I am not and may never be at this level but love the videos. Worth adding for anyone who doesn’t know, David’s Pennsylvania Station Blues is a great little record. Especially pleased to see the addition of tab boxes. That’s really helpful for someone like me with some sight loss who struggles to see exactly where some of your fingers are going on the video. Finishing touch would be if you could just indicate which frets you’re on in the tab.
Great lesson David. You mention the possibility of combining chord moves like this temporarily within a single note approach to soloing. Will your forthcoming workshop demonstrate some examples of this combined chord melody plus single line soloing? That would be especially helpful. Thanks.
So useful and informative. Chord melody is molecular guitar. Nice salute to Duke R.
Love this! Thanks for sharing
Super slick and a great sound. Got to see Duke last year play with Joel Paterson…what a treat!
Loving the lessons - always so concise and informative but above all, musical.
Great ideas!! Thank you!
Very good lesson ❤
Love it. Stealing this next practice session. Thanks David. 👍
So so good, as ever 🙏
Great move--I look forward to the workshop!
Got a very similar move from Larry Coryell
Fantastic lesson thanks!
Great lesson!
Nice lesson
I am not and may never be at this level but love the videos. Worth adding for anyone who doesn’t know, David’s Pennsylvania Station Blues is a great little record.
Especially pleased to see the addition of tab boxes. That’s really helpful for someone like me with some sight loss who struggles to see exactly where some of your fingers are going on the video. Finishing touch would be if you could just indicate which frets you’re on in the tab.
The fret is indicated by the Roman numeral on the left of the chord diagram. :)
@@FretboardConfidential Ah, apologies. I read the Roman numerals as the chords rather than the fret number.
That sounds like the move in Okie Dokie Stomp by Gatemouth Brown.
Duke Robillard undoubtedly listened a ton to Clarence Brown, as well as cats like Bill Jennings, Tiny Grimes (to name a few)
Great lesson David. You mention the possibility of combining chord moves like this temporarily within a single note approach to soloing. Will your forthcoming workshop demonstrate some examples of this combined chord melody plus single line soloing? That would be especially helpful. Thanks.
Yes, absolutely!
Great stuff...Duke IS the man. Will the course all be done on electric guitar?
That is the plan!
80 bucks, that‘s a lot..
Yah, but that’s a million dollar trick.
Great lesson, thanks!