Hey, kids! I am very proud to announce the release of two new albums: “Tony Cultreri ~ On Betrayal”. Pure instrumental music, straight from my heart. A guitar-driven, intense, and emotional journey. And “Tony Cultreri & Brian Lynch ~ These Different Machines (Deluxe Edition)”. Essential songs, powerful lyrics, and passionate playing. The Great Ride's starting now! Visit tonycultreri.bandcamp.com for high-def digital downloads. They're also available to download on iTunes, and all other usual locations. Now streaming everywhere finer records and tapes are streamed. Your support is needed and very much appreciated! ❤🎸🤘😎 ~ Tutorial Notes: I show the very first note of the intro as an E harmonic played on the 12th fret. Greg Lake sometimes played it that way live, but on the original album he simply plays an open E. ~ Subscribe if you’d like, and please remember to “like” this video, as that helps it show up in search results. Thank you, and enjoy! 🎸
Hello Tony, there is also a beautiful acoustic solo From Greg Lake interview Q 104.3 part 2 in TH-cam. Can you sometimes give a lessen in that? Like your Lessons ! Greetings
Thanks for a great tutorial Tony 👍 I have been trying to play guitar for well over 50 years 🥵 but only recently have i learned much by watching Gabriella Quavido and now you 😊 ELP where my idols in my teens, life is incredibly fast 🤯🙏
I'm just getting to come to know Tony's efforts here and Wow!! Amazing! Great work sir! This is stellar and inspirational and easy to follow tutorials. I love it!
Just found you this morning. Have played the basics for decades but have never been serious about the solo until now. Thank you so much. Having fun with this one. Subbed you too.
Wow! Well done! I'm very impressed with the clean flat picking -- not an easy feat to be sure. Another one of my favorites and thank you so much! SUBSCRIBED
Thanks Uncle Tony, You are appreciated, Cool lesson, To the point, Succinct, Only a breakdown of here's chords, Here's how'um, Here's the song, Here's to play it, The rest is up to you ,, It don't get better than that
Thank you for showing us the parts that we were missing - I got to see them Live in San Diego Ca - in their prime - Thomas [ From Morris/Roberts Group -
4:54 I've been trying to play that lick ever since the song came out. Left hand is easy. Right hand is a bitch. I need to try it your way, since it's smooth as silk in your hands.
You mentioned the advantage of TH-cam. Yeah I remember learning songs by ear back in the day. Wearing out records from picking the needle up and replaying those parts over and over. Then later the cassette tape rewind button. Good luck rewinding an 8 track lol
Thank you for your kind words! It was a 1993 Guild D-55 USA. Nothing sounded quite like it, but it was a bear to play I just traded it in for a Martin.HD28 Which is much easier to play, especially as I get older. Keep on playing!
@@UncleTonyGuitar Your choice was certainly great! Never tried a d28 but I imagine it's a dream guitar🤤. A more comfortable guitar to play is always useful for a young man like you😉
I’m glad you enjoyed the lesson! The fretboard seems perfectly viewable to me, but I’m always trying to improve. (I am on a desktop...) Perhaps I need to sit higher, so it will be more centered. Keep playing!
Omg Tony! What a great explanation. You have it together man, many thanks for this and others! Under 2k subs? Unreal. Instant sub my man! Why aren't you MY uncle Tony?
Hi Tony, those are extremely well done tutorials and I thank you for it, only one thing, when Greg starts playing this one, he starts with the low E (not it's harmonic) and the harmonics of G B E. In contrary of the Yes song ''Roundabout'' where in the intro, They indeed start on the harmonic of the low E. I loved growing up with that music (1954 model here ;))
I’ve seen him play it live both ways, but you are correct that the opening note on the original record is an open low E, and not the harmonic. I added that to my notes, above. I was originally going to teach a live version of this, as I feel it’s a much better version, and on that he opens with the harmonic. I decided on the studio version because Keith's Moog solo is superb, and I wanted to teach that on the guitar. : )
This was my 1993 Guild D 55. I traded it in for a Taylor 417e-R Natural because, although the Guild sounded and recorded beautifully, it was becoming just too much for me to play. It’s a very stiff, unyielding instrument. But quite frankly, the Taylor didn’t even come close to comparing. Yesterday, I traded the Taylor in for a Martin HD28E. Now we’re talking! I just could not live with that Taylor. Although it was beautifully made, I would not even put it in the same league as the Guild or the Martin. Now, all I have to do is pay for it…. 🙂
@@UncleTonyGuitar I have a 1979 D55 (Waverly, RI)...and every time I think about selling it, I just can't quite pull the trigger. The units from that era were heavy - I think you could toss that thing down the stairs and just check that it's in tune and go to the gig! Just found your channel and you have an excellent manner of teaching. From one paisan to another!
If you really wanna hear my D55 check out a video of mine called “Another Winter”. And that was just plugged straight into the board! I thank you so much for the compliment, Paisan!
My guitar is a 1977 hand made D’Agostino, essentially a double cutaway Les Paul, made by Pat D’Agostino, who had recently defected from Gibson Custom Shop. As far as we know he made five of these. This guitar was made for me. It sounds incredible and has enormous sustain, but it weighs as much as a Prius. He sold the company to Italian makers, who then sold it to Korean makers. You can find guitars that look like it online, but they are not the same. Hope you enjoyed the lesson!
It's a beautiful looking and sounding guitar, thanks for taking the time to respond and for the great tutorial, always loved that song@@UncleTonyGuitar
Thank you, I’m so happy that you enjoyed the lesson! My guitar was a 1990 Guild D-55. I recently traded it in because although it sounded incredible, it was always a very difficult guitar to play. Like a pair of shoes that never broke in. But I miss it...
Thanks, I’m so glad you enjoyed it! ~ That’s my D’Agostino guitar. Pat D’Agostino was a builder with the Gibson Custom Shop in the 70’s. He made 5 of these by hand. The company was then sold and re-sold to overseas concerns several times, each owner making worse guitars than the previous. A few years later, it died. You can find terrible versions around; this is not one. This guitar weighs roughly as much as a Prius. It is currently in its case, replaced by a much, much lighter PRS McCarty 594 Thinline that I love.
@@UncleTonyGuitar your D'Agostino guitar is very beautiful, maybe it is heavy because it is quite thick do you know what guitar and effect did Greg Lake use to play the solo on this song? it sounds gorgeous
@@muzixman2011 Yes, my guitar is very thick and solid. Unreal sustain. ~ I do not know what guitar Greg Lake used on the record. Live, he used a top of the line Martin D-45 or similar. ~ Keep playin’!
Hey, kids! I am very proud to announce the release of two new albums: “Tony Cultreri ~ On Betrayal”. Pure instrumental music, straight from my heart. A guitar-driven, intense, and emotional journey. And “Tony Cultreri & Brian Lynch ~ These Different Machines (Deluxe Edition)”. Essential songs, powerful lyrics, and passionate playing. The Great Ride's starting now! Visit tonycultreri.bandcamp.com for high-def digital downloads. They're also available to download on iTunes, and all other usual locations. Now streaming everywhere finer records and tapes are streamed. Your support is needed and very much appreciated! ❤🎸🤘😎 ~ Tutorial Notes: I show the very first note of the intro as an E harmonic played on the 12th fret. Greg Lake sometimes played it that way live, but on the original album he simply plays an open E. ~ Subscribe if you’d like, and please remember to “like” this video, as that helps it show up in search results. Thank you, and enjoy! 🎸
Thank you Uncle Tony…always fantastic!
@@Jetblackt120 I’m so glad you enjoyed it! Keep on playing!
OK, this must be the *best* tutorial for this song.
Thanks Uncle Tony, love this track!
You are most welcome! Keep on playing!
Very good lesson, clear and direct teaching. Also, it makes you really appreciate Greg Lake’s unbelievably creative songwriting and guitar playing.
Thank you so much! Keep on playing!
Best tutorial on You Tube.
Thank you so much!
Hello Tony, there is also a beautiful acoustic solo From Greg Lake interview Q 104.3 part 2 in TH-cam. Can you sometimes give a lessen in that? Like your Lessons ! Greetings
So glad you enjoyed the lesson! Keep on playing!
Well done! Thanks.
So glad you enjoyed it! Keep on playing!
Bravissimo!!! 13:49
Grazie! Sono così felice che ti sia piaciuto. Per favore, metti "mi piace" e iscriviti, e soprattutto, continua a giocare!
Fabulous explanation. Thank you very much. I remember watching ELP live playing this tune. Still fantastic
I’m so glad that you enjoyed the tutorial! Keep on playing!
Subscribed too. You have a great style of teaching
Love it!! Thank you Uncle Tony! Fabulous teacher. 😘
@@endaveres I’m so glad it made you happy! Keep on playing!
Nice job Tony! Succinct, easy to understand, sounds beautiful!
Glad you enjoyed it! Thank you so much!
Excellent! Just a fabulous song. My all time favorite
So glad you enjoyed it!
You are theeee Bomb Tony!
Thank you! Keep on playing!
Excellent!
Thanks! I’m truly so glad that you liked it! Most importantly, keep playing...
Thanks for a great tutorial Tony 👍 I have been trying to play guitar for well over 50 years 🥵 but only recently have i learned much by watching Gabriella Quavido and now you 😊 ELP where my idols in my teens, life is incredibly fast 🤯🙏
Excellent. Nicely taught.
I’ so glad you liked it! Keep on playing!
Great lesson Tony! Thank you! Will try myself!
I’m so glad you liked it! Keep on playing…
Awesome lesson from one of my favorite songs. Thank you.
Thank you so much! I’m so happy that you enjoyed it. Keep on playing!
I'm just getting to come to know Tony's efforts here and Wow!! Amazing! Great work sir! This is stellar and inspirational and easy to follow tutorials. I love it!
So glad you liked it! Keep on playing!
Love your teaching style Uncle Tony…. And Love this song. It’s my new project…thanks!
Thank you so much! So gald you’re enjoying the lessons!
so many interesting things between the lines. Thank you for sharing
So glad you liked it! Keep on playing!
Great job!! Greetings from Swinging London ✨
Thanks! So glad you enjoyed it! Greetings to Blighty...
Mastro Antone,
Excellent, excellent lesson. The best I’ve seen on the net. 👍👍👍
Thank you so much! I’m truly glad that you enjoyed it!
Just found you this morning. Have played the basics for decades but have never been serious about the solo until now. Thank you so much. Having fun with this one. Subbed you too.
I’m so glad you enjoyed it!
Great work. Thanks.
So glad you liked it! Keep on playin’...
Wow! Well done! I'm very impressed with the clean flat picking -- not an easy feat to be sure. Another one of my favorites and thank you so much! SUBSCRIBED
Great stuff Tony! I teach students how to learn fast parts the same way, really works.
Thank you! I try to ‘sneak in some vegetables’ to each lesson...
Hi Tony, thanks a lot for taking time to record tutorials to some "rarer" songs :) Immense help.
You’re welcome! So glad you liked it!
Thanks Uncle Tony, You are appreciated,
Cool lesson,
To the point, Succinct,
Only a breakdown of here's chords,
Here's how'um,
Here's the song,
Here's to play it, The rest is up to you ,,
It don't get better than that
Thank you! I’m truly glad you enjoyed it! Please “Like” & “Subscribe” if you like & subscribe, but more importantly, keep on playing...
Best lesson, great teaching!
Thank you! So glad you liked it.
Thank you for showing us the parts that we were missing - I got to see them Live in San Diego Ca - in their prime - Thomas [ From Morris/Roberts Group -
I’m so glad you enjoyed the lesson! I saw so many great bands, but never ELP!
Nice job Uncle Tony! Thanks
Glad you enjoyed it!
You are a very good teacher
Thank you so much! Keep on playin’!
4:54 I've been trying to play that lick ever since the song came out. Left hand is easy. Right hand is a bitch. I need to try it your way, since it's smooth as silk in your hands.
Thanks! You can do it... slowly, with no tension, a little faster each day... take your time, and keep on playing! 😊
Thanks uncle Tony
You’re very welcome! Keep on playing!
You mentioned the advantage of TH-cam. Yeah I remember learning songs by ear back in the day. Wearing out records from picking the needle up and replaying those parts over and over. Then later the cassette tape rewind button. Good luck rewinding an 8 track lol
Nice video ! could you tell me the precise model of your guitar? she is wonderful!
Thank you for your kind words! It was a 1993 Guild D-55 USA. Nothing sounded quite like it, but it was a bear to play I just traded it in for a Martin.HD28 Which is much easier to play, especially as I get older. Keep on playing!
@@UncleTonyGuitar Your choice was certainly great! Never tried a d28 but I imagine it's a dream guitar🤤. A more comfortable guitar to play is always useful for a young man like you😉
@@alessiolaplaca7326 it is a wonderful, dream instrument, and priced accordingly… 😂
Hey Tony - Great lesson for the song but also for playing in general, many thanks!
I’m so glad you liked it, Doc! Keep on playing!
Nice tutorial! One suggestion - please position your camera a little higher, so it will provide better view of the guitar neck. Thank you.
I’m glad you enjoyed the lesson! The fretboard seems perfectly viewable to me, but I’m always trying to improve. (I am on a desktop...) Perhaps I need to sit higher, so it will be more centered. Keep playing!
Great tutorial. Could you do one for "Love Alive" by Heart?
@@kshavo Thank you, I’m so glad you liked it. I’ll add the Heart song to my list of suggestions. Keep on playing!
Omg Tony! What a great explanation. You have it together man, many thanks for this and others!
Under 2k subs? Unreal. Instant sub my man! Why aren't you MY uncle Tony?
So glad you liked it!
Hi Tony, those are extremely well done tutorials and I thank you for it, only one thing, when Greg starts playing this one, he starts with the low E (not it's harmonic) and the harmonics of G B E. In contrary of the Yes song ''Roundabout'' where in the intro, They indeed start on the harmonic of the low E. I loved growing up with that music (1954 model here ;))
I’ve seen him play it live both ways, but you are correct that the opening note on the original record is an open low E, and not the harmonic. I added that to my notes, above. I was originally going to teach a live version of this, as I feel it’s a much better version, and on that he opens with the harmonic. I decided on the studio version because Keith's Moog solo is superb, and I wanted to teach that on the guitar. : )
What year is your D55? They are such great-looking guitars that fly under the radar compared to Martin or Taylor.
This was my 1993 Guild D 55. I traded it in for a Taylor 417e-R Natural because, although the Guild sounded and recorded beautifully, it was becoming just too much for me to play. It’s a very stiff, unyielding instrument. But quite frankly, the Taylor didn’t even come close to comparing. Yesterday, I traded the Taylor in for a Martin HD28E. Now we’re talking! I just could not live with that Taylor. Although it was beautifully made, I would not even put it in the same league as the Guild or the Martin. Now, all I have to do is pay for it…. 🙂
@@UncleTonyGuitar I have a 1979 D55 (Waverly, RI)...and every time I think about selling it, I just can't quite pull the trigger. The units from that era were heavy - I think you could toss that thing down the stairs and just check that it's in tune and go to the gig! Just found your channel and you have an excellent manner of teaching. From one paisan to another!
If you really wanna hear my D55 check out a video of mine called “Another Winter”. And that was just plugged straight into the board! I thank you so much for the compliment, Paisan!
@@UncleTonyGuitar Just watched - only 1 question - who's that young guy playing your D55? ;)
Fantastic playing!
That young guy used to be me, somehow I got old and fat. Thank you so much for the compliments!
thank you !!!
You are most welcome!
Your teaching is excellent and you remind me of the warden in The Shawshank Redemption.
Thank you, and thank you? Keep on playing!
The first note is not a harmonic. It's just an open E. You're thinking of roundabout :)
Thanks for watching! I hope you enjoyed the tutorial. The first note is addressed in the tutorial notes above. Keep on playing!
Hey Uncle T
What make model is your electric guitar please Tony
Steve Chester
My guitar is a 1977 hand made D’Agostino, essentially a double cutaway Les Paul, made by Pat D’Agostino, who had recently defected from Gibson Custom Shop. As far as we know he made five of these. This guitar was made for me. It sounds incredible and has enormous sustain, but it weighs as much as a Prius. He sold the company to Italian makers, who then sold it to Korean makers. You can find guitars that look like it online, but they are not the same. Hope you enjoyed the lesson!
It's a beautiful looking and sounding guitar, thanks for taking the time to respond and for the great tutorial, always loved that song@@UncleTonyGuitar
@@jakeblakeman447 I’m so glad you enjoyed the tutorial!
👍👍👍
Glad you liked it!
Tony great lesson. Is that a Guild D-50?
Thank you, I’m so happy that you enjoyed the lesson! My guitar was a 1990 Guild D-55. I recently traded it in because although it sounded incredible, it was always a very difficult guitar to play. Like a pair of shoes that never broke in. But I miss it...
great stuff, especially the Keith's keyboard parts, what is the electric guitar you use in this video?
Thanks, I’m so glad you enjoyed it! ~ That’s my D’Agostino guitar. Pat D’Agostino was a builder with the Gibson Custom Shop in the 70’s. He made 5 of these by hand. The company was then sold and re-sold to overseas concerns several times, each owner making worse guitars than the previous. A few years later, it died. You can find terrible versions around; this is not one. This guitar weighs roughly as much as a Prius. It is currently in its case, replaced by a much, much lighter PRS McCarty 594 Thinline that I love.
@@UncleTonyGuitar your D'Agostino guitar is very beautiful, maybe it is heavy because it is quite thick
do you know what guitar and effect did Greg Lake use to play the solo on this song? it sounds gorgeous
@@muzixman2011 Yes, my guitar is very thick and solid. Unreal sustain. ~ I do not know what guitar Greg Lake used on the record. Live, he used a top of the line Martin D-45 or similar. ~ Keep playin’!
Than k you! Been playing it all wrong ..😅 . Subscribed!
As long as you’re playing, it’s all right... Have fun!
You were good kid, real good . but so long as i'm around you'll always be second best see.😅😅. Seriously , great teachings. Many thanks
... I might as well learn to live with it... Glad you liked it!
Excellent!
I’m so happy that you enjoyed it! Keep on playing!