Thanks for a clear informative lesson--you have explained more in these first two lessons than I have gotten from anyone in the past two years. I cannot say thank you enough.
just have to clear up some confusion. lets say a c chord is playing, i would want to play c,e and g, but i wouldn't limit myself to those notes only, just as long as i hit them?
Right. The C, E, and G are bases to land on. The other notes are called "passing tones"; you pass through them. They are like the base paths which lead from one base to another.
The first vid seems as if I heard before somewhere(in Tennessee?) You'll be glad to know that stuck. This cleared up the phrasing part that evidently fell out of my head,very clearly explained and demonstrated,thanks Rolly. Maybe see ya next summer....Todd
i just adore the way you showed the difference between 'playing scales' to 'playing music' - it's amazing - an amazing change
what the artist, the human brings into the technique - inspiring to watch
thank you for your vids
MagicalSunrise1984 7 months ago
Thanks for a clear informative lesson--you have explained more in these first two lessons than I have gotten from anyone in the past two years. I cannot say thank you enough.
ofawoo 1 year ago
really nice, Rolly! I especially like the phrasing stuff.
kbarguitar 1 year ago
really nice, Rolly!
kbarguitar 1 year ago
Real good tips!
peacefulvulture 2 years ago
extremly beneficial lesson... thank you SO much!
siamitude 2 years ago
you are an amazing guitar teacher :)
ghfjghfjghfjghfjg 3 years ago
Can't watch this without hearing 'Whiter Shade of Pale'.
lollygaggle 3 years ago
very very nice..... :)
ShayCsper 3 years ago
great video, when are you gonna post part III? Can't wait to get into the jazz soloing.
yiutou 3 years ago
Thanks, please make a part 3! I've been studying at a music school and this makes more sense than anything they teach!
Major scales and blues scales certainly fall into Jazz I think. Especially when Charlie Christian's involved...
Azrael888 3 years ago
just have to clear up some confusion. lets say a c chord is playing, i would want to play c,e and g, but i wouldn't limit myself to those notes only, just as long as i hit them?
drewhet 3 years ago
Right. The C, E, and G are bases to land on. The other notes are called "passing tones"; you pass through them. They are like the base paths which lead from one base to another.
Hope this helps.
Best,
Rolly
djangokeli 3 years ago
Sehr informativ!
Danke
grozengyz 3 years ago
Great lesson as always!
The combined major and minor blues scale makes it sound bluegrassy! Cool!
Esbenmad 3 years ago
The first vid seems as if I heard before somewhere(in Tennessee?) You'll be glad to know that stuck. This cleared up the phrasing part that evidently fell out of my head,very clearly explained and demonstrated,thanks Rolly. Maybe see ya next summer....Todd
ddotstrebor 3 years ago
Yes great..very clear..thank you.
I sure hope I will allow the time with
what you're imparting because it will
be beneficial. The trick will be to get
the time in on it. :)
NatureLegalized 3 years ago