Thanks for posting! I love your lectures, though at 81 years old, I only play nylon string, non cutaway guitar. I’m tempted to pull out my forty year old Gibson Charley Christian CC model jazz box with my Polytone amplifier, despite the feedback it generates!!
Great lesson. Note choice in the blues is my main interest at this point as I try and play with more feel. Quickly becoming my favorite guitar channel..
@@evergladesrhythm If you have time, consider giving Jeff Healey's version a listen. Very much benefiting from your thorough analyses and demonstrations highlighting the topics you present.
@@wscott-ly4rtthats not any band its Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, with Dani Harrison too at the George Harrison tribute event after his passing. Awesome video on here if you look it up!
Question. If each chord is a change in key why are you playing the same pentatonic scale over it? When you go to D7 couldn’t you play D pentatonic over it?
Great Question. You totally can do that, in fact many players do, it is a little more tricky because you have to be aware of the major 3rd in the chord. (So you basically have to bend the minor 3rd) Also you have to practice or it can sound a bit 'boxy' However, many blues players use the basic pentatonic scale as the home base for most of the licks. If you are playing a blues in A, an A minor pentatonic scale is the easiest to use and will work over the whole 12 bar progression. But when you try adding in different scales and notes it makes it much more interesting.
The 1 to the 1 🤯 thank you for sharing
You got it! Glad you found the channel Mkke.
Top notch playing Sir.... Deep respect from India/Roby.
Thanks Roby!
Thanks for posting! I love your lectures, though at 81 years old, I only play nylon string, non cutaway guitar. I’m tempted to pull out my forty year old Gibson Charley Christian CC model jazz box with my Polytone amplifier, despite the feedback it generates!!
You should definitely do that!
great breakdown here...nice!
Appreciate it! Glad you found the channel Steven ⚡
Great lesson. Note choice in the blues is my main interest at this point as I try and play with more feel. Quickly becoming my favorite guitar channel..
Huge compliment- thanks Mathew
Very nice .Im just a brick layer, you are a.Master carpenter!
Thanks Bob! Hope you have fun jamming. That is what it is all about
Again appreciete You !Still Practising!
Keep it up
Pardon my ignorance, but that snippet of Prince is his band playing "While my guitar gently weeps" ?
That’s right
@@evergladesrhythm If you have time, consider giving Jeff Healey's version a listen. Very much benefiting from your thorough analyses and demonstrations highlighting the topics you present.
@@wscott-ly4rtthats not any band its Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, with Dani Harrison too at the George Harrison tribute event after his passing. Awesome video on here if you look it up!
So glad you found the channel!
Question. If each chord is a change in key why are you playing the same pentatonic scale over it? When you go to D7 couldn’t you play D pentatonic over it?
Great Question.
You totally can do that, in fact many players do, it is a little more tricky because you have to be aware of the major 3rd in the chord. (So you basically have to bend the minor 3rd)
Also you have to practice or it can sound a bit 'boxy'
However, many blues players use the basic pentatonic scale as the home base for most of the licks. If you are playing a blues in A, an A minor pentatonic scale is the easiest to use and will work over the whole 12 bar progression. But when you try adding in different scales and notes it makes it much more interesting.