thursday at 2PM ET. And all of his live streams are retained in you tube for future reference; he has several that touch on your inquiry. One lesson was on June 18th of this year entitled "How to use chords is your solos." Just enter that title followed by Corey's name in YT and you should find it. It's an hour and 14 minutes long; you can navigate through it at will to find answers to your question. The answer to your fundamental challenge is to understand the triads and their inversions. Jump to 23:45 of that archived live stream. Corey offers free stuff on you tube and several decently priced "TrueFire" courses. All the best.. Sam.
Great video Corey very helpful. Since i am a beginner its nice that you do this for us that really want to understand this. Then im more into classic rock tones maybe you can change that tone for a beginner like me just for the inspiration for coming videos that would be great. I know the theory is the same but anyway. Thanks again
amazinnnng! im a member of 3 different lesson platforms not one explains how to move across the board like that...there like, these are your penatonic scales now your on your own lol.....This is exactly what i meant when i said we need a teacher whos gonna teach the guitar like he remembers what it was like to once be trying to learn himself! when some one like myself whos on the guitar 10/12 hrs a day on a crash course you wanna be able to move around the board bc its inspiring and motivating to get out of that box thanks for the lesson ill be joining up
@@coreycongilio i definitly did! i wrote some songs someone took interest in! so, just built a really nice studio..sso, i been on a guitar crash course 10 hrs a day for 2 months..about to embark on a classic album! so i need your help, ill be tuning in...i can hire a great guitarist but this has to be all done by me! wish me luck lol
You can never get enough information on note targeting. So many others talk about it, and just play, you can never figure out what they are doing. Pointing at the roots as you did looks silly, but makes all the difference to understanding. Please do something similar, targeting the third and fifth as well. Would be assume.
I'm looking at the tab for this lesson and thinking that I could add in the blue notes across these patterns for some additional tones to include. The other thing I'm wondering is which of these tones make sense to bend, and how big the bends should be (full, half, quarter, etc.). I guess just playing it and trying stuff out will lead to some ideas. This is a really great lesson, and it's ideal for where I'm at right now.
Give you just elementary tips: ONLY for FIRST pentatonic shape !! (find yourself the note position on other shapes ) ONLY on the 1 chord !! (i mean while the band plays the 1 chord. Cause each chord has their own bends but it's tooo difficult to write em all) Anyway, don't stop here, dig deeper and when you understand the concept you can apply those tips accordingly to each chords (1,4,5). Full tone bending: .everywhere there's a 4 degree. from the 4 to the 5 degree (while the band plays the 1 chord). For example you can find a 4 degree on the G string. . Everywhere there's a flat 7 degree. From the flat 7 to the 1 degree : (while the band plays the 1 chord). For example you can find a 4 degree on the B string. Full Semitone bending : . to reach "the blue note" you already know. Less than a Semitone, just a flavour: .from the minor 3 degree to quite major 3 degree: For example you can find a minor 3 degree on the G string under your index finger.
I’m glad you enjoyed the lesson. Yes, you can absolutely add the blue note in and I’ll do that in a lesson this weekend. Without the blue note, you could benefit from whole step bends. A half step bend is doable with the blue note added or, when you add other tones from say the major pentatonic
Wow, this is an absolutely great video. The stuff in this lesson does answer a lot of questions about how to make things happen with these scales. Do you think shape or notes? Thank You Corey!
Another oddity about the scales is the notes are in the same positions in each pattern. Example: in shape 1, the 4th and 5th are on the A string and the A string is just below the 1st and minor 3rd on the base E string. In shape 2, the 1st and minor 3rd on the D string are just above 4th and 5th on the G string. you can locate the notes in all shapes once you know them in one shape.
Thanks for this lesson. I've got tonnes of information from it. Question: If I'm in a i iv v progression, what note of the pentatonic will be suitable for the iv chord? considering that the fourth note is not part of the pentatonic scale? I'm asking this question based on the information on the last part of your lesson where you talked about Roots, thirds and fifths...
If you're in the key of A and you use the Am Pentatonic for blues playing...the iv chord is say a D7. You can use the D(root) A(5th) or C(b7). All will work and sound good!
When playing blues, the minor Pentatonic scale is typically played over a dominant seventh (which is major) progression. Therefore the 4th is present. Example in an A7 blues, the 4th Chord is D7. The note D is the 4th degree of the Am Pentatonic scale.
It's only from your lesson that I could lrearn soloing connecting all the shapes. Wonderful teaching. Thanks a lot.
What a really great lesson. you are not only a tremendously talented player but a really goog teacher. you know how to break things down and clearly explain them.
I found this video because I watched the Greer Lightspeed on your pedalboard wich my favorite pedal and then came over this lesson, I’ve been the mediocre guitar player who buys gear but doesn’t play very well, but I can tell I just learned in this lesson what I haven’t in 30 years, thank you so much Corey, God bless you!
You literally just made CAGED click for me. I knew my chord shapes and could play the minor pent in each, but hadn't figured out how to take that final step to connect them together. Now I'm noodling over backing tracks and jumping between shapes like I know what I'm doing, feels amazing
hey man where were you when I was 14? My life would've been completely different. At 60 time to start all over again thanks so much you're a great teacher
As good as it gets for learning how to moving that pentatonic scale all over the fretboard. Thank you very much.
Coey,
Thank you for your channel and your simple explanations. The most simple connection that I missed all of the sudden comes alive. This rift is now a part of my basic knowledge to build upon. 🤯 thanks again
Such a great teacher. Providing tabs and backing shuffle for free is just icing on the cake.
Glad you enjoy!
You are just a great human being. Thank you.
Hello from Greece. i am a guitar teacher , and doing Progressive rock music with my band. I want to express my opinion on your wonderful chanel, and all the knowledge you provide, both to beginers and advanced musicians. Greetings and keep up with the good work
thanks so much!
@@coreycongilio i thank you more
Corey, just came across your channel by my friend’s recommendation, and this video really helps me to figure out what’s going on in an easy and fun way, suddenly some bits and pieces in my head are connected 😆
Great video
Not everyone that is a great player is a great teacher. You have a talent teaching
Appreciate that
U R a great teacher Corey IT TAKES A GREAT PLAYER A ND TEACHER TO BE EFFECTIVE AND UR BOTH !! Thank you
thx so much!
You taught me all the 5 shapes and taught me how to connect them all and it also helped me to remember all the notes on the fretboard. Thanks a ton 🙂
My pleasure!
thanks, as a teacher myself I aknowledge your such a good teacher !!
Wow, thank you!
Ha! “Pretty decently now”. God if that’s not an understatement. Holy Smokes man you are awesome. Thank you Corey.
🙏🏻
Hi there Corey - Eddie in the UK here. I've heard several Guitar " Teachers " say you can't learn guitar by watching RUclips but this has totally blown all that sh*t away Corey ! Thanks for such great lessons and for the way you put the nitty gritty stuff across in your videos Buddy. I feel I can now make some progress in getting outside the G Minor Pentatonic Box I've lived in for too long ! Keep "em coming please my friend - they are much appreciated ! ! ! Best Regards . . . Eddie.
Thx for that!
That was the best introduction to playing the pentatonic positions. Learning to play the target notes👍 , love the way you teach!!
Awesome!
Cory you are a great player and teacher, also you have a great sense of humor during your lessons. Thank you so much!
Great video on connecting patterns across the fretboard. Once you know where the intervals and roots are,, you can go anywhere in any key. My brain still thinks the major pentatonic but it's "relatively" easy to translate this to the minor. Thank you.
Thank you Corey. I am going to watch this again tomorrow. As I am very tired right now and need to sleep. I have been playing guitar for a lot of years. But what you are showing me I can now see what is happening. Light is on. Thank you.
Great to hear. Best of luck!
Great lesson! I’ve been playing for over 30 years and touring/gigging for over 25 years. But I’m always looking to learn. Your videos are always fun and eye opening even for experienced players. I appreciate what you do and thank you for all the fantastic content you put out!
Wow thx for that, Josh! More vids on the way for sure!
Idk why I ignored lesson starts at 10:46....but glad I did! Wealth of knowledge just understanding your teaching method. Thank you. After a year self taught THIS MAKES SENSE! Took me about an hour to watch because I was stopping and going to backing tracks I been stuttering on since 2020 and applying real time..fuck.sir, Ty
Great job dude. It was just a dependent clause, but I guess you're absolutely right: The real secret to get all of this stuff under the fingers is to learn it in small pieces. Step by step. Thanks a lot for your good advice. It's just great to have you as my teacher.
Glad it’s helpful!
Hi Corey ....you have fixed alot of issues that i have on guitar,your teaching skills are excellent,you also dont go off the script,your a Star ....thanks mate
I appreciate that!
Thanks for this Corey - great stuff!
Of course!!
Very good, seen many videos on Pentatonic this is best
Wow, thank you!
Thanks very nice keep up the great job excellent have a great one
Thanks for the visit!
Ive been in a lot of tutorials and lessons, but this channel helped me a lot! Thank you very much!
Forget the lesson, I just listen to a great player!
🙏🏻👊🏼
Very good teaching
Thank you!
Hey Corey, I want to tell you how awesome it is that you're provided tabs and tracks for these.... SO appreciated
my pleasure!
Dude, I don't know how long you've been on RUclips (I just found your channel tonight!) but you should have like 3 million subs!!! Awesome instruction that even an old drummer can understand!! Thank you!!
haha, thanks! Appreciate that!
Corey, you the man. Fantastic lesson. Thanks for teaching the blues so methodically.
My pleasure!
Thank you.
You're welcome!
Hey Cory...
Thanx a bunch for helpin us !!!
You & Bret are so inspiring and a pleasure to be able to tap into your own way of teaching!!
I appreciate that!
Yep... There it is...... Thank you for all your do Corey.....
Thank you Sam!
Thanks Corey, esp for TAB and Track, much appreciated...
Thanks man watching this was like one of those lightbulb moments for me excellently explained
awesome!
Ya, pretty decently......great lesson, great player!
Thank you kindly!
and yes it can be moved any where along the fret board... great guitar to... woah old fashioned epiphone to boot as well... bless you you're really helping beginners like myself at 56 lol...
My pleasure!
Fantastic! I have been looking for something that isn't just "boxes" but gets you moving around the fretboard, very well explained as well thanks!
My pleasure!
So Nice
Good stuff!it will help me a lot.
I’m glad!
This is very great 👍👍👍. I am a music student almost giving up but now,
I feel more like I wanna Continue learning guitar after your lectures.
That’s very kind. Keep at it!
Superb lesson, I've actually learnt something that's simple, fun and can be played around with for many days, weeks and months to come. I love your style and you teach at a pace I can keep up with. Thanks Corey
Glad you enjoyed it!
Thanks Corey, see you next Thursday!
See you then!
Hey Corey, thanks for a great video. You helped me learn the notes of the pentatonic scale and how they’re connected really enjoy your teaching with it thanks again.
My pleasure!
Well done Corey ..got so much outta this lesson
Thank you so much for all your lessons!One of the best teachers in you tube!
My pleasure. Thx so much
Thanks Corey one of your best. perhaps a follow up with how to rest in between, I have a problem with resting and to play something other than 1234 1234---thanks again
Thx Rick. Maybe check out the lesson on my channel about Blues Phrasing. Might help!
My head is about to explode right now!!😂😅😅😅😅 in the best way, all of the sudden now I feeling like I know what I’m doing.
Thats better than a Christmas present! Gracias!
Awesome in it's simplicity! Great lesson!!
Glad you liked it!
Excellent! its the stuff like this that helps me put the pieces together! Thanks Corey, got some more to work on this weekend..
Great to hear!
Corey, love the channel. I pretty much learned guitar by watching your TF videos. These youtube ones are fantastic! Good on ya!
thx so much!
amazing lesson! one of the best guitar learning videos I've seen, thank you!
Wow, thanks!
Hey Corey, love your delivery, dude. So good, thanks.
Thanks!
So needed this Corey, thank you! . Brilliant lesson as always.
Very welcome
thank you so much
Love your work. Simple informative. You are a great teacher.
Thanks so much!
Awesome lesson!!
Great lesson Corey! Loved it. Hey... here's a suggestion for a lesson: Personally I never get it cemented remembering which position goes with which CAGED position. Can you do a lesson that perhaps is the next-step to this one where not only you connect the shapes but also share the chords in each position. So for example if you have some progression like: Am - F - G - Em then how you connect the whole thing in any of the shapes. I hope this is helpful and makes sense. Hopefully some folks can vote up on this idea. Great lesson again man!
First pattern minor pentatonic corresponds with the “G shape” chord. Second pattern goes with E, and so on. I think of D and C as the same position but with a few extra note choices, having a visual in front of you while learning these patterns is a huge help. Learning triads will also help to bridge the gap. Hope that made some sense.
Sagig72. I play guitar but am not a teacher. I did want to mention that the chord progression above is the main riff in Ted Nugent's
"Fred Bear", except for the Em which sounds nice since it is the relative minor to the G chord. I think your question is touched upon by
Corey towards the end of his lesson, beginning around 18:45. Also, All of your chords are in the key of A minor, so playing in the A
minor pentatonic scale works, but you must target the individual notes that are in the chord being played. So when you progress
from Am to F, target the C note, as C is in the F chord as well as the Am . Targeting the F will work, but you're leaving the scale and
it'll sound different. The A would work too. Use your ear the music will follow. Hope this helps.. Upvoted. Happy strummin'
@@samstamos427 Thanks for both replies!! I actually just made up some random progression, it can be any. What I was trying to suggest is to have a lesson showing all the chords of the progression in any of the shapes so that we understand the transition. So... for example, if there is some progression such as: D-C-G (for example..) then what I find difficult is if I move for example to Position 3 on the C chord then how do I quickly find the G chord that's following in that position so that I don't have to move far enough etc etc.. It's just somehting I personally am struggling with and thought it's a good "next step" to this lesson.
@@sagig72 Sure thing sagig72. Corey reads these posts and I'm sure he's thinking about your idea of finding chord inversions
for efficiency of movement. I know you've provided D-C-G as a random example, of course what immediately came to mind
was lynyrd skynyrd's "Sweet Home Alabama", except the C is a Cadd9. ;-) Corey live streams every Thursday at 2PM ET.
And all of his live streams are retained in you tube for future reference; he has several that touch on your inquiry. One lesson
was on June 18th of this year entitled "How to use chords is your solos." Just enter that title followed by Corey's name in YT
and you should find it. It's an hour and 14 minutes long; you can navigate through it at will to find answers to your question.
The answer to your fundamental challenge is to understand the triads and their inversions. Jump to 23:45 of that archived live
stream. Corey offers free stuff on you tube and several decently priced "TrueFire" courses. All the best.. Sam.
@@samstamos427 Thanks MUCH MUCH Sam!!
With all due respect; Back to the roots. This line saves me on the gaps where I run out of ideas to play. Decent stuff finally !
Brilliant lesson as usual Corey so so helpful
Thx so much!
Corey" is 'The Best'👍☝👍☝👍
Nice, this was fun to jam along together at the end.
Sweet!
out of small acorns mighty oak trees grow eh ............ small steps .... as a beginner this is great stuff. bless you .
thanks for that!
Man, this is a great lesson, your teaching skills are amazing, thanks for sharing with us! Cheers
Thanks so much!
Just new to your channel and glad I found it. Everything so well explained.
Wow thanks so much!
Great revisit! thanks.
Glad it was helpful!
Great lesson, thank you.
My pleasure!
Great video Corey very helpful. Since i am a beginner its nice that you do this for us that really want to understand this. Then im more into classic rock tones maybe you can change that tone for a beginner like me just for the inspiration for coming videos that would be great. I know the theory is the same but anyway. Thanks again
amazinnnng! im a member of 3 different lesson platforms not one explains how to move across the board like that...there like, these are your penatonic scales now your on your own lol.....This is exactly what i meant when i said we need a teacher whos gonna teach the guitar like he remembers what it was like to once be trying to learn himself! when some one like myself whos on the guitar 10/12 hrs a day on a crash course you wanna be able to move around the board bc its inspiring and motivating to get out of that box thanks for the lesson ill be joining up
Glad you enjoyed and thanks for the kind words. Yep, I try to teach how I learned!
@@coreycongilio i definitly did! i wrote some songs someone took interest in! so, just built a really nice studio..sso, i been on a guitar crash course 10 hrs a day for 2 months..about to embark on a classic album! so i need your help, ill be tuning in...i can hire a great guitarist but this has to be all done by me! wish me luck lol
Nice guitar ... face ;) I bought ALL Corey's Truefire courses. He's THE school of blues.
Please make a lesson on how to use A major pentatonic on 12-bar blues using chords A7,D7 and E7. Please!!!!!
Try this! ruclips.net/video/ih00MAr5L2Q/видео.html
Nice
Super
hi corey from scotland
Hey!
You can never get enough information on note targeting. So many others talk about it, and just play, you can never figure out what they are doing. Pointing at the roots as you did looks silly, but makes all the difference to understanding. Please do something similar, targeting the third and fifth as well. Would be assume.
I just might at some point. Thanks for watching!
Guitar Teacher of the Year,
Awe yeah!
I'm looking at the tab for this lesson and thinking that I could add in the blue notes across these patterns for some additional tones to include. The other thing I'm wondering is which of these tones make sense to bend, and how big the bends should be (full, half, quarter, etc.). I guess just playing it and trying stuff out will lead to some ideas. This is a really great lesson, and it's ideal for where I'm at right now.
Give you just elementary tips:
ONLY for FIRST pentatonic shape !!
(find yourself the note position on other shapes )
ONLY on the 1 chord !! (i mean while the band plays the 1 chord. Cause each chord has their own bends but it's tooo difficult to write em all)
Anyway, don't stop here, dig deeper and when you understand the concept you can apply those tips accordingly to each chords (1,4,5).
Full tone bending:
.everywhere there's a 4 degree.
from the 4 to the 5 degree (while the band plays the 1 chord). For example you can find a 4 degree on the G string.
. Everywhere there's a flat 7 degree. From the flat 7 to the 1 degree : (while the band plays the 1 chord). For example you can find a 4 degree on the B string.
Full Semitone bending :
. to reach "the blue note" you already know.
Less than a Semitone, just a flavour:
.from the minor 3 degree to quite major 3 degree: For example you can find a minor 3 degree on the G string under your index finger.
I’m glad you enjoyed the lesson. Yes, you can absolutely add the blue note in and I’ll do that in a lesson this weekend. Without the blue note, you could benefit from whole step bends. A half step bend is doable with the blue note added or, when you add other tones from say the major pentatonic
beautiful sit man....
Thanks a ton
"That doesn't mean shit", I like that. LOL
Wow, this is an absolutely great video. The stuff in this lesson does answer a lot of questions about how to make things happen with these scales. Do you think shape or notes?
Thank You Corey!
Glad it was helpful!
Another oddity about the scales is the notes are in the same positions in each pattern. Example: in shape 1, the 4th and 5th are on the A string and the A string is just below the 1st and minor 3rd on the base E string. In shape 2, the 1st and minor 3rd on the D string are just above 4th and 5th on the G string. you can locate the notes in all shapes once you know them in one shape.
???
What’s the song called in the intro??? Someone please!!!
great sounds sir, I call this scale the "money" scale😂
Ha! Thx!
😍😍😍
Oops ! Sorry Corey - I forgot to thank you for the free Tabs & Backing TRAX ! ! ! BestvRegards . . . Eddie
Thanks for this lesson. I've got tonnes of information from it.
Question: If I'm in a i iv v progression, what note of the pentatonic will be suitable for the iv chord? considering that the fourth note is not part of the pentatonic scale? I'm asking this question based on the information on the last part of your lesson where you talked about Roots, thirds and fifths...
If you're in the key of A and you use the Am Pentatonic for blues playing...the iv chord is say a D7. You can use the D(root) A(5th) or C(b7). All will work and sound good!
When playing blues, the minor Pentatonic scale is typically played over a dominant seventh (which is major) progression. Therefore the 4th is present. Example in an A7 blues, the 4th Chord is D7. The note D is the 4th degree of the Am Pentatonic scale.
I want that guitar! Is that a vintage Casino or one of those new American series? And are those Lollar P90s? Sounds great! Dig your pedagogy too, btw.
Ha! It’s a 61 with original pickups. Pretty special guitar for sure. Thanks for the kind words!
Where do you get the tab? Thanks
I always put the link in the description and comments. Here ya go!
Get the TAB and Tracks here
coreycongilio.ac-page.com/unlock5pentatonics
What do you charge for a hour zoom lesson?
Unfortunately, I'm not doing 1 on 1 lessons at this time. Thanks for asking
The link for tabs is only an email subscription, I can't find the tabs that you've mentioned so many times. Or am I missing something here?
By the way thank you for this great lesson.
Hey thx for asking. Going through some changes in the Tab delivery. Email me through my site and and I’ll get you what you need.
Great video! Where can I get this backing track?
Thx! There is a link in the video description. Give it a shot! The track is called Shuffle in A and the TAB is labeled with today’s date
@@coreycongilio thanks man! I found it 👍🏻
Lesson almost as cool as u
Yay for the Pod GO presets! Sounds like you tweaked the EQ! More please!
Yeah I definitely did. I’ll have more for sure!
And S.R.V.'s
Great lesson in connecting the "boxes" I've seen this one before but do you have any other useful runs to connect some of the other patterns?
Have you tried linking pentatonics with open strings?