People always use that quote but always miss the part where he says if you HAVE GOOD EARS you will know. A lot of people do not have good ears and if you don't have good ears don't be contempt with if it sounds good it is good because that only applies if you have trained your ears. Too many people do not hear their own mistakes and settle for mediocrity. Thats not what yngwie did. His definition of sounding good is everynote is perfect and clean.
@@preston2636 another truth is that most people aren’t trained musicians and thus they can’t really tell the difference between 90% accuracy and 100% accuracy and unless you’re playing to an audience of exclusively professionally trained guitarists it doesn’t really matter so yes as long as it sounds good you’re good to go
Lol, to be fair it's not like any guitar tutorial videos offer any decent advice other than "practice." I mean, that's really the only way to get faster at playing. There's no "secret technique" out there.
Really.. Man you have no idea what your talking about! The man himself is not going just come out and reveal his secrets of his perfect playing?? Why would he.. stands nothing to gain. The main reason he won't slow it down.. is to make it hard as possible to pick up on his secrets and techniques he employs. Its absolutely100% All technique, and a very precise system. He picks 100% the same way every single time... However.. you need to know how he does this.. and why he does this.. for it to work? (its not so much a secret, just a every well thought out system that has definite rules). This enables him to perform lighting fast, perfectly ,every single time, getting the seemingly perfect order from chaos. No amount of practice is really going to help you.. unless you can figure out how he and the other greats do this??? that sounds like Secret Technique to me?
Exactly, he does have a special technique which he uses. One of his secrets to playing like this across string changes with smooth transition is to always end his last note on a string with an upstroke so that the pick is already in position to hit the new string. In order to make this happen with alternate picking, sometimes he has to use legato on one note before he changes to the other string to ensure the pick is always in the upstroke position before he hops to the new string to continue the lick.
@@richbailey8174 his solos might sound very fast, but one thing is that if any guitarist develops a speed on guitar at his level, he/she would have infinite potential to make tasteful music. His technique is just top notch level. He might have shredded too much, which is why he doesn't sound that melodic sometimes.
@@Siraj-123-q5p His music is boring...simple as that...I have been playing for nearly 60 years and am a graduate of Berklee so I don't need lessons thanks....:)
But...he can play slow. And acoustic classical. and blues. So what? Idiotic comments are idiotic? Jealous people who can't play at all make dumb comments?
Say what you want about Yngwie, but the guy knows his music theory forwards, backwards, sideways and upside down. His style may not be for everyone, but he is a genius none-the-less!!! ~Ken
Ellen Bultman Not really. He says at one point regarding A harmonic minor; "If you invert that from Am to Em, that would be Phrygian." This is not correct. If you invert the scale, or as we music teachers say, "Play the mode from the 5th of Harmonic Minor," you get what is called 'Spanish Phrygian' mode or 'Phrygian Dominant' scale which is a MAJOR scale, not a minor and works over the V7 chord in A harmonic minor. He knows limited theory, his technique is great though so I cannot take that away from him.
hmcccpp Sorry, the 3rd dictates whether a chord or scale is major or minor. Spanish Phrygian has a major 3rd, therefore it is completely major. The 6th and 7th degrees of a scale have nothing to do with that designation.
hmcccpp Sure but that does not change the fact it is a major scale type. Him not knowing that means he is not a theory expert like the original post I am rebutting said.
his speed picking is just unreal dude... but i just hate watching his tutorial videos!! before RUclips and the internet i bought all of his "guitar tutorial" videos! what a complete waste of money!! lol! for guitar beginners Paul Gilbert is the best teacher for me.
+Rohann van Rensburg Oh you got that right. Great comment. Troy Grady and his systematic analysis of Yngwie's picking and chunking, hands you the speed techniques of Eric Johnson, Michael Angelo Batio, Nuno Betancourt, Eddie Van Haylen, Malmsteen, Vai, Steve Morse and many more. Learning those techniques is way better than parroting riffs and solos or the muscle memory repetition licks so many fall victim to. It allows for diverse improvisation... or as YJM just said, a lot more things happen! It also affords combining those aspects of each of these master guitarists techniques, that can blend with your body of knowledge and ability. Nobody can pick up an axe and demonstrate such precision and speed without having already advanced to an intermediate level. You need to know your scales and pentatonics, as well as fingering position patterns first. Then these techniques make sense but whatever your level, the secret speed sauce, is in your picking hand but also, you've gotta have a sense of melody when playing slow. Crawling before running! Most guitarists learn by ear. Tablature doesn't include fretting like piano... How can it? Theres one middle C in a piano and 5 middle C's on a guitar. There's no way! There's no book or video for it, just practice. Sight reading on a piano helps but isn't necessary. That said. Picking and effective synchronization of your hands, at speed, requires confident picking techniques or else, outta sync you go, every time! Downward pick slanting, edge picking, sweeping thru one, maybe two strings... and chunking. Those are Yngwie's (And Eric's) secret weapons that fall into that "I don't know" category he mentioned. Regardless, it's getting your pick above the strings for string changes only on upstrokes, unless sweeping. Yngwie does this while almost exclusively using downward pick slanting. It's a hybrid of alternate picking and a devastatingly effective ability once acquired. Straight alternate picking like Morse or Batio, either requires the precise godlike "stringhopping" attack of Morse which, truly requires great aptitude to even hope to approach, or subtly alternating pick angles between up and down as Batio does. It's all about getting that pick above the strings without that up and down hopping motion. Get rid of that and all that's left is back and forth. Yngwie's picking hand looks like it's barely moving, Batio's is definitely moving. Every note is alternately picked except for Batio's sweeps which, are usually full on arpegios. Troy Grady's RUclips videos are entertaining, well edited and extremely empowering. His Cracking the Code series one and two, did for me what 35 years of playing in bands could not. It advanced me beyond the wall I hit 30 years ago. It will advance anyone who has reached that wall and... it's fucking free! So my advice to all who think they've hit a wall and peaked is... It's not a peak, it's a ledge. The peak is still up there! Most beginners struggle with picking at first, then it becomes somewhat natural and from that point, for the most part ignored. Most are focused on fingering. Understandable! The common mistake is, most never really focus on picking after that! Till now, nobody's ever broken it down. Even Yngwie here focused on his fingering hand and when asked to explain his picking, couldn't (Or wouldn't) even answer the question of WTF is he's actually doing! Seems a bit arrogant but I think he assumes that if one isn't advanced enough to simply watch and comprehend? Going note by note is a waste of time...and it pretty much is. But Troy Grady Channel did answer it! You want a blast of mind blowing speed, to integrate into your shredding or melodiously "soulful-when-slow", picking? Plug in your axe and watch both seasons of Cracking Code. Then you gotta practice practice practice, because it's gonna feel weird at first. Don't let that stop you tho. This is over 40 years of guitar talking here kids. Had I known this shit back in the day? You'd know my name today. I didn't have anyone to point me in the right direction and kick me in the ass. You do. Take advantage of it. Have a great day!
I'm not a guitar player I'm a pianist but what he said makes sense to me. It's just that most guitarists i see in the comments probably play by ear and just don't know enough of music theory and harmony to understand him better. just to summarize some of the things he said about his playing is that fast passages usually involve scales in different modes or repetitive patterns . To make these transitions-modulations between modes its almost necessary to know harmony of music. very often he uses diminished sevenths in the form of arpeggios. Of course, in the beginning he practiced them all at a slow pace and in the process he just grows up tempo. Now, in the video there are a lot of cliché things for him that is the reason he improvises so effortlessly.
Yup, most of his playing can be broken down into a handful of repeating patterns, not that it makes it any easier necessarily, but it is a lot more simple than people tend to realize.
If that's the case then the problem his really the TITLE of this video. Because he's giving absolutely NO CLUE whatsoever about how to play fast. And I disagree with most of the comments here saying that no technically gifted guitar player would give his secrets for free, that's false. Bernth, Ben Higgins, Steve Stine, The-art-of-guitar... And even well established shredders like Kiko Loureiro or even Steve Vai give more "secrets" away than this guy...
@@brunobailly7013 Learn the modes slowly. Gradually practice the modes more quickly as you travel up and down the neck. Combine the modes as your ear likes what it is hearing. That becomes your chosen style. Nothing beats knowing the modes and practice followed by practice followed by practice over multiple genres of music. Then maybe look at some violin or keyboard practical theory. Learn the insights given. Practice some more. But it seems to me, Yngwie is correct. Play music according to what sounds and feels good to you and your ear. I don't see how this is bad advice? He also hints at alternate picking style, the use of the legato technique, and how according to what sounds good to you this becomes your style and your speed. This is only my first listening tot his snippet of what this very skilled musician has tried to break down for the rest of us. But, I heard multiple really great method suggestions that if applied, could and would help any musician out in thinking on these suggestions. Ultimately each musician must judge for themself what sounds and feels good to play. I guess I'm just trying to counter the comments saying that there is nothing to gain from this video snippet. And I'll shut up now.. Thanks for reading if you did.
All the DAMNN harsh comments if you don't like it get out and don't listen to it. He's just a human. But I must say the guy is excellent at what he does and that is playing extraordinary fast and clean! Enough said.
I know I sure do appreciate his commitment to his craft! Been enjoying his music since I was 16 or 17 myself. Now 48 and still cant get over how amazing he is
All 'shredders' have good technique. Very very few however employ this with enough tastefulness and soul to justify their abilities. Yngwie is a very rare breed indeed.
His brain is wired differently than most. His technique and knowledge is so prodigious even he can't explain what he does. To accomplish that kind of muscle memory requires some kind of dedication to your craft. I've never followed his career much, but as a guitar playing fool myself I've learned never to doubt the mark this musician has made on the guitar world.
@@danielstrickland1013 Maybe, maybe not. A lot of players develop their technique just through learning songs and never really thinking about it. Alot of the django-style acoustic players have similar technique to Yngwie and they never really studied it, just grew up playing the songs.
Dude, it was the 80s. He didn't know all that he was doing and when he did, he hid it so no one could figure it out. Today you can know more about his technique than he does himself by watching a 20 minute Troy Grady video, and any 10 year-old kid can do what he does faster and cleaner because of the ease of information. Yngwie was a god then and no one can deny it, but today he's just a fat asshole with a fatter ego that still thinks he's on the top of the world when he clearly isn't
He is a legend and incredible, sometimes even to his own mind. And makes for a horrible teacher. Always explaining at lightning pace, "yeah, I play it like this".... and then playing it even faster lol
lets get real tho .. this guy is master-level professional, Top 1% etc.. he isn't gonna be giving out beginner-lessons unless he's completely broke and no one wants to pay money to hear his music. For someone to come to Yngwie and say "teach me", he's gonna assume you've reached a certain level of competency in your performance ability and understanding of music theory. There's no shortcuts to getting as good as this guy or other professionals.
Yngwie is a riot. He to this day has the best, most economical picking hand in the business. That's the secret to playing with speed and accuracy. I love his style and tone too...
Late to the party here but his trick is he uses his thumb nail and the pick making his picking lightening fast, this "lesson" was pretty useless TBH, as usual he is just showing us how good he is.
It is true but even as a guitar player when I saw him last year the show was super repetitive. He also had his band shoved into the corner with him center stage which is fine I guess. Kinda a dick move but it is yngwie lol. I will say this though. He had so many heads and cabinets on the stage and I’ve never heard so much sound coming from the stage before. Usually you here the house speakers but his amps were so loud the stage sound was louder than the house system. Nuts
Comprehensive understanding of theory, well thought out compositions, understanding of music history and his own contributions to it, and a perfect technique to express some of the most soulful playing in the history of this awesome genre of music.
I watched a vid where he spoke of America and his feelings about this country. He's more American than most Americans. He actually loves this Country. We all can be assholes occasionally. Yngwie's by no means immune. He's just a flawed human, just like all of us.
I've gotten that the pretentious thing is more of an act imo. I think it's part of the character he's developed as a performer because anytime you watch stuff with him 1 on 1 being serious, serious about music and the guitar, he comes off really nice and genuine imo.
Thanks for posting, learned some stuff from this video. Great to understand Yngwie's approach to his guitar playing. I like the diminished scales as well. They're great to string other riffs together and are basically made up of only four notes so they can be played anywhere easily on the guitar.
Even after all these years and countless other technically extremely proficient musicians have come (and gone), Yngwie is still an absolutely amazing guitarist, instantly recognisable - an original.
Regardless if you like his music or not, if you pay close attention to his picking hand, you will notice how fully devolved and synchronized it is with his left. Very small efficient movements, where no energy goes wasted. Using all kinds of picking techniques without even realizing it, pick slanting, rotational picking, angled picking, parallel picking, thumb and index squeeze etc.. Like he said, it is like knitting ha ha. Also, Incredible muscle memory where he rarely makes mistakes. I don't care what Yngwie says but that had to take stupendous amount of time to develop. No way he had any time for friends as a child.
He's so good that concepts aspiring guitarists study and break their backs trying to imitate are second nature to him. The criticisms from people saying "I prefer to listen to music" are jealous guitar players that can't admit that the guy is a guitar god, and they feel pathetic in comparison. Best guitarist ever. He's always good, always tasteful, I always want to keep listening. This guy has been touched by God.
to be totally honest here...I am not a Yngwie fan at all, but..ive seen him in concert 3 times and every time I seen him live, he was amazing. just blazing up and down the neck, saw him with Aerosmith in Mass on Aug 31,1986 I was in the first row and I was floored. never seen anyone play that fast, and as I am also a guitar player, I appreciated that. even though its not my style, I still admired it. but he is also very smart. this is a great video.
Yngwie was born with that ability,He cultivated it over the years. He's right about using your ears, that's the best way to judge your progress. Techniques can be learned,how well you use them is a matter of your inborn skill. Discovering how to play like yourself will make you unique.
HIs style is very improvisational. And there is very clearly a blend between legato, alternate picking, economy picking and sweeping. Each support a unity of direction. Like he says, he listens when he's jamming alone. He will take the direction (or technique) as he prefers, not as is generally understood but according to his ear. In essence, he is a "tone chaser".
Like him or not, agree with him or not, the man stuck to his guns. In this day and age, that's a sure way to be inspired. With all of the distractions we all have to deal with, by sticking with what you TRULY want, Yngwie has shown it IS possible to achieve greatness. Good for him. Great musician!
As soon as he started saying things like, inverting from Am to Em, and diminished whatever I just put my ukulele down and carried on watching 'Coronation Street'.
Yngwie can afford Ferraris due solely to his guitar prowess...He plays with passion, tone, and fire. If you don't like him, move on...I think he is phenomenal...He gets bashed so fucking much it's ridiculous...Of course he's an arrogant knucklehead, but I laugh at that and then watch him burn it up...
He showed you his bread and butter, you are just too stupid to realize it. He clearly says what works best for him. A harmonic minor Phrygian diminished augmented 7th major 3rd Link them with the 3rd in the Phrygian diminished
For me the most amazing aspect of his playing, which is mostly overlooked rightly so for his solo's, is his rhythm playing. And in almost all of his "tutorials" it's glanced over or rarely spoken or played. I love his crunchy rhythm playing and his effortless style while playing it.
***** What the actual fuck. Van Halen and Yngwie are completely different... Van Halen is well known for his awesome tapping solos and Yngwie is known for his badass super fast licks, sweep picking and legatos. Yngwie focused a lot in shredding music, bt Van Halen did not. Completely different. Period
***** The first solo I learned was Eruption by Eddie Van Halen when I was 14. I have yet to master any of Yngwie's solos due to the sheer difficulty involved. Comparing Van Halen to YJM is only showing your ignorance.
***** The fact that Van Halen started to shred before doesn't change anything. He never fully focused in shredding as Yngwie, that's all I said and it's true. Again, Van Halen is known for his tapping, but he never got into neoclassical shredding as Yngwie. Both of them were the first ones in their own thing. You're actually hating on music variety (and taste is subjective, you should know). We can all learn from both of 'em but you're hating on Yngwie for no reason, saying that he has no creativity, which is completely false (I love both, not a Malmsteen fanboy). If we're talking about taste and feeling, my way to go is BB King, and if we're talking about feeling in shredding, my way to go are Paul Gilbert and Steve Vai. But as you see it is completely subjective, they are not more creative than Eddie or Yngwie, just different.
***** I did. I played Eruption in my junior high talent show...was nothing special. There are plenty of kids far younger than I was who have mastered that solo. Just search youtube. Seriously, who are you to call someone you don't know a liar? EVH is awesome and very creative, and I loved learning his licks when I first started out. When I learned how to tap I felt like a god on the guitar. There is simply a huge difference between EVH and YJM. One you can learn when you start out if you put in a lot of work, the other you never really learn no matter how hard and how long you try.
Lol. To Sophon's comment above .There is some truth to this ...And his right hand is super efficient as some of you pointed out- it barely moves. Almost everyone says 'I am not into this Style - but he is amazing ' . Let me be the 34,465 th person to say that.
Yngwie might not be the most likeable person (don't know him personally, but that's what press and journalists usually say...), but the man is undeniably a genius on guitar - a true original, highly knowledgeable about technique and theory, instantly recognisable (which *very* few are), and he sticks to his guns.
Rob Davis With that said... you can read the same thing in magazines like Guitar World, Guitar Player, Guitar For The Practicing Musician, and just about every other legit guitar magazine out there. Yngwie is widely considered one of the greatest guitarist of all time. His technique and influence is profound. Also... Tom Hess(a great player and teacher) has written a article recently talking about how important and influential Yngwie Malmsteen is in the advancement of modern rock guitar playing. Yngwie is very highly regarded by players like Guthrie Govan, Paul Gilbert, Jason Becker, George Bellas, Kelly Simonz, Zakk Wylde, Joe Stump, George Lynch, Gus G, Slash, Joe Satriani etc... So in my opinion and the opinion of many others I would say Time Magazine has it right. He's definitely one of the best all time.
Time magazine put Johnny Ramone on that list and they forgot Robert Fripp, Steve Vai, Eric Johnson, Joe Satriani. That list is complete bullshit. Yngwie is amazing and he belongs on a top 10 list but he does not belong with the likes of Johnny Ramone and Kieth Richards...he is waaaaay better than them.
Dingo D. Manhunter That's unbelievable that Johnny Ramone made that list. I Love punk rock, but to compare punk rock's repetitive power chord riffs to some of the real guitar legends is a joke. A good band with good songs doesn't necessary mean the guitar playing is new/innovative.
Also you have to realize there may have been many guitarists who are great guitarists before him but he was the first to do what he does.. To bring all of the technics together.. Sweeping,arpeggios,tapping,speed he mastered them all and all other shredders since can thank him
Yngwie was a major influence on my guitar playing. I never cared what anyone said about him like saying he was pompous, arrogant, etc. I just liked his style of playing and it helped me to be a better guitar player. I love how he mentioned that (Allan) Holdsworth is his favorite legato player because he is definitely my favorite. I can totally hear Holdsworth's influence on Yngwie in his instrumental song "Marching Out" from the album of the same name. I can never get bored of listening to that awesome song. I still listen to lots of Yngwie's songs even after listening to them for over 30 years. He is great, and he seems like a cool dude to me. :)
+John Jachens All the naysayers say Yngwie has no feel and just plays scales, without realizing that the pentatonic scale and the blues scale ARE scales, and in my experience, are confined to those shapes. Yngwie, Dave Murray from Iron Maiden (SERIOUSLY underrated legato player), and good ol' Vai were what opened my eyes and expand my playing to new levels. And yeah, Yngwie's cocky, but if you have the bitchin' chops he does, I think you have every right to be cocky. The best piece of advice I heard was from my high school guitar teacher, he said listen to as much music as possible, and take influence from as many players as possible.
Frapzoid Indeed. Even if you decide to use "incorrect" notes in a key, they have to be used in the right context. Guthrie Govan did a great video on this. :)
+Tom Cass You mean like Theloniious Monk? No as much as I love Jazz that man DID hit some awful sounding notes. No, I'm not talking accidentals. There is a time and place for accidentals. On the subject of Jazz, trust me it's a lot harder to play fast on a horn than to play fast on a guitar. I know this from experience. I have the same complaint about 50's Be Bop players who were trying to show off their virtuosity just like Malmsteen. I don't listen to rock anymore but I like Eric Johnson better than Malmsteen. Eric plays fast AND tasty. Melodic. Malmsteen sound like he's doing speed exercises. Each to his or her own. No problem.
+Chickenbeek I can't believe you just mentioned that floppy insert I was just thinking that was where I first heard him. Seems like there was something special about the insert too, like it was an HD recording of some sorts.
I completely believe him when he says he doesn't know what he's doing with his right hand. Nobody was around to teach him that when he was growing up, so that is just a bit of serendipity mixed with talent and persistence. Segovia, the great Spanish classical guitarist, was always being asked what he was doing with his right hand. His technique is now, just like Malmsteen's, considered part of the curriculum when learning guitar. Unfortunately, for most of us mortals, analyzing and copying their technique will never generate the same results they get playing it naturally as part of their style. But hey, there are always a few freakish players who somehow pull it off anyway.
+Epictetus of Hierapolis lets see ygwieee (whatever)njust play 1 lick (riff) the opening of "hang em high" by Van Halen, want to impress me, your playing so damn fast I cant tell what your doing, an old school trick,, you, yourself yngvie dont even realize the mistakes you're making, stop this INDY500 death race fretboard gymnastics, i learned this early, if you dont know the lick verbatim, astound the audience w/blazing speed, haang it up man, make me feel something, wow I'm now hearing a blatant rip off of eric johnsons, cliffs of dover
+Epictetus of Hierapolis i dont think segovia used a pick tho he used all his fingers i studied him a little when i started playing i agree with you tho theyre both awesome
segovia, a perfect example and chet atkins, and many other masters hardly EVER shredded but when they would think outside the box and the song called for it, WOW did it stand out but this horseshit of doing nothing but shredding just bores the livin' shit outta me. I mean I can sit all day and just shred for ppl, and amaze them, but when it comes to something like claptons crossroads I blow thier minds. segovia, I don't think he used a pick either, but man could that master of guitar play, I would never cut heads w/ anyone like segovia, but malmsteen, I'll cut heads w/that meth metal "master" any day of the week, btw, you can thank ed van Heineken for this shredding bullshit.
+Epictetus of Hierapolis Guitar Licks are like math problems you need to figure out solutions. You need to figure out how to play each lick with efficiency. Troy Grady has excellent videos for cracking codes of guitarists! In this video he is using Downward Pick Slanting and Economy Picking which enables phrases to be played at the highest speeds. Does he really not know what he's doing or is he hiding the secrets he figured out maybe accidentally from practicing for several hours? Who knows!
Vibrato-George lynch Scales-Malmsteen Love it how he says' a bit like this' and he plays something utterly amazing and then he goes'like that' like it was nothing
Yngwie's vibrato has more soul than entire songs from most other guitarists, and I don't even like his music. Don't get things twisted, just because you can't comprehend more than five notes every ten seconds, doesn't make this is any less complex and impressive
finowa "Fucking bullshit pentatonic" If that i'ts all you can see in the video, you have a lot of things to study very hard, if you want to play as fast as him. The 7 modes and his variations could be a good start ;)
MrLongjohnsilver90 That's according to you because you're a hater. But ask Paul Gilbert, Guthrie Govan, Joe Stump, Tom Hess, George Lynch, Zakk Wylde and the legions of other players around the world whom he has inspired if his music is shit. See what they say, because they would all laugh at your ridiculous statement. Music is about personal taste, if you don't like his music that's fine, but to deny his impact on modern rock guitar playing and his musicianship is ignorant.
i see a lot of critical comments, all i have to say is i bet all those comments come from people that didn't heard him in the 80's when he came out and did what nobody else could do, when the best of the time played at 50 mph he came out playinh 100 mph with complete accuracy, new sound, clarity and melodic approach, in fact he introduced us to a new standard of greatness we didn't though posible until him.
This is VERY true. He created a new genre all by himself. It may have started with Ritchie Blackmore, but Yngwie, Jason Becker and Tony MacAlpine brought Neo-Classical into the spotlight. Without these 3, we wouldn't have Stratovarius (or the entire Symphonic metal movement), Kelly Simonz or any of the virtuosos that had influence from the movement Yngwie started.
You're wrong !! HE'S THE FIRST because he has created a STYLE..... many peoples worship the Beatles or the Doors or Jimmy Hendrix.... Never forget he owns the guitar hero legacy... he's the master... that's all.
No such thing as the best. Yngwie is pretty awesome. I don't know if he can do Robert Johnson as well as Robert Johnson or play jazz like Joe Pass, but who cares? Variety is the spice of life! (original saying.)
***** thanks for agreeing, I thought I would get a lot of flack on that one. But Vibrato is the one thing the kids i see play guitar nowadays seem to pay no attention to. It's cool to be able to shred through classical scales and stuff, but with out vibrato it's like a cold emotionless bitch....not tryring to say yngwie dosen't have emotion in his playing.
I always remember when he came out in the bands Stealer and Alcatraz. Everyone was blown away. Just a perfect blend of technique, classical scales, and heart wrenching blues runs. Just the best. Made me learn guitar and play for hours as a kid.
I was there. I was an up and coming shredder, on the road in a band. When Yngwie showed up, we were all blown away. People don’t realize how insane his emergence on the scene was. There are a million guys now. But, it wasn’t like that then. He was something very different. And he was so young. He elevated the instrument. He really did.
@@readmore4178 I had just started learning guitar and ppl were like you gotta hear this guy wingwang malmsteen! Lol. Those were the days. I was 13yo I think.
This is fascinating. To everyone saying he can't teach, how much teaching is there to "drill until you have dexterity?" He lays out his whole technique and all his tricks here. This is exactly how Yngwie plays fast.
Amen to that. The sour guys are hilarious like they want to be spoon fed and crying that they aren't. Well actually he gave a lot of info but the spoon feeding isn't good enough to their spoilt baby tastes 😂
Except he doesn't teach how to play fast. He even says in the video that he doesn't know and he doesn't pay attention. So since he can't teach it, he rambles about why he plays what he plays
I'm not super familiar with this guy, but damn is his playing impressive. How can you not like his playing? Sure you may prefer different music, but to see this in person must be insanity.
The Mystic King Conor McGOAT Well yeah, there's better players in my opinion. I don't know anything about this guy, other than the playing is pretty flashy. Steve Vai is my favorite. Nice guy and great player.
+The Mystic King Conor McGOAT Guthrie Govan: "I can also mention that seeing Yngwie Malmsteen made a real impact on me. He wasn’t this academic looking guy just standing there with his music stand. He was going crazy, running around the place, and throwing his Strat while playing a million notes per second. And when he stopped and played just one note, it sounded like a violin or an opera singer. Yngwie has an incomparable vibrato, which his detractors choose to ignore." "And then Yngwie, who, to me, demonstrates that it is possible to have all these chops and play these outrageous fast things but still sound like you mean it. This may not be a popular viewpoint, but when I listen to Yngwie playing, there’s as much sincerity as there is when B.B. King is playing. He plays every note like it could be his last."
Im 51 and have never got into his playing or style but the dude is a legend and one of the best to wvwr do it. Have to give him the respect he deserves. The dude doesnt even think about what he is doing he just does it. Says can look at what he does while he does it
His speed, skill and knowledge of the scales etc is amazing, really amazing. If he sits down like this and play guitar it is even better. Buy I wish he would slow down every once in a while. Then he would be absolutely perfect. But I would not mind him as a teacher that is for sure.
He is a little hard to understand, but his grasp on music is unmatched. I still cannot play any faster, but learned a few things about tying together different modes and come up with some cool sounding stuff.
He gets off on playing guitar. He's a natural and should be respected for what he has contributed to music. Long live the King! Yngwie fucking Malmsteen!!
Yngwie is a virtuoso. The Itzhak Pearlman of guitar. He plays classical music in a way the average person can enjoy. I had Rising Force when it came out and thought it was revolutionary. Just like EVH took the guitar beyond the 60's -70s style so did Yngwie in the 80s.
He still plays about like he always did...better than practically every guitar player who ever lived. How gifted?! Still awesome! How cool is it that he's so far out there even HE doesn't know how he does it #AutomaticeGenius
"You gotta practice 9 to 10 hours a day if you wanna be like Ywngie Malmsteen...and I know you do. You'll never have as much gold as him but I'll tell you what, start investing now." - Russ Parrish aka Satchel
You know... for someone into Megadeth, I'm surprised at you aggression towards Yngwie. To say that he's "talentless" is to shout out "I have a limited appreciation of music". Yngwie is many things (e.g. a wife beater and an arrogant prick) but without talent he is not.
These videos are actually really helpful. He's telling you the names of the scales he's using and he's giving you insight behind the theory instead of being like "here's some tabs. Figure it out."
There are great guitarists. There are mind blowing, awesome guitarists. Then there is Yngwie Malmsteen, who plays at a God level. And he just keeps on getting better. I love this man!
@JohnnyMavers that is a pretty stupid argument. First im a paul gilbert fanboy and can play most of his really hard stuff (racer x and solo albums) which is arguably harder then anything yngwies ever put out. I did learn some yngwie solos aseell but they are all really samey and pretty boring tbh. So assuming im a beginner is a pretty bold statement. Second, this is a technique video so you dont need any theory for it. Its about explaining technique and he always does a very poor job in doing that. Pauls 90s lessons are all on a really high level but hes great at explaining everything he does. Same with john petrucci.
"If it sounds good, its good"
-Yngwie Malmsteen '08
Best advice ever
“More is more.” - Yngwie Malmsteen, 2010
People always use that quote but always miss the part where he says if you HAVE GOOD EARS you will know. A lot of people do not have good ears and if you don't have good ears don't be contempt with if it sounds good it is good because that only applies if you have trained your ears. Too many people do not hear their own mistakes and settle for mediocrity. Thats not what yngwie did. His definition of sounding good is everynote is perfect and clean.
Truth
😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@preston2636 another truth is that most people aren’t trained musicians and thus they can’t really tell the difference between 90% accuracy and 100% accuracy and unless you’re playing to an audience of exclusively professionally trained guitarists it doesn’t really matter so yes as long as it sounds good you’re good to go
So, in order to play fast, you have to:
1) Be Malmsteen.
2) Play fast.
Amazing guide.
Lol, to be fair it's not like any guitar tutorial videos offer any decent advice other than "practice." I mean, that's really the only way to get faster at playing. There's no "secret technique" out there.
Really.. Man you have no idea what your talking about!
The man himself is not going just come out and reveal his secrets of his perfect playing?? Why would he.. stands nothing to gain.
The main reason he won't slow it down..
is to make it hard as possible to pick up on his secrets and techniques he employs.
Its absolutely100% All technique, and a very precise system. He picks 100% the same way every single time...
However.. you need to know how he does this.. and why he does this.. for it to work?
(its not so much a secret, just a every well thought out system that has definite rules).
This enables him to perform lighting fast, perfectly ,every single time, getting the seemingly perfect order from chaos.
No amount of practice is really going to help you.. unless you can figure out how he and the other greats do this???
that sounds like Secret Technique to me?
+Wheelio Really? Fuck, I thought selling my soul and slamming 8-balls was the secret.
+Daniel Stone
You make it sound like it's common sense. If that were true, people wouldn't spend tons of money on trying to figure out "the obvious."
Exactly, he does have a special technique which he uses. One of his secrets to playing like this across string changes with smooth transition is to always end his last note on a string with an upstroke so that the pick is already in position to hit the new string. In order to make this happen with alternate picking, sometimes he has to use legato on one note before he changes to the other string to ensure the pick is always in the upstroke position before he hops to the new string to continue the lick.
His technique is exquisite: minimal movements, hands and wrists relaxed, no effort, no tension, very smooth and organic.
and boring....playing riffs at lightning speed isn't really music
@@richbailey8174 Well, the title of the video is not "how to play tasty and please your grandmother".
@@marcblum5348 Yes...maybe it should've been called...."how to play real fast to impress 14 year olds who live in their basements"?
@@richbailey8174 his solos might sound very fast, but one thing is that if any guitarist develops a speed on guitar at his level, he/she would have infinite potential to make tasteful music. His technique is just top notch level. He might have shredded too much, which is why he doesn't sound that melodic sometimes.
@@Siraj-123-q5p His music is boring...simple as that...I have been playing for nearly 60 years and am a graduate of Berklee so I don't need lessons thanks....:)
"Yngwie Malmsteen is the most talented guitarist the world has ever seen, or will ever see."
-Yngwie Malmsteen
Him VS Buckethead 😊
This guy is a charlatan who became a famous musician without having an ear for music.
Every time he said "you know what I mean?" I was like...
nah man...nah
Matt Adams lmfao " I ain't understandin nothin... G" 😂
I did :c
absolutely right
"Hey Yngwie, can you show me how to play slow now?"
Yngwie-Malmsteen.exe has stopped working
My gf and I laughed out loud from this!
But...he can play slow. And acoustic classical. and blues. So what? Idiotic comments are idiotic? Jealous people who can't play at all make dumb comments?
yes agree there.i think the man is class his knowledge of music theory is 2nd to none,great guitarist
Jolly Voqar dude it's a joke
Matt Moves This player has left the match.
Say what you want about Yngwie, but the guy knows his music theory forwards, backwards, sideways and upside down. His style may not be for everyone, but he is a genius none-the-less!!! ~Ken
Ellen Bultman Not really. He says at one point regarding A harmonic minor; "If you invert that from Am to Em, that would be Phrygian." This is not correct. If you invert the scale, or as we music teachers say, "Play the mode from the 5th of Harmonic Minor," you get what is called 'Spanish Phrygian' mode or 'Phrygian Dominant' scale which is a MAJOR scale, not a minor and works over the V7 chord in A harmonic minor. He knows limited theory, his technique is great though so I cannot take that away from him.
xmoniker@hotmail.com phrygian dominant is a major, but actually sounds like a mix between minor and major like dorian
hmcccpp Sorry, the 3rd dictates whether a chord or scale is major or minor. Spanish Phrygian has a major 3rd, therefore it is completely major. The 6th and 7th degrees of a scale have nothing to do with that designation.
hmcccpp Sure but that does not change the fact it is a major scale type. Him not knowing that means he is not a theory expert like the original post I am rebutting said.
xmoniker@hotmail.com he doesnt need to be , he s got the "ear"!
His slow playing is faster than anyone else's fast playing. Love this man
Listen to Chris Impelliterri's SOMEWHERE OVER THE RAINBOW..it is faster.
i stopped listening to him in the eighties but damn his playing is still unreal. a true guitar genius.
his speed picking is just unreal dude... but i just hate watching his tutorial videos!! before RUclips and the internet i bought all of his "guitar tutorial" videos! what a complete waste of money!! lol! for guitar beginners Paul Gilbert is the best teacher for me.
Eclipse was the last straw for me half of the album is good and the other isn't then went down hill from there
+jhon lacaba He's a terrible teacher, but Troy Grady and Cracking The Code have perfectly deconstructed what he does.
+Rohann van Rensburg
Oh you got that right. Great comment.
Troy Grady and his systematic analysis of Yngwie's picking and chunking, hands you the speed techniques of Eric Johnson, Michael Angelo Batio, Nuno Betancourt, Eddie Van Haylen, Malmsteen, Vai, Steve Morse and many more.
Learning those techniques is way better than parroting riffs and solos or the muscle memory repetition licks so many fall victim to.
It allows for diverse improvisation... or as YJM just said, a lot more things happen!
It also affords combining those aspects of each of these master guitarists techniques, that can blend with your body of knowledge and ability.
Nobody can pick up an axe and demonstrate such precision and speed without having already advanced to an intermediate level. You need to know your scales and pentatonics, as well as fingering position patterns first. Then these techniques make sense but whatever your level, the secret speed sauce, is in your picking hand but also, you've gotta have a sense of melody when playing slow. Crawling before running!
Most guitarists learn by ear. Tablature doesn't include fretting like piano... How can it? Theres one middle C in a piano and 5 middle C's on a guitar. There's no way! There's no book or video for it, just practice. Sight reading on a piano helps but isn't necessary.
That said.
Picking and effective synchronization of your hands, at speed, requires confident picking techniques or else, outta sync you go, every time!
Downward pick slanting, edge picking, sweeping thru one, maybe two strings... and chunking. Those are Yngwie's (And Eric's) secret weapons that fall into that "I don't know" category he mentioned. Regardless, it's getting your pick above the strings for string changes only on upstrokes, unless sweeping. Yngwie does this while almost exclusively using downward pick slanting. It's a hybrid of alternate picking and a devastatingly effective ability once acquired.
Straight alternate picking like Morse or Batio, either requires the precise godlike "stringhopping" attack of Morse which, truly requires great aptitude to even hope to approach, or subtly alternating pick angles between up and down as Batio does. It's all about getting that pick above the strings without that up and down hopping motion. Get rid of that and all that's left is back and forth.
Yngwie's picking hand looks like it's barely moving, Batio's is definitely moving. Every note is alternately picked except for Batio's sweeps which, are usually full on arpegios.
Troy Grady's RUclips videos are entertaining, well edited and extremely empowering. His Cracking the Code series one and two, did for me what 35 years of playing in bands could not. It advanced me beyond the wall I hit 30 years ago. It will advance anyone who has reached that wall and... it's fucking free!
So my advice to all who think they've hit a wall and peaked is...
It's not a peak, it's a ledge. The peak is still up there!
Most beginners struggle with picking at first, then it becomes somewhat natural and from that point, for the most part ignored.
Most are focused on fingering. Understandable! The common mistake is, most never really focus on picking after that! Till now, nobody's ever broken it down. Even Yngwie here focused on his fingering hand and when asked to explain his picking, couldn't (Or wouldn't) even answer the question of WTF is he's actually doing! Seems a bit arrogant but I think he assumes that if one isn't advanced enough to simply watch and comprehend? Going note by note is a waste of time...and it pretty much is.
But Troy Grady Channel did answer it!
You want a blast of mind blowing speed, to integrate into your shredding or melodiously "soulful-when-slow", picking?
Plug in your axe and watch both seasons of Cracking Code. Then you gotta practice practice practice, because it's gonna feel weird at first. Don't let that stop you tho. This is over 40 years of guitar talking here kids. Had I known this shit back in the day? You'd know my name today. I didn't have anyone to point me in the right direction and kick me in the ass. You do. Take advantage of it.
Have a great day!
@@RohannvanRensburg Troy Grady learned how yngwie picked FROM those yngwie tapes, he just knew what to look for
Dude plays faster than I can hear
sean fried yes i agree. never go faster than your angel can fly.
Probably faster than he can hear too
basically he can timetravel
True
Slide guitar is faster, if you think about it. 😁😁
"how to play fast, according to yngwe:
learn your scales
play them fast"
Awesome.
I'm not a guitar player I'm a pianist but what he said makes sense to me. It's just that most guitarists i see in the comments probably play by ear and just don't know enough of music theory and harmony to understand him better. just to summarize some of the things he said about his playing is that fast passages usually involve scales in different modes or repetitive patterns . To make these transitions-modulations between modes its almost necessary to know harmony of music. very often he uses diminished sevenths in the form of arpeggios. Of course, in the beginning he practiced them all at a slow pace and in the process he just grows up tempo. Now, in the video there are a lot of cliché things for him that is the reason he improvises so effortlessly.
Yup, most of his playing can be broken down into a handful of repeating patterns, not that it makes it any easier necessarily, but it is a lot more simple than people tend to realize.
If that's the case then the problem his really the TITLE of this video. Because he's giving absolutely NO CLUE whatsoever about how to play fast.
And I disagree with most of the comments here saying that no technically gifted guitar player would give his secrets for free, that's false. Bernth, Ben Higgins, Steve Stine, The-art-of-guitar... And even well established shredders like Kiko Loureiro or even Steve Vai give more "secrets" away than this guy...
@@brunobailly7013 Learn the modes slowly. Gradually practice the modes more quickly as you travel up and down the neck. Combine the modes as your ear likes what it is hearing. That becomes your chosen style. Nothing beats knowing the modes and practice followed by practice followed by practice over multiple genres of music. Then maybe look at some violin or keyboard practical theory. Learn the insights given. Practice some more. But it seems to me, Yngwie is correct. Play music according to what sounds and feels good to you and your ear. I don't see how this is bad advice? He also hints at alternate picking style, the use of the legato technique, and how according to what sounds good to you this becomes your style and your speed. This is only my first listening tot his snippet of what this very skilled musician has tried to break down for the rest of us. But, I heard multiple really great method suggestions that if applied, could and would help any musician out in thinking on these suggestions. Ultimately each musician must judge for themself what sounds and feels good to play. I guess I'm just trying to counter the comments saying that there is nothing to gain from this video snippet. And I'll shut up now.. Thanks for reading if you did.
@@michaelromani2348 k
All the DAMNN harsh comments if you don't like it get out and don't listen to it. He's just a human. But I must say the guy is excellent at what he does and that is playing extraordinary fast and clean! Enough said.
I know I sure do appreciate his commitment to his craft! Been enjoying his music since I was 16 or 17 myself. Now 48 and still cant get over how amazing he is
Absolutely love his vibrato more than anything, and he's obviously a master fast player.
for me his shredding is articulate and musical unlike many shredders. i still enjoy listening to his music, even if its somewhat a novelty.
All 'shredders' have good technique. Very very few however employ this with enough tastefulness and soul to justify their abilities.
Yngwie is a very rare breed indeed.
His right hand looks so beautiful and calm even at high speed :)
That's the real key to his playing but it sounds like even he is unaware of it haha
I hope this guy sticks with it, looks like he's starting to catch on.
The father of modern shred...love him or hate him he's easily the most influential for that style.
I actually like Yngwie's rhythm/riff playing more than the solos. He writes killer riffs!
Thats true,crystal ball,demon driver just to name a few…always liked them more than the solos
I don't prefer it but I think both are amazing. Fire and Ice has so many killer riffs. C'est La Vie is awesome.
"Fast, slow, whatever". He's a funny guy. Slow does not exist with Yngwie :D
What do you expect when one of his inspirations is Niccolo Paganini who wasn't known for playing slow.
his slow, equals our fast 5x
geebuzem1 Hahahahaha..that true. :-D
The Chuck Norris of Guitar. "Slow" for Yngwie is "time warp" for the rest of us. :)
unfortunately, that's what she said...
His brain is wired differently than most. His technique and knowledge is so prodigious even he can't explain what he does. To accomplish that kind of muscle memory requires some kind of dedication to your craft. I've never followed his career much, but as a guitar playing fool myself I've learned never to doubt the mark this musician has made on the guitar world.
MikeBikerKickstand he knows exactly what he’s doing lol he just doesn’t wanna say
He knows what he is doing though
@@danielstrickland1013 Maybe, maybe not. A lot of players develop their technique just through learning songs and never really thinking about it. Alot of the django-style acoustic players have similar technique to Yngwie and they never really studied it, just grew up playing the songs.
Dude, it was the 80s. He didn't know all that he was doing and when he did, he hid it so no one could figure it out. Today you can know more about his technique than he does himself by watching a 20 minute Troy Grady video, and any 10 year-old kid can do what he does faster and cleaner because of the ease of information. Yngwie was a god then and no one can deny it, but today he's just a fat asshole with a fatter ego that still thinks he's on the top of the world when he clearly isn't
He learned his style from music and books written well before any of the other 80s shredders were born.
I don't care what some people may say, he is still 99.9% as great as he ever was.
He is a legend and incredible, sometimes even to his own mind. And makes for a horrible teacher. Always explaining at lightning pace, "yeah, I play it like this".... and then playing it even faster lol
The harmonic minor is the relative to phrygian dominant. No different than. Major and minor pentatonic. Different pattern that's all
And eventually learn all the modes of harmonic minor
lets get real tho .. this guy is master-level professional, Top 1% etc.. he isn't gonna be giving out beginner-lessons unless he's completely broke and no one wants to pay money to hear his music. For someone to come to Yngwie and say "teach me", he's gonna assume you've reached a certain level of competency in your performance ability and understanding of music theory. There's no shortcuts to getting as good as this guy or other professionals.
When I first saw his instructional video I thought it was a joke lol "here it is slow" then brbrbrbrb
Yeah... I gotta agree on the fact that as a teacher, he's an absolutely flabbergasting PLAYER.
Yngwie is a riot. He to this day has the best, most economical picking hand in the business. That's the secret to playing with speed and accuracy. I love his style and tone too...
Late to the party here but his trick is he uses his thumb nail and the pick making his picking lightening fast, this "lesson" was pretty useless TBH, as usual he is just showing us how good he is.
Love him or hate him...but Yngwie's playing is so mind blowing!
It is true but even as a guitar player when I saw him last year the show was super repetitive. He also had his band shoved into the corner with him center stage which is fine I guess. Kinda a dick move but it is yngwie lol. I will say this though. He had so many heads and cabinets on the stage and I’ve never heard so much sound coming from the stage before. Usually you here the house speakers but his amps were so loud the stage sound was louder than the house system. Nuts
it truely is…always floors me…😮
YES!!
I love his playing technic but hate his song writing! Over dated and never tried different stuff or even different sound
Watch video at 0.5 speed and listen to amazingly drunk Yngwie :)
That's more like listen to Yngwie after a stroke
2X speed for German Speed Metal Yngwie
So don't listen at half speed :)
hahahha enjoyed so muchhhhh!!!!!!!! thanks!!!!!!!!
LOL
Just got my first guitar today. Watched this video 4 times and now I can play all of the examples. Thanks Yngs.
Criminally underrated comment.
Lol. And at twice the speed.
Comprehensive understanding of theory, well thought out compositions, understanding of music history and his own contributions to it, and a perfect technique to express some of the most soulful playing in the history of this awesome genre of music.
"I dunno i just tilulululilililili and tililiilililului" basicly what i got from this
Amorr Winterstorm lol
Amorr Winterstorm whwhhwhw lol
That's what you were supposed to get from it.
And wuingggg wuinggggggg
Amorr Winterstorm Ahahahahahaha
Masterclass! By far one of the best uploads of Yngwie, in a lot of videos he comes across as pretentious but here he is genuine. What a guy.
I watched a vid where he spoke of America and his feelings about this country.
He's more American than most Americans. He actually loves this Country.
We all can be assholes occasionally. Yngwie's by no means immune. He's just a flawed human, just like all of us.
I've gotten that the pretentious thing is more of an act imo. I think it's part of the character he's developed as a performer because anytime you watch stuff with him 1 on 1 being serious, serious about music and the guitar, he comes off really nice and genuine imo.
Thanks for posting, learned some stuff from this video. Great to understand Yngwie's approach to his guitar playing. I like the diminished scales as well. They're great to string other riffs together and are basically made up of only four notes so they can be played anywhere easily on the guitar.
How can we not be grateful to the universe to have given us the good ol Yngwie 😊
Even after all these years and countless other technically extremely proficient musicians have come (and gone), Yngwie is still an absolutely amazing guitarist, instantly recognisable - an original.
Regardless if you like his music or not, if you pay close attention to his picking hand, you will notice how fully devolved and synchronized it is with his left. Very small efficient movements, where no energy goes wasted. Using all kinds of picking techniques without even realizing it, pick slanting, rotational picking, angled picking, parallel picking, thumb and index squeeze etc.. Like he said, it is like knitting ha ha. Also, Incredible muscle memory where he rarely makes mistakes. I don't care what Yngwie says but that had to take stupendous amount of time to develop. No way he had any time for friends as a child.
“I wasn’t thinking about what I was doing, but I knew what I wanted to hear.” Sage advice from the maestro.
Even though I don't like his style , I really bow down people who has a style and make it a kind of trade mark. He is Malmsteen dude
He's so good that concepts aspiring guitarists study and break their backs trying to imitate are second nature to him. The criticisms from people saying "I prefer to listen to music" are jealous guitar players that can't admit that the guy is a guitar god, and they feel pathetic in comparison. Best guitarist ever. He's always good, always tasteful, I always want to keep listening. This guy has been touched by God.
The king of neoclassical shred guitar 👊🏿
The smooth ,tight , effortless action of his picking hand is sick ! No wasted movement
to be totally honest here...I am not a Yngwie fan at all, but..ive seen him in concert 3 times and every time I seen him live, he was amazing. just blazing up and down the neck, saw him with Aerosmith in Mass on Aug 31,1986 I was in the first row and I was floored. never seen anyone play that fast, and as I am also a guitar player, I appreciated that. even though its not my style, I still admired it. but he is also very smart. this is a great video.
Yngwie was born with that ability,He cultivated it over the years. He's right about using your ears, that's the best way to judge your progress. Techniques can be learned,how
well you use them is a matter of your inborn skill.
Discovering how to play like yourself will make you unique.
How well you use them is a matter of how much you practice and how much you love making music. Nothing less, nothing more.
HIs style is very improvisational. And there is very clearly a blend between legato, alternate picking, economy picking and sweeping. Each support a unity of direction.
Like he says, he listens when he's jamming alone. He will take the direction (or technique) as he prefers, not as is generally understood but according to his ear. In essence, he is a "tone chaser".
Like him or not, agree with him or not, the man stuck to his guns. In this day and age, that's a sure way to be inspired.
With all of the distractions we all have to deal with, by sticking with what you TRULY want, Yngwie has shown it IS possible to achieve greatness.
Good for him. Great musician!
Well explained Yngwie. I started playing as fast as you in 30 seconds after watching your clear, concise explanation.
As soon as he started saying things like, inverting from Am to Em, and diminished whatever I just put my ukulele down and carried on watching 'Coronation Street'.
Ha,ha! This comment is awesome!
he didnt shows us shit. only thing he showed us is how awesome it is
Yes he did, he shows the phrygian mode and tells you to practice your scales. Which is correct, there is no substitute for hard work and practice.
He shows that you must be pationnate.
When he plays it's like he put's is brain off focus on music and just let go.
Yngwie can afford Ferraris due solely to his guitar prowess...He plays with passion, tone, and fire. If you don't like him, move on...I think he is phenomenal...He gets bashed so fucking much it's ridiculous...Of course he's an arrogant knucklehead, but I laugh at that and then watch him burn it up...
He showed you his bread and butter, you are just too stupid to realize it.
He clearly says what works best for him.
A harmonic minor Phrygian diminished augmented 7th major 3rd
Link them with the 3rd in the Phrygian diminished
Imxaxmac i can tell your a douche bag just by your snide comment
For me the most amazing aspect of his playing, which is mostly overlooked rightly so for his solo's, is his rhythm playing. And in almost all of his "tutorials" it's glanced over or rarely spoken or played. I love his crunchy rhythm playing and his effortless style while playing it.
Wiggle your fingers very fast, but here's THE thing, in the right places.
picking hand is way more important.
Eren Çelikkanat Can't you just go with the bloody joke! 🙄
Simon Watts
humour is lost on some people lol. Have a " like"..
Don't forget to take a shit-load of speed as well. You know, amphetamines.
teppolundgren ampSHREDtamines
i'm a 70 yr guitar player. his music might not be my cup of tea, but in his genre he has to be the best i've ever heard. the kids shit hot.
John James McCartney Well he invented the genre...literally.
***** What the actual fuck. Van Halen and Yngwie are completely different... Van Halen is well known for his awesome tapping solos and Yngwie is known for his badass super fast licks, sweep picking and legatos. Yngwie focused a lot in shredding music, bt Van Halen did not. Completely different. Period
***** The first solo I learned was Eruption by Eddie Van Halen when I was 14. I have yet to master any of Yngwie's solos due to the sheer difficulty involved.
Comparing Van Halen to YJM is only showing your ignorance.
***** The fact that Van Halen started to shred before doesn't change anything. He never fully focused in shredding as Yngwie, that's all I said and it's true. Again, Van Halen is known for his tapping, but he never got into neoclassical shredding as Yngwie. Both of them were the first ones in their own thing. You're actually hating on music variety (and taste is subjective, you should know). We can all learn from both of 'em but you're hating on Yngwie for no reason, saying that he has no creativity, which is completely false (I love both, not a Malmsteen fanboy). If we're talking about taste and feeling, my way to go is BB King, and if we're talking about feeling in shredding, my way to go are Paul Gilbert and Steve Vai. But as you see it is completely subjective, they are not more creative than Eddie or Yngwie, just different.
***** I did. I played Eruption in my junior high talent show...was nothing special. There are plenty of kids far younger than I was who have mastered that solo. Just search youtube. Seriously, who are you to call someone you don't know a liar? EVH is awesome and very creative, and I loved learning his licks when I first started out. When I learned how to tap I felt like a god on the guitar.
There is simply a huge difference between EVH and YJM. One you can learn when you start out if you put in a lot of work, the other you never really learn no matter how hard and how long you try.
His skill is so epic he is incapable of dumbing down his tutorial below "advanced"
Lol. To Sophon's comment above .There is some truth to this ...And his right hand is super efficient as some of you pointed out- it barely moves. Almost everyone says 'I am not into this Style - but he is amazing ' . Let me be the 34,465 th person to say that.
Finally a good video, those same blues licks from every other guitar player do get old
YM has always had the fire, and it burns even brighter and faster now! Thanks for sharing your talent, insights, and artistry.
Yngwie might not be the most likeable person (don't know him personally, but that's what press and journalists usually say...), but the man is undeniably a genius on guitar - a true original, highly knowledgeable about technique and theory, instantly recognisable (which *very* few are), and he sticks to his guns.
I'm impressed with his scale knowledge.
7:05 What are you doing? "I don't know".
Me neither. Loved it anyways.
😂😂
TIME Magazine top 10 guitarists of all time...'nuff said :) Yngwie is amazing
Yes, because when I want to hear about guitarists, I look to time magazine
Rob Davis
With that said... you can read the same thing in magazines like Guitar World, Guitar Player, Guitar For The Practicing Musician, and just about every other legit guitar magazine out there. Yngwie is widely considered one of the greatest guitarist of all time. His technique and influence is profound.
Also... Tom Hess(a great player and teacher) has written a article recently talking about how important and influential Yngwie Malmsteen is in the advancement of modern rock guitar playing.
Yngwie is very highly regarded by players like Guthrie Govan, Paul Gilbert, Jason Becker, George Bellas, Kelly Simonz, Zakk Wylde, Joe Stump, George Lynch, Gus G, Slash, Joe Satriani etc...
So in my opinion and the opinion of many others I would say Time Magazine has it right. He's definitely one of the best all time.
Time magazine put Johnny Ramone on that list and they forgot Robert Fripp, Steve Vai, Eric Johnson, Joe Satriani. That list is complete bullshit. Yngwie is amazing and he belongs on a top 10 list but he does not belong with the likes of Johnny Ramone and Kieth Richards...he is waaaaay better than them.
Dingo D. Manhunter That's unbelievable that Johnny Ramone made that list. I Love punk rock, but to compare punk rock's repetitive power chord riffs to some of the real guitar legends is a joke. A good band with good songs doesn't necessary mean the guitar playing is new/innovative.
Time Magazine cannot judge him. That bloke's got no technique.
Also you have to realize there may have been many guitarists who are great guitarists before him but he was the first to do what he does.. To bring all of the technics together.. Sweeping,arpeggios,tapping,speed he mastered them all and all other shredders since can thank him
Very helpful! You explain it well!
This is a good video for anyone who already knows how to play like Yngwie. Otherwise, not so good.
Yngwie was a major influence on my guitar playing. I never cared what anyone said about him like saying he was pompous, arrogant, etc. I just liked his style of playing and it helped me to be a better guitar player. I love how he mentioned that (Allan) Holdsworth is his favorite legato player because he is definitely my favorite. I can totally hear Holdsworth's influence on Yngwie in his instrumental song "Marching Out" from the album of the same name. I can never get bored of listening to that awesome song. I still listen to lots of Yngwie's songs even after listening to them for over 30 years. He is great, and he seems like a cool dude to me. :)
+John Jachens All the naysayers say Yngwie has no feel and just plays scales, without realizing that the pentatonic scale and the blues scale ARE scales, and in my experience, are confined to those shapes.
Yngwie, Dave Murray from Iron Maiden (SERIOUSLY underrated legato player), and good ol' Vai were what opened my eyes and expand my playing to new levels.
And yeah, Yngwie's cocky, but if you have the bitchin' chops he does, I think you have every right to be cocky.
The best piece of advice I heard was from my high school guitar teacher, he said listen to as much music as possible, and take influence from as many players as possible.
+TheCrimsonIdol987 everybody plays scales. In order to play in tune you have to play the right notes within that particular key. But you knew that.
Frapzoid Indeed. Even if you decide to use "incorrect" notes in a key, they have to be used in the right context.
Guthrie Govan did a great video on this. :)
+Tom Cass You mean like Theloniious Monk? No as much as I love Jazz that man DID hit some awful sounding notes. No, I'm not talking accidentals. There is a time and place for accidentals. On the subject of Jazz, trust me it's a lot harder to play fast on a horn than to play fast on a guitar. I know this from experience. I have the same complaint about 50's Be Bop players who were trying to show off their virtuosity just like Malmsteen. I don't listen to rock anymore but I like Eric Johnson better than Malmsteen. Eric plays fast AND tasty. Melodic. Malmsteen sound like he's doing speed exercises. Each to his or her own. No problem.
+Chickenbeek I can't believe you just mentioned that floppy insert I was just thinking that was where I first heard him. Seems like there was something special about the insert too, like it was an HD recording of some sorts.
I completely believe him when he says he doesn't know what he's doing with his right hand. Nobody was around to teach him that when he was growing up, so that is just a bit of serendipity mixed with talent and persistence. Segovia, the great Spanish classical guitarist, was always being asked what he was doing with his right hand. His technique is now, just like Malmsteen's, considered part of the curriculum when learning guitar. Unfortunately, for most of us mortals, analyzing and copying their technique will never generate the same results they get playing it naturally as part of their style. But hey, there are always a few freakish players who somehow pull it off anyway.
+Epictetus of Hierapolis lets see ygwieee (whatever)njust play 1 lick (riff) the opening of "hang em high" by Van Halen, want to impress me, your playing so damn fast I cant tell what your doing, an old school trick,, you, yourself yngvie dont even realize the mistakes you're making, stop this INDY500 death race fretboard gymnastics, i learned this early, if you dont know the lick verbatim, astound the audience w/blazing speed, haang it up man, make me feel something, wow I'm now hearing a blatant rip off of eric johnsons, cliffs of dover
+Epictetus of Hierapolis i dont think segovia used a pick tho he used all his fingers i studied him a little when i started playing i agree with you tho theyre both awesome
segovia, a perfect example and chet atkins, and many other masters hardly EVER shredded but when they would think outside the box and the song called for it, WOW did it stand out but this horseshit of doing nothing but shredding just bores the livin' shit outta me. I mean I can sit all day and just shred for ppl, and amaze them, but when it comes to something like claptons crossroads I blow thier minds. segovia, I don't think he used a pick either, but man could that master of guitar play, I would never cut heads w/ anyone like segovia, but malmsteen, I'll cut heads w/that meth metal "master" any day of the week, btw, you can thank ed van Heineken for this shredding bullshit.
+Epictetus of Hierapolis Guitar Licks are like math problems you need to figure out solutions. You need to figure out how to play each lick with efficiency.
Troy Grady has excellent videos for cracking codes of guitarists!
In this video he is using Downward Pick Slanting and Economy Picking which enables phrases to be played at the highest speeds.
Does he really not know what he's doing or is he hiding the secrets he figured out maybe accidentally from practicing for several hours? Who knows!
+Wes Northcutt I'm sure Yngwie would smoke through Hang em High, unlike Ed, who can't anymore.
Vibrato-George lynch
Scales-Malmsteen
Love it how he says' a bit like this' and he plays something utterly amazing and then he goes'like that' like it was nothing
Yngwie's vibrato has more soul than entire songs from most other guitarists, and I don't even like his music. Don't get things twisted, just because you can't comprehend more than five notes every ten seconds, doesn't make this is any less complex and impressive
Also this video is titled "How to play fast", did you think he's gonna sit here and play fucking bullshit pentatonic blues bends for ten minutes
finowa "Fucking bullshit pentatonic" If that i'ts all you can see in the video, you have a lot of things to study very hard, if you want to play as fast as him. The 7 modes and his variations could be a good start ;)
His music is still shit.
MrLongjohnsilver90
That's according to you because you're a hater.
But ask Paul Gilbert, Guthrie Govan, Joe Stump, Tom Hess, George Lynch, Zakk Wylde and the legions of other players around the world whom he has inspired if his music is shit. See what they say, because they would all laugh at your ridiculous statement.
Music is about personal taste, if you don't like his music that's fine, but to deny his impact on modern rock guitar playing and his musicianship is ignorant.
epic103 That's fine. His music is still shit though.
i see a lot of critical comments, all i have to say is i bet all those comments come from people that didn't heard him in the 80's when he came out and did what nobody else could do, when the best of the time played at 50 mph he came out playinh 100 mph with complete accuracy, new sound, clarity and melodic approach, in fact he introduced us to a new standard of greatness we didn't though posible until him.
This is VERY true. He created a new genre all by himself. It may have started with Ritchie Blackmore, but Yngwie, Jason Becker and Tony MacAlpine brought Neo-Classical into the spotlight. Without these 3, we wouldn't have Stratovarius (or the entire Symphonic metal movement), Kelly Simonz or any of the virtuosos that had influence from the movement Yngwie started.
pilotamurorei
You're forgetting Randy Rhoads.
+1 Yngwie cut a new path that many have since followed. That is the essence of a true guitar hero.
Most of these dumb kids on here struggle to play Smoke On The Water.
Yngwie may not be the #1 guitarist but he has the best vibrato in the business.
Jimi Jones he is being literall....
You're wrong !! HE'S THE FIRST because he has created a STYLE..... many peoples worship the Beatles or the Doors or Jimmy Hendrix.... Never forget he owns the guitar hero legacy... he's the master... that's all.
No such thing as the best. Yngwie is pretty awesome. I don't know if he can do Robert Johnson as well as Robert Johnson or play jazz like Joe Pass, but who cares? Variety is the spice of life! (original saying.)
No Paul Kossof has the best vibrato, don't even argue.
***** thanks for agreeing, I thought I would get a lot of flack on that one. But Vibrato is the one thing the kids i see play guitar nowadays seem to pay no attention to. It's cool to be able to shred through classical scales and stuff, but with out vibrato it's like a cold emotionless bitch....not tryring to say yngwie dosen't have emotion in his playing.
Thanks, Yngwie! You will always be one of the best and one of my top favorites in my book.
his style is not for me... but his talent is unbelievable, or should I dare say, unsurpassed.
Judge him if you will, he earns a living doing something he enjoys doing. He found his niche in life. That's more than most people can say.
And the crazy thing is: he actually sounds clean when he plays it. His playing has soul, just not the kind some losers want.
I always remember when he came out in the bands Stealer and Alcatraz. Everyone was blown away. Just a perfect blend of technique, classical scales, and heart wrenching blues runs. Just the best. Made me learn guitar and play for hours as a kid.
I was there. I was an up and coming shredder, on the road in a band. When Yngwie showed up, we were all blown away. People don’t realize how insane his emergence on the scene was. There are a million guys now. But, it wasn’t like that then. He was something very different. And he was so young. He elevated the instrument. He really did.
@@readmore4178 I had just started learning guitar and ppl were like you gotta hear this guy wingwang malmsteen! Lol. Those were the days. I was 13yo I think.
Respect man. Thanks for caring about music enough to create your own style n rock the shit out of it. Peace
Yngwie is the perfect blend of theory, feel & technicality.
He is an amazing classical player! He brought that into metal. He has a great technique. Definitely not beginner lessons here
What amazes me is that he hardly looks like he is putting any effort, particularly with his picking - smooth and relaxed.
I have watched this video a couple of times... and I love how it has nothing to do with "How to play fast".
This is fascinating. To everyone saying he can't teach, how much teaching is there to "drill until you have dexterity?" He lays out his whole technique and all his tricks here. This is exactly how Yngwie plays fast.
The technique he uses matters. Economy picking makes his stuff much, much easier to play.
woah, it turns out you get better at guitar by playing guitar
Amen to that. The sour guys are hilarious like they want to be spoon fed and crying that they aren't. Well actually he gave a lot of info but the spoon feeding isn't good enough to their spoilt baby tastes 😂
Except he doesn't teach how to play fast. He even says in the video that he doesn't know and he doesn't pay attention. So since he can't teach it, he rambles about why he plays what he plays
@@unleashthefury111 awww lil baby
I'm not super familiar with this guy, but damn is his playing impressive. How can you not like his playing? Sure you may prefer different music, but to see this in person must be insanity.
+Brandon Thornton It wears thin real quick.
The Mystic King Conor McGOAT
Well yeah, there's better players in my opinion. I don't know anything about this guy, other than the playing is pretty flashy.
Steve Vai is my favorite. Nice guy and great player.
Brandon Thornton steve vai is awesome. he gave me a free lesson at namm and even signed an autograph for one of my friends. great guy
+The Mystic King Conor McGOAT Guthrie Govan, well said.
+The Mystic King Conor McGOAT
Guthrie Govan:
"I can also mention that seeing Yngwie Malmsteen made a real impact on me. He wasn’t this academic looking guy just standing there with his music stand. He was going crazy, running around the place, and throwing his Strat while playing a million notes per second. And when he stopped and played just one note, it sounded like a violin or an opera singer. Yngwie has an incomparable vibrato, which his detractors choose to ignore."
"And then Yngwie, who, to me, demonstrates that it is possible to have all these chops and play these outrageous fast things but still sound like you mean it. This may not be a popular viewpoint, but when I listen to Yngwie playing, there’s as much sincerity as there is when B.B. King is playing. He plays every note like it could be his last."
Im 51 and have never got into his playing or style but the dude is a legend and one of the best to wvwr do it. Have to give him the respect he deserves. The dude doesnt even think about what he is doing he just does it. Says can look at what he does while he does it
I only have one question Yngwie...
"What the fuck are you talking about?"
Yumping yimminy, vere's my axe?
LOL!!! IKR!!
Yngwie apparently has no idea what E Phrygian is.
he has a song called heavy E Phrygian, so im pretty sure he does....
sjnfaueefaefaef jdnsuiodsgsd Well he isn't proving that with this particular video, because thats not E Phrygian in his demonstration.
_yngwie is badass_..
His speed, skill and knowledge of the scales etc is amazing, really amazing.
If he sits down like this and play guitar it is even better. Buy I wish he would slow down every once in a while. Then he would be absolutely perfect.
But I would not mind him as a teacher that is for sure.
Love the way you talk. You are not a stuck up musician! Thank you
He is a little hard to understand, but his grasp on music is unmatched. I still cannot play any faster, but learned a few things about tying together different modes and come up with some cool sounding stuff.
Unlike any other musicians or guitarist, Yngwie is still on spandex even though he is aging. He never quit! I adore him!
2019...still viewing
This is one of the best lessons I’ve ever watched
He gets off on playing guitar. He's a natural and should be respected for what he has contributed to music. Long live the King! Yngwie fucking Malmsteen!!
His right hand technique is unbelievable...
Right?
Its insane.
The guy in Japan goes "Dude... how do you do this; how do you do that??"
Yngwie leans in and says "I don't know, man..."
What a great teacher! 7:05
"what are you playing there?"
"I don't know."
Yngwie is a virtuoso. The Itzhak Pearlman of guitar. He plays classical music in a way the average person can enjoy. I had Rising Force when it came out and thought it was revolutionary. Just like EVH took the guitar beyond the 60's -70s style so did Yngwie in the 80s.
Very well said... you understand. Cheers
Agreed
I'm going to give you, the keys to the Lamborghini.
Michael Angelo Batio Did :V
In his case, Ferrari.
Michael Angelo Batio is a true teacher, this guy isn't, he just wants to be full of himself.
Dan L hahahaha mab
Dan L lol man :""
Ингви ваши баллады рвут мне душу , у них очень глубокий смысл . Спасибо !
Just plain amazing!
He still plays about like he always did...better than practically every guitar player who ever lived. How gifted?! Still awesome! How cool is it that he's so far out there even HE doesn't know how he does it #AutomaticeGenius
check out Michael Romeo
"You gotta practice 9 to 10 hours a day if you wanna be like Ywngie Malmsteen...and I know you do. You'll never have as much gold as him but I'll tell you what, start investing now." - Russ Parrish aka Satchel
What do you call a pianist at Juilliard that practices 12 hours a day? A hobbyist. www.juilliard.edu/degrees-programs/music/guitar
It takes ALOT of practice to play this badly!
This guy is a talentless hack, no feeling, no soul
craig cotter Fucking jealous idiot.
You know... for someone into Megadeth, I'm surprised at you aggression towards Yngwie. To say that he's "talentless" is to shout out "I have a limited appreciation of music". Yngwie is many things (e.g. a wife beater and an arrogant prick) but without talent he is not.
These videos are actually really helpful. He's telling you the names of the scales he's using and he's giving you insight behind the theory instead of being like "here's some tabs. Figure it out."
There are great guitarists. There are mind blowing, awesome guitarists. Then there is Yngwie Malmsteen, who plays at a God level. And he just keeps on getting better. I love this man!
I love yngwie but he can't teach
Paul gilbert is best guitar teacher and player
If you meet Beethoven or Dimebag Darrell they are not going to be a good teacher neither if you are not a good pupil.
He teach in the advance class..lol
Your is true
@JohnnyMavers that is a pretty stupid argument. First im a paul gilbert fanboy and can play most of his really hard stuff (racer x and solo albums) which is arguably harder then anything yngwies ever put out. I did learn some yngwie solos aseell but they are all really samey and pretty boring tbh. So assuming im a beginner is a pretty bold statement. Second, this is a technique video so you dont need any theory for it. Its about explaining technique and he always does a very poor job in doing that. Pauls 90s lessons are all on a really high level but hes great at explaining everything he does. Same with john petrucci.