Great track. Fun jamming on a Saturday afternoon. Love how some people took this in a Blink 182 direction-I used it to practice a solo I do with my band on Come Sail Away! Lol. That is what makes music both great and timeless. Rock on friends.
Great track! I’m a guitar instructor and use tracks like these for students that are learning to create their own solos by using the major pentatonic and diatonic scales and their relative minors. Good on you for your work...it’s making a difference and helping the future generations of guitarists find their voice.
This was incredibly fun to jam along to. Started off just doing variations of the main chords, syncing to the groove, next thing I know this track inspired some Blink 182 / Sum 41 style lead / solo to come flowing through into the time of my life. Most fun I've had with a backing track in a while, thank you so much! Your channel / talent / music is incredible!
I've always have really loved this backing track, I like how you start rockin it in beginning and mellow it out, back and forth,,and the length of all of your tracks are long I really love that,
You can do to build your chordal playing, seeing what extensions and inversions you can use, but another great way to practice is to search the scales for the notes and try and play a melody. For example: When the tracks playing the C major chord, play the C major scale and jam the notes over it, Chord G, G major scale, A minor play the minor scale and finally F play an F major scale. You don't have to play the notes in order just the select notes in the scales and create melody's that way. Learning the scales and different variations will create melody in your playing and create a foundation to start implementing it in chordal patterns. Hope this helps search a little bit of music theory will really help in the long run, although its kinda boring it will provide crazy opportunities in your playing. Hope this helps, good luck and enjoy!
@@Lymanization Hi there! If your building a chord, I would recommend learning intervals of of keys and what sound they produce, so you can build chord sounds in relation to the idea you have. If you're talking chord progressions, I would recommend analyzing music you really enjoy. Take the song and look at the chords used and how they relate to the intervals of the key. That way you have knowledge of how the chords interact but also how you can recreate the sound in any key. In practice I do this and I also sing out progressions as I work them out. This is really good for ear training but will also build your songwriting and playing skills as you can play sung melodies/chord progressions. Hope this helps! And hope you're having a great day! All the best!
Great track. Fun jamming on a Saturday afternoon. Love how some people took this in a Blink 182 direction-I used it to practice a solo I do with my band on Come Sail Away! Lol. That is what makes music both great and timeless. Rock on friends.
Great track!
I’m a guitar instructor and use tracks like these for students that are learning to create their own solos by using the major pentatonic and diatonic scales and their relative minors.
Good on you for your work...it’s making a difference and helping the future generations of guitarists find their voice.
Hey I'm doing exactly that
Just major scales for me
@@albertsisonbulaun5991 same here
+1
@@elsnowman123 Try a C major pentatonic over this one
Love this C backing tract for practising chord tones and caged system. Thank you so much
This was incredibly fun to jam along to. Started off just doing variations of the main chords, syncing to the groove, next thing I know this track inspired some Blink 182 / Sum 41 style lead / solo to come flowing through into the time of my life. Most fun I've had with a backing track in a while, thank you so much! Your channel / talent / music is incredible!
This track inspired Blink 182ish feelings initially and then it kind of went Canon-ish! Great! Thanks so much!
Really a good one 👍👍
Thank you a lot 🙌
just what i was looking for
Really fun to play along to! Awesome, thanks!
I've always have really loved this backing track, I like how you start rockin it in beginning and mellow it out, back and forth,,and the length of all of your tracks are long I really love that,
О, хорошо, что пишете аккорды!
thank you so much for doing the backing track. I came here every day and thought I forgot. haha ha. thank you . can i give more suggestions?
Of course you can
OMG! This is so much fun I can hardly stand it! Thank you and Rock On!
Wow thanks im using this track in my first album
Thank you. Please do not forget to credit me for the backing track and don't make money on it. :-)
Thank you for this!
Wowwww I absolutely love this track you've created, I have been down lately and with this track made my heart beat
There will be answer let it be!!!
Muy buena la de canciones que habrá en el mundo con estos acordes
Sting: " So Lonely, so lonely, so lonnnnnnely !!!!! "
Can you feel the love tonighttttt !! Country road take me home to the place where i belong.... 4 chords song !!
Not surprised with the shite he plays
I love it
Thank you
I wrote words too. Is that wrong?
Not at all!
great !
very helpful!
awesome...thanks
Buenisimo
Killer!!!
Yay Canon in C 😁😀
Nice
Worthy.
Permiso para usar. Gracias
At the end of the track i literally thought: "sweet.". Then I saw your channel name
Top ✌️
Blink-182 chords and riffs
lol yeah other wise known as basic ass chord progressions.😂😂
My facorte jam track
👍
MERCI
Topissssssssssiiiiiiiimmmooooooooooooooooo
Mateo Carcassi Op 60 n°1
♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️
What I do just play the open chords
You can do to build your chordal playing, seeing what extensions and inversions you can use, but another great way to practice is to search the scales for the notes and try and play a melody. For example: When the tracks playing the C major chord, play the C major scale and jam the notes over it, Chord G, G major scale, A minor play the minor scale and finally F play an F major scale. You don't have to play the notes in order just the select notes in the scales and create melody's that way.
Learning the scales and different variations will create melody in your playing and create a foundation to start implementing it in chordal patterns. Hope this helps search a little bit of music theory will really help in the long run, although its kinda boring it will provide crazy opportunities in your playing.
Hope this helps, good luck and enjoy!
@@thebushwookie9922 how do you come up with this chord structure? I’m trying to figure out how and what to do!
@@Lymanization Hi there!
If your building a chord, I would recommend learning intervals of of keys and what sound they produce, so you can build chord sounds in relation to the idea you have.
If you're talking chord progressions, I would recommend analyzing music you really enjoy. Take the song and look at the chords used and how they relate to the intervals of the key. That way you have knowledge of how the chords interact but also how you can recreate the sound in any key.
In practice I do this and I also sing out progressions as I work them out. This is really good for ear training but will also build your songwriting and playing skills as you can play sung melodies/chord progressions.
Hope this helps! And hope you're having a great day!
All the best!
One way jesus.
Permission to use
all the, small things
haha its a jouney beat