this is an easy 1 4 5. just take it slow and learn to hit the root notes and move with the chord changes. it's really fun to let 'er rip on this one. Maybe an exactly similar track along with this at slow tempo is fine to add. but, this speed is great for practicing on. when you play that minor pent on this it really sounds like it's rip roaring, i come to this track a lot to have some fun
Steve Morse sou Fernando do brasil, tenho 45 anos, e queria lhe dizer que desde das videos aulas dos anos 90, eu sò tenho a lhe agradecer, por todas as suas influencias musicais, desde o Diixie, Steve Morse Band e Depp Purple.. obrigado Mestre!! Você pra mim foi a maior influência de guitar de todos os tempos .. grande abraço Morse.
Love it,👍🤘 great for fast little repetitive licks in Am pent 1st position on bottom 2 strings. I like the fast tempo, forced me to play a bit more melodic.
@@wyvernofhefei8712 just for fun (and for a different feel, phrasing, etc.), instead of A mixolydian, play B Aeolian (B natural minor) over it. They're the exact same notes, but sometimes little mental tricks and putting your fingers in slightly different positions produces drastically different results.
This is a great backing track, I don’t know if this is the place to ask but I’m wondering if I could use this as a backing track in one of my TH-cam videos?
That's not a capo. That's a string mute. It was invented by a guy who plays ambidextrously, on a guitar with two necks and he plays both at the same time. This dude isn't doing that, so I'm wondering why he needs a string dampener when he's playing country. Country should be played on a clean amp with a little overdrive to the leads, not a completely saturated tone that you'd need a string dampener for. Plus, mute with your hands. It's insane to think that someone would intentionally take away the ability to use open strings in country. I was playing along with this track and ripped off some really cool pull-offs to open strings. In the key of A, you can use all of the open strings to pull off to and it sounds awesome, you can pull off some really fast licks that way. Basically the same thing Randy Rhoads does in Crazy Train, if you know that part. E A D and B are already in the key of A major, so all of those fit, plus in country you play a lot of flatted sevenths (Mixolydian mode), which in this case the flatted seventh is G, so you have all six open strings available to use when playing country in A major. There's no reason at all this dude should be using a string mute like that, it's like the antithesis of country music in every way.
@@mattgarvey737 Thank you Matt. That was really a great answer. I've got to go back now and jam with this thing a bit more And concentrate on some open strings
It's to mute any noise that might happen due to unintended finger movements. I do a lot of recording and I usually use this mute as it let's me record a cleaner performance that needs less denoising and editing.
@@easyjamtracks Thanks. At the beginning of the video the "capo" on the Les Paul is below the first fret. But in the solo at the end of the video, it looks as though it is on the first fret. Anyway, it looks like a fuzzy black cat is glued to your guitar:')
Hey! Nice track!😄 Could I use this for a song I’ve written? I’m gonna change the lyrics a bit, so it fits and then I’m gonna post it and give you credits. Is that alright to you?😃
This is a traditional blues/rock chord progression. Thousands have used it because it’s super fun and sounds amazing. Chuck Berry is one of the originals with “Johnny be Goode”
Slowwwwww down..
Yeah. Thank you. I don’t know what to play over it except improvising. And I think you have a great advice there.
Play some A major on one string f ex
this is an easy 1 4 5. just take it slow and learn to hit the root notes and move with the chord changes. it's really fun to let 'er rip on this one. Maybe an exactly similar track along with this at slow tempo is fine to add. but, this speed is great for practicing on. when you play that minor pent on this it really sounds like it's rip roaring, i come to this track a lot to have some fun
So fast he even had to speed up his solo in the end
Steve Morse sou Fernando do brasil, tenho 45 anos, e queria lhe dizer que desde das videos aulas dos anos 90, eu sò tenho a lhe agradecer, por todas as suas influencias musicais, desde o Diixie, Steve Morse Band e Depp Purple.. obrigado Mestre!!
Você pra mim foi a maior influência de guitar de todos os tempos .. grande abraço Morse.
never played so well in my life. LOVE THIS
Love it,👍🤘 great for fast little repetitive licks in Am pent 1st position on bottom 2 strings. I like the fast tempo, forced me to play a bit more melodic.
That solo at the end in minor literally had me rolling my eyes. Thanks for the track though lol
Very nice work mate. I appreciate the time and effort you put into it.
Glad you enjoyed it
Awesome track, love the pace.
This is lot's of fun to play to!!!!!
Thanks! . . that was some kind of workout. I needed this.
❤ Awesome. Thank You.
Super! Loved playing over it!
Nice rippage at the end!
Many thanks
A major pentatonic works well too, since it's pretty upbeat and poppy
You could use mixolydian to combine those Major and minor modes/scales/voicing
@@wyvernofhefei8712 that makes country
@@wyvernofhefei8712 just for fun (and for a different feel, phrasing, etc.), instead of A mixolydian, play B Aeolian (B natural minor) over it. They're the exact same notes, but sometimes little mental tricks and putting your fingers in slightly different positions produces drastically different results.
holy shit, talk about a country work out
Had to keep my pick on dry ice!!! LOL Thanks!!
perfect!
👏👏👏✌️🏍️🇮🇲 thanks ✌️
This was fun... but only a couple minutes before I was wore out lol.... this is cookin
Played some slide guitar to this, pretty fun. I aint so good yet tho.
Freaking kickass perfect.
Thank you kind sir
This is a great backing track, I don’t know if this is the place to ask but I’m wondering if I could use this as a backing track in one of my TH-cam videos?
Sure, go ahead, I wouldn't mind if you credited me though :)
@@easyjamtracks thank you so much, I sure will!😊
Great!
Pretty sure I played the pentatonic and also everything but the pentatonic 😎
Why do you capo on the first fret? Is it for speed, or tonal?
That's not a capo. That's a string mute. It was invented by a guy who plays ambidextrously, on a guitar with two necks and he plays both at the same time. This dude isn't doing that, so I'm wondering why he needs a string dampener when he's playing country. Country should be played on a clean amp with a little overdrive to the leads, not a completely saturated tone that you'd need a string dampener for. Plus, mute with your hands. It's insane to think that someone would intentionally take away the ability to use open strings in country. I was playing along with this track and ripped off some really cool pull-offs to open strings. In the key of A, you can use all of the open strings to pull off to and it sounds awesome, you can pull off some really fast licks that way. Basically the same thing Randy Rhoads does in Crazy Train, if you know that part. E A D and B are already in the key of A major, so all of those fit, plus in country you play a lot of flatted sevenths (Mixolydian mode), which in this case the flatted seventh is G, so you have all six open strings available to use when playing country in A major. There's no reason at all this dude should be using a string mute like that, it's like the antithesis of country music in every way.
@@mattgarvey737 Thank you Matt. That was really a great answer. I've got to go back now and jam with this thing a bit more And concentrate on some open strings
It's to mute any noise that might happen due to unintended finger movements. I do a lot of recording and I usually use this mute as it let's me record a cleaner performance that needs less denoising and editing.
@@easyjamtracks Thanks. At the beginning of the video the "capo" on the Les Paul is below the first fret. But in the solo at the end of the video, it looks as though it is on the first fret. Anyway, it looks like a fuzzy black cat is glued to your guitar:')
Hey! Nice track!😄 Could I use this for a song I’ve written? I’m gonna change the lyrics a bit, so it fits and then I’m gonna post it and give you credits. Is that alright to you?😃
Hi. Sure thing go ahead!
@@easyjamtracks Thanks!😃
i would no be able to sing to this
This is bathroom wall by fasterpussycat ..Give it a listen same chord structure
This is a traditional blues/rock chord progression. Thousands have used it because it’s super fun and sounds amazing. Chuck Berry is one of the originals with “Johnny be Goode”
Jesus Loves You