@@louiscarrollmusic-lcm5331 I know. I use superimposition all the time. It's just that the person I responded to had relative major and minor incorrect between C major and e minor.
@@coupe-lee I see what you mean, my mistake Is it possible to refer to something less directly as a relative minor? Say for example C#m is the relative minor of E, but F#m is also a minor relative to E due to its position in the scale? I guess it’s how you phrase it but I’m curious
The way you broke triads in groups of four notes(moonlight sonata III style) is very fluid:I'm impressed watching your right hand cause it seems a little bit far from the strings and it stays very precise though...I only saw Rob Barnby using this type of approach,do you know him? Greetings from france,great harmony tips on your channel 👍
Very comfortable! Bought one myself, feels like an old Gibson, a little chunky C shape that's not too wide. Very much not the "Shred neck" Ibanez is known for but fits the style perfectly imo.
⚡Learn it in TAB/Notation in "5 Creative Triadic Etudes": www.bensguitarclub.com/p/5-creative-triadic-etudes
⚡All 3 transcription books: www.bensguitarclub.com/p/transcription-book-bundle
⚡The BGC Bundle (All masterclasses): www.bensguitarclub.com/p/the-bgc-bundle
Your Ibanez is absolutely beautiful. And great channel btw, very inspirational.
Thank you so much for watching! 😀
Excellent lesson Ben, love the sound of that E triad
One of my favorites as well!
Awesome video
this is really good. thank you Ben for doing these great videos.
Thanks for watching, Brad!
I usually think in terms of relative major/minor. I play an Emin triad over C, G major over Emin, etc.
E minor is not the relative minor of C major though. It would be A minor.
@@coupe-leemore about the shape than the theory, Pat Martino is an excellent example of this with his patented “minor conversion theory”
@@louiscarrollmusic-lcm5331 I know. I use superimposition all the time. It's just that the person I responded to had relative major and minor incorrect between C major and e minor.
@@coupe-lee I see what you mean, my mistake
Is it possible to refer to something less directly as a relative minor? Say for example C#m is the relative minor of E, but F#m is also a minor relative to E due to its position in the scale?
I guess it’s how you phrase it but I’m curious
That's a great approach!
Good lesson guitarist....
thanks!
D/C had the nicest voicing. A good concept, I want to try this out!
It's my favorite out of all the chords here!
The way you broke triads in groups of four notes(moonlight sonata III style) is very fluid:I'm impressed watching your right hand cause it seems a little bit far from the strings and it stays very precise though...I only saw Rob Barnby using this type of approach,do you know him? Greetings from france,great harmony tips on your channel 👍
Thank you so much for checking it out! I've recently seen his videos, he's great! Thank you again and all the best 😀
All your studies are very good to increase vocabulary, your tone is awesome, what amp do you use Ben?
So glad you enjoyed it! Going to make an updated gear video soon where I'll discuss it all
How is the neck on that Ibanez?
Very comfortable! Bought one myself, feels like an old Gibson, a little chunky C shape that's not too wide. Very much not the "Shred neck" Ibanez is known for but fits the style perfectly imo.
Somewhere between chunky and slim, just right! Feels great
Should show tabs on the screen or its hard to always know what yur doin
Tab/Notation is available in this book: www.bensguitarclub.com/p/5-creative-triadic-etudes
D/C
Thank you, Ben.
Thanks for watching, Jim!