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  • สอนได้ดีครับ ดี ดี

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  • I can;t do B7 ;( I don't know why but my guitar make some strange noise in the end but I don't touch strings I shoudn't touch ... I'll be sitting all day long until I play it this chord.

  • @IljimaePl how do you manage to do that. i just feel like giving up right now

  • @IljimaePl Check your guitar. Learn about every piece of it and carefully inspect it. Could be fretting out, which means your action (height of the strings from the fretboard) is too low and the string you hit will hit another fret and stop vibrating altogether, which means strange noise and no sound afterward. Make sure your fingers aren't touching, there've been times I've said mine aren't touching only to find out they were once I plucked it. =P Never give up tho.

  • BINGO!

  • How do you play a G7+ and C7+ chord?

  • @ShiNoKuroTsuki u mean g7 and c7 sharp? u'd have to play them as barre chords.  thats on his website too.

  • @dyneportega ahhh I see, yeah I'll take a look. Thanks (:

  • Seriously.. You are the best teacher ever.! Well done.. I'm learning a lot.. Thanks!

  • thank you so much Justin :), this was very helpfull for me, and I bet it is the same for everyone whos watching it.

  • whats the brand of your guitar? thanks in advance

  • Comment removed

  • You make everything so much easier than most teachers Justin! Thanks for helping mediocre players!!!

  • thanks a lot for the help

  • seriosly i've played guitarr for two weeks the first days i was struggelin but since i found you videos it's no problem can't be any better m8 10/10

  • I love you xD.

  • why in it an a# for the c7 chord when the 7th note is a B?

  • what does the '7' mean? you add the 7th note of the key/scale?

  • gd corse

  • Might want to mention that these are Dominent 7ths not Major 7ths.....that is for the beginner that may be looking these up in a book. :]

  • @4:14

  • ur an awesome teacher man

  • ok you teach like this thn, he's doing this for learner guitarists , he doesnt have to do this, if you didnt learn anything from this , there must be something wrong with you rather than him

  • actually isn't A11 sus 2 over E :P (minor detail, not important). lol good lesson justin but wouldn't it be better to teach A7, E7 and D7 before C7, B7 and G7 cuz those ones are bit harder. anyways you know what your doing, keep up the good work.

  • It's typically not referred to as a sus2 if it has a 7 (the G in this case). The B would get a 9 label and the chord would typically be called that if it weren't for the D which makes it an 11 chord. For all open strings on the guitar I'd say A11/E is a fair analysis. IMO, Asus2/E is an incomplete analysis because it ignores the G and D.

    Of course, a chord name can be ambiguous unless you see it in a song. I can play a plain G chord, and the bass player plays E? Pow. We're making an Em7 chord.

  • thanks for the info, forgot bout the G string.

    so you mean a 9 chord is a chord that has the 7th and a sus 2?

  • That's pretty much true, but for reasons too long to get into here, and because I don't fully understand it myself, It's possible for a chord to have the 7 and still be a suspension (which means a note from the previous chord is sounding as a NCT in the current chord), but calling it a 9 or 11 is pretty much correct all the time, IMO.

    "Suspended" always bothered me as a name in a static chord, because the word implies (to me) how the note functions in relation to the chords surrounding it.

  • The 9th (2nd) is automatically implied in an 11 chord.

  • lol shut it , id like to see you teach like tht and if you think about it if they can play the harder ones first the otherones will be easier for them

  • ahahahahaha A11 with E base :D

  • The trouble is, Justin, knowing where and how to use these chords, or at least, thats how it seems to me when I play them. I don't know where to put them if I were just strumming around, you know? Sure, E and Em and Am and G and all those basic chords go together, but these weird chords people show me, its hard to know where they fit in the grand scheme of jamming, you know what I mean?

  • Check up on progressions, for example you sometimes substitute them with other chords to flavor the song a bit more

  • cheers justin, been trying to transcribe "something in the way she moves" and that B7 is the chord I was trying to figure out, knew it was right soon as I heard you play it.

  • Hey Justin. You could describe B7 as D7 but just shifted up a coupla strings and with an extra finger.

  • You know what you should do Justin? To make people not give up; Play a good - simple - song with those chords and say like: "With this chord you can make music like this; pling pling"

    I would love and also learn everything if it was like that.

  • @ Matheus222 - have you seen the web site??? - I have songs for most stages... every stage will have songs but I have just been a bit busy lately to get them all finished, but it's coming. J

  • Yes I have. I didn't mean songs. Just a simple thing you can do for learning chords more interesting. I didn't mean to make a full song lesson, just say: "With those chord you can make something like this" then play something with the chords.

    You don't need to explain strumming or what to do. And the people who say: "please make lesson" , just say: go to my website and you'll find it. (Just an idea to make people not give up and also make more people find your great work)

  • @JustinSandercoe i would like to learn how to play meet you there by busted

  • @Matheus222 Yeah, on his website he uses these chords in the songs "Killing Me Softly", "Sitting on the Dock of the Bay", and "Wish You Were Here".

  • wow theres only 113 views

    your a great teacher dude! when i started playing i learned a lot from your blues lessons.

  • @Terrybob123 46,326 views now! :-) it's a long way from 113 views, huh.

  • @theamazingsupergirl lol your amazing super girl : D, my new best friend!!!!!!!!!

  • your lessons are always top notch, but now with widescreen and hd camera it is even better!

  • good beginner stuff here

  • Nice one. Good for beginners. But would include A7 as well since its easy too.

  • The A7 comes in stage 5 with E7 and D7. The is method to this madness ;)

  • Well done Justin. Good videos and well presented. As usual 5 stars mate.

  • great lesson as always ...  :)

  • very nice lesson!

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