Hey guys, I hope you enjoy the video! Feel free to leave any comments or questions below. And don't forget to grab your copy of Listen & Play if you want to help support the channel ❤ andrewclarkeguitar.com/p/listen-play
After purchasing your course listen and play, I have now more better understanding on how to play by ear. Now I’m trying to play my favorite song that I can’t play before by my ear. Thank you Andrew for sharing your talent. I’m looking forward for more helpful course coming from you.
I have been with your channel for a while now, and I am such a believer in your methods (from personal experience at this point) that I just bought your course first chance I got (pay day lol). Thank you so much for everything you are doing for the beginner-intermediate guitar community! I can't speak for anyone else when I share that I just felt stuck in "how-to-learn" mode for so long, until you came along and put things in terms I can understand, follow, AND instantly start improving upon. My fundamental understanding of music, not just guitar, has absolutely improved my guitar playing in ways I only hoped for before. Long story short, THANK YOU, and please continue to do what you do.
Hey! Thank you so much for your kind words and support. Comments like this are the whole reason I do this stuff. I'm so happy to hear my methods are working for you. And don't worry, there is SO MUCH more to come. Cheers and thank you again ☺🙏
Unstructured creative practice - start with, more relaxed, ease into it . Andrew plays along with songs on spotify, identifying the key, then the chords, then improvising. rhythm practice - done again along with the songs on spotify, but can be done to a metronome. Moving between rhythmic divisions as smoothly as possible, Find the tempo of that song. quarter notes, eight notes, sixteenths, etc. Bounce between them. Can even do it with muted strings. Demonstration at 7mins. Syncopation, random rhythms that fit, freestyle structured practice - now fully warmed up, focus on the hard stuff. New scale, new music theory material, songwriting, etc. bonus tips: When learning licks, understand how they will work in different keys. Copy vocal melodies, try play on the guitar the notes that the vocalist sung.
Hey Andrew. Another great video. Thanks for the content and sponsoring yourself. I think that's really cool and I'm definitely going to check out your course. I can't wait for your channel to blow up cause you're definitely on a Paul David's or Marty Music level. Honestly, I think you explain things even clearer than they do sometimes. Keep it up!
I felt a bit at a loss about how to progress, and thought I was doomed to never be able to recognise anything by ear. You changed that with your videos. Thanks, I’m know practicing following the breadcrumbs of your multiple lessons, and progressing and enjoying myself a great deal! Looking into your patreon too, and maybe your course. One thing at a time😊
Sure! I do a longer breakdown of this exact exercise in this video: th-cam.com/video/VqUuJK-dTx4/w-d-xo.html Here's another helpful rhythm lesson as well: th-cam.com/video/fopY2yNRu68/w-d-xo.html
This video gave me some ideas for my practice routine. I want to do more songwriting. I like the idea of using part of my practice routine to do something creative. I might work on songwriting ideas during some of my practice time. I also like your rhythm practice technique.
Hello just subscribe to your Channel im a 52 now i love playing guitar but after playing for months i end up quitting and playing again.I wanted to learn more and improve and also wanted to know more about your guitar class.I found your channel because of the 4 shapes of triads,by the way thank you so much.
Hey! Thanks for subscribing. I hope you find the videos on the channel helpful. Let me know if there are any specific questions you have about the course or anything else. I'd be happy to answer :)
Great lesson with this type, I think your right this is the building blocks ,😅 of lead guitar, I've been using for a while now ☺️ I'm sorda mechanical still working with it though . I just now seen how your supposed use 😂.from tk
I could use some help with phrasing while playing notes within the scales. I hear the melodic sounds I want to make, but could use some quick videos on building up a vocabulary of sound.
Hi Andrew! I started to learn major scales, and they work really well, and I love play in them, but the problem is that, our band made songs in different keys, and its hard to remember, which scale is in which scale. So my question is, should I learn all the major scales by memorizing them, or there are rules that builds these scale, and I can't learn them instead? Maybe like this I don't have to constantly look at scale charts to learn a scale
Hey! Good question. It's essentially one shape no matter which key you're in. By memorizing the notes on the low E string you can easily move that shape into any key. Watch these videos if you haven't yet: th-cam.com/video/geZ9YBD6HtM/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/gpJwaidpcm0/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/wXZGcgYysNs/w-d-xo.html Hope they help!
It's really going to depend on where your skills are at. If you can already play bar chords pretty comfortably and don't need to spend time working on that, I'd say you could get through all the material in a week or two. Each step has exercises that you might not be able to master on the first attempt, so it's best to take your time a bit where necessary. I've seen some folks take it much slower than this as well. So it's kind of tough to say for sure 😅
@@andrewclarkeguitar That's right. Pros: you can do whatever you want without having to learn from anyone. Cons: improvement takes a long time and you may never discover what could be learned in just a few minutes with study/tutelage. I mean, why waste hours of your time learning from people who, over the past 100+ years, have mastered the instrument when you can spend years trying to "figure it out" yourself all for the sake of claiming you're "self-taught"!? Btw, unless you locked yourself in a room for 20 years and never watched another player or listened to any music, you're not self taught. Listening to other people's music, watching them play and then learning... is called _imitation._ Not invention. In reality, you're not self-taught; you're self-limiting.
@@TouchscreamPresents Not really. There are four different "ways" people learn: Visual, Auditory, Read & Write, and Kinaesthetic. People can have a combination of these but most people (about 85%) are primarily _visual_ learners. So no, not everyone learns differently. We learn mostly the same with some small variations. Additionally, if you go back and read what I wrote you'll realize that what I'm prescribing is how to both facilitate and accelerate learning. The main issue in an actual "self-taught" scenario; by definition, is that you must discover new knowledge over time or by chance instead of being shown right away. No other musical discipline does this, why is the guitar so special that people need to be "self-taught" when there is no objective advantage in it?
@@monsterram6617 it might be a cultural thing that's guitar specific... Although I'm getting a sense you're being a bit overly irate about the self-taught description itself so I won't engage any further.
Hey guys, I hope you enjoy the video! Feel free to leave any comments or questions below. And don't forget to grab your copy of Listen & Play if you want to help support the channel ❤ andrewclarkeguitar.com/p/listen-play
Thanks
Thank YOU!
You deserve to be known more and more!… top tier guitar TH-camr!
I really really appreciate that. Thank you so much :)
After purchasing your course listen and play, I have now more better understanding on how to play by ear. Now I’m trying to play my favorite song that I can’t play before by my ear. Thank you Andrew for sharing your talent. I’m looking forward for more helpful course coming from you.
Thank you so much for the support. I'm so happy to hear you enjoyed the course. Lots more to come in the future. Cheers!!
Man Thanks Andrew I hope you realise how much your Teaching Style is Appreciated , and thanks for taking the time to share your Talent .
Thank you so much. I'm very happy I can help ☺🙏
This guys video's are great. Everyone should share his stuff.
Thank you so much ☺🙏
Completely agree! Andrew is putting so much value into his videos. I just started his course and so far it is SO GOOD.
I just bought “Listen and Play”!!!
Thank you so much!! ☺🙏
Brandon Carter go on fresh and fit again 🙏😂
I have been with your channel for a while now, and I am such a believer in your methods (from personal experience at this point) that I just bought your course first chance I got (pay day lol). Thank you so much for everything you are doing for the beginner-intermediate guitar community! I can't speak for anyone else when I share that I just felt stuck in "how-to-learn" mode for so long, until you came along and put things in terms I can understand, follow, AND instantly start improving upon. My fundamental understanding of music, not just guitar, has absolutely improved my guitar playing in ways I only hoped for before.
Long story short, THANK YOU, and please continue to do what you do.
Hey! Thank you so much for your kind words and support. Comments like this are the whole reason I do this stuff. I'm so happy to hear my methods are working for you. And don't worry, there is SO MUCH more to come. Cheers and thank you again ☺🙏
Unstructured creative practice - start with, more relaxed, ease into it . Andrew plays along with songs on spotify, identifying the key, then the chords, then improvising.
rhythm practice - done again along with the songs on spotify, but can be done to a metronome. Moving between rhythmic divisions as smoothly as possible, Find the tempo of that song. quarter notes, eight notes, sixteenths, etc. Bounce between them. Can even do it with muted strings. Demonstration at 7mins. Syncopation, random rhythms that fit, freestyle
structured practice - now fully warmed up, focus on the hard stuff. New scale, new music theory material, songwriting, etc.
bonus tips:
When learning licks, understand how they will work in different keys.
Copy vocal melodies, try play on the guitar the notes that the vocalist sung.
Great summary! Thanks for sharing ☺
Hey Andrew. Another great video. Thanks for the content and sponsoring yourself. I think that's really cool and I'm definitely going to check out your course. I can't wait for your channel to blow up cause you're definitely on a Paul David's or Marty Music level. Honestly, I think you explain things even clearer than they do sometimes. Keep it up!
That is incredibly high praise. Thank you so so much. ☺🙏
I just started his course and so far it is REALLY GOOD!!
wow!! you're doing all that all alone? well thanks mate, that's some veeery good quality content!
Yes! Appreciate that, thank you.
I felt a bit at a loss about how to progress, and thought I was doomed to never be able to recognise anything by ear. You changed that with your videos. Thanks, I’m know practicing following the breadcrumbs of your multiple lessons, and progressing and enjoying myself a great deal! Looking into your patreon too, and maybe your course. One thing at a time😊
That's so great to hear! I'm glad my videos are helping :)
I really like the way you teach, it really speaks to the way i like to learn.
That's great! Glad I can be helpful :)
I'm going to buy your Listen & Play course hopefully this week.
Awesome! I'm sure you'll love it ☺
great stuff!! your videos are always super informative and well made, thanks Andrew!
Glad you like them!
Thank you more rhythm demo will be appreciated
Sure! I do a longer breakdown of this exact exercise in this video: th-cam.com/video/VqUuJK-dTx4/w-d-xo.html
Here's another helpful rhythm lesson as well: th-cam.com/video/fopY2yNRu68/w-d-xo.html
This video gave me some ideas for my practice routine. I want to do more songwriting. I like the idea of using part of my practice routine to do something creative. I might work on songwriting ideas during some of my practice time. I also like your rhythm practice technique.
Hello just subscribe to your Channel im a 52 now i love playing guitar but after playing for months i end up quitting and playing again.I wanted to learn more and improve and also wanted to know more about your guitar class.I found your channel because of the 4 shapes of triads,by the way thank you so much.
Hey! Thanks for subscribing. I hope you find the videos on the channel helpful. Let me know if there are any specific questions you have about the course or anything else. I'd be happy to answer :)
Great lesson with this type, I think your right this is the building blocks ,😅 of lead guitar, I've been using for a while now ☺️ I'm sorda mechanical still working with it though . I just now seen how your supposed use 😂.from tk
I could use some help with phrasing while playing notes within the scales.
I hear the melodic sounds I want to make, but could use some quick videos on building up a vocabulary of sound.
Good suggestion. I'll add it to the list and try to come up with something.
Hi Andrew! I started to learn major scales, and they work really well, and I love play in them, but the problem is that, our band made songs in different keys, and its hard to remember, which scale is in which scale. So my question is, should I learn all the major scales by memorizing them, or there are rules that builds these scale, and I can't learn them instead? Maybe like this I don't have to constantly look at scale charts to learn a scale
Hey! Good question. It's essentially one shape no matter which key you're in. By memorizing the notes on the low E string you can easily move that shape into any key. Watch these videos if you haven't yet:
th-cam.com/video/geZ9YBD6HtM/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/gpJwaidpcm0/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/wXZGcgYysNs/w-d-xo.html
Hope they help!
@@andrewclarkeguitar Thank you very much!
I have this private playlist where I throw stuff on guitar I wanna rewatch/work on.. at this point is just Andrew's videos 😅 *added this one too
Ahaha, I'm honored! 😅 Glad you're liking the videos.
Here for the algorithm, but helpful tips!
Thank you my man 🙏❤
Andrew: What is the average length of time to learn all the concepts of the 2 hour course. Thanks! Bob K
It's really going to depend on where your skills are at. If you can already play bar chords pretty comfortably and don't need to spend time working on that, I'd say you could get through all the material in a week or two. Each step has exercises that you might not be able to master on the first attempt, so it's best to take your time a bit where necessary. I've seen some folks take it much slower than this as well. So it's kind of tough to say for sure 😅
Hi...good for you! Do you know about Mary Spender? She's handling videos too.
Yes! I love Mary Spender's videos. Been following her for years. :)
that guitar is beautiful🔥🔥
I agree! It's a Baum Wingman
Damn guess i gotta go practice now 😂
Lol been engaging following along with you, making myself write it down, then play it all. My brain fries and i play while watching cold case files
Haha, that's awesome!
Brother please make tutorials on leads
I've got tons! ☺ Check out this playlist: th-cam.com/video/hafoCeXWxAE/w-d-xo.html
@@andrewclarkeguitar brother you are very skillful on teaching guitar 🎸
I can figure out chords qith ear but the problem arises when there is a nin diatonic progression 😢
Video start at 1:40
So weird, it just occurred to me that I've been playing for 20 years as well
You’ve been playing Guitar for 20 years? How old are u now bro?
Haha yeah! I'm 32.
@@andrewclarkeguitar damn u look younger, i thought you were around 20 😅
@@Name-bo4ox haha yeah I seem to get that a lot 😂
Always put stand up practice in a day 💀
That's why you don't know much about music theory.
Being self-taught definitely has its pros and cons!
@@andrewclarkeguitar That's right. Pros: you can do whatever you want without having to learn from anyone. Cons: improvement takes a long time and you may never discover what could be learned in just a few minutes with study/tutelage. I mean, why waste hours of your time learning from people who, over the past 100+ years, have mastered the instrument when you can spend years trying to "figure it out" yourself all for the sake of claiming you're "self-taught"!?
Btw, unless you locked yourself in a room for 20 years and never watched another player or listened to any music, you're not self taught. Listening to other people's music, watching them play and then learning... is called _imitation._ Not invention. In reality, you're not self-taught; you're self-limiting.
@@monsterram6617
Everybody learns differently though remember that
@@TouchscreamPresents Not really. There are four different "ways" people learn: Visual, Auditory, Read & Write, and Kinaesthetic. People can have a combination of these but most people (about 85%) are primarily _visual_ learners. So no, not everyone learns differently. We learn mostly the same with some small variations.
Additionally, if you go back and read what I wrote you'll realize that what I'm prescribing is how to both facilitate and accelerate learning. The main issue in an actual "self-taught" scenario; by definition, is that you must discover new knowledge over time or by chance instead of being shown right away. No other musical discipline does this, why is the guitar so special that people need to be "self-taught" when there is no objective advantage in it?
@@monsterram6617 it might be a cultural thing that's guitar specific...
Although I'm getting a sense you're being a bit overly irate about the self-taught description itself so I won't engage any further.