For info on affordable, quality private guitar lessons via Skype visit www.tastyguitar.com/skype-lessons Get an amazing collection of R&B, Soul and Funk Fills and Grooves w/video & tracks www.tastyguitar.com/books For free downloadable TAB on this lesson and dozens more visit www.tastyguitar.com/free-lessons
The Amazing Guitar Devil !!!! Great sound & Great stuf & Great lessons & Great teacher !!!! Jazz,Blues.Funk,Pop etc. He does it all !!!! Thanx a million !!!!
Tight groove, great sound and music taste bro! Reminds me Ross the Mighty, though your pick attack and timing feels even more precise(not harder). Youve just got an another subscriber
Beautiful. I think I'm going to have to get an electric guitar. I'm trying my best on my 3/4 sized classical guitar. Mind you - a bad workman blames his tools!
@@TastyGuitarcom haha, I know, and with the action a bit high as well. I bought it for my daughter. I had to leave my guitar in the UK but now I'm wanting to play. I'm a percussionist. I love what I'm learning here.
Great lesson as always, learned a couple new riffs from you today. Thank You. P.S. Would be good (especially with funk) to go into the timing of these a bit more.
It totally depends on the other instrumentation in that particular mix. like you may want to add horns, or an organ witch both can take the same frequency range of guitars. But I'd say generally you would pan two different funky rhythm parts to the sides, although usually not hard panned. As for the Bass, to bring it out of the mix, you often want to pan the bass also, but by using say, a stereo modulation effect on it. The kick can also go _slightly_ off center if you are recording the kit in stereo. In the end, you need to use your ears to judge what sounds best in each different case. There is no golden rule that will work for every situation when recording. That's why adding effects during mixing is better than when recording the actual track. Get your tone (and all important room sound if not direct input) as close as you can to what you want in the end, but I suggest added a tiny bit more treble than you want because adding treble can add noise, whereas adding bass to your tone will not add noise. It's also important to reference your mix on alternatives sources besides your monitor speakers. A clock radio, a phone and a car stereo are all good to listen to your mixes on. For checking your bass and kick in particular, it's super important to have a sub woofer with a cross over so you can listen to bass frequencies by themselves. If there is a golden rule for this, it's do your best to give each instrument their own sonic space, and a lot of that is what he is teaching here as far as how you play and song writing goes, the same rule works for recording though, and is even more important. Hope some of that helps. ^-^
For info on affordable, quality private guitar lessons via Skype visit www.tastyguitar.com/skype-lessons
Get an amazing collection of R&B, Soul and Funk Fills and Grooves w/video & tracks www.tastyguitar.com/books
For free downloadable TAB on this lesson and dozens more visit www.tastyguitar.com/free-lessons
The Amazing Guitar Devil !!!! Great sound & Great stuf & Great lessons & Great teacher !!!! Jazz,Blues.Funk,Pop etc. He does it all !!!! Thanx a million !!!!
haha thanks Rene!
Nice lesson and beautiful Tele!
il catch up...that was excellent..i can read basic music , so following made it a bit easier.
Finally doing play alongs and this 2 part series was a BLAST!
Thanks again for doing what you do.
Thanks for watching, glad you enjoyed this!
Very nice lesson...so funky I can smell it...! This is Funk rythm techniques 101.
Yea, you can always smell it when it's funky.
Like something good is cooking in the oven, lols.
You've got the funk man! Thank's
Brother, it STANK's in here! Great lesson! Thank you!
Great lesson tonight is thanks for sharing
that is some tasty funky guitar playing. plus you are a great teacher. thanks for the lesson
Thanks Bob!
YEAH! That's so Tasty!!!!! A HUGE FAN! Thanks a million!
Thanks Joseph!
Hey man, great channel. Appreciate the lessons.
Excelente muchas gracias.. Desde Venezuela..
Learnt to add more color to music .. now i feel like pro thanks
Another quality lesson, thanks so much mate :) !!
Thanks mate really appreciate the hard work on those lessons ! keep it up
thanks mate...ozzy or kiwi
great lesson. thanx
Tight groove, great sound and music taste bro! Reminds me Ross the Mighty, though your pick attack and timing feels even more precise(not harder).
Youve just got an another subscriber
Beautiful. I think I'm going to have to get an electric guitar. I'm trying my best on my 3/4 sized classical guitar. Mind you - a bad workman blames his tools!
Yeah, a 3/4 classical is probably not the best choice here :)
@@TastyGuitarcom haha, I know, and with the action a bit high as well. I bought it for my daughter. I had to leave my guitar in the UK but now I'm wanting to play. I'm a percussionist. I love what I'm learning here.
Thank you !!!
zarizarikun thanks for watching!
Great lesson as always, learned a couple new riffs from you today. Thank You.
P.S. Would be good (especially with funk) to go into the timing of these a bit more.
Really good
Best stuff like this i've seen on Yout.
And the guy's not irritating like some.
Great man!
Great, tasty grooves. Are you on your bridge pickup? Sounds funky. Thanks!
Thanks! I was on either the neck or middle position on all this, nothing on the bridge pickup by itself.
Hmmm so tasty, thank you...
I now have it 90% guitar wise
sweeeeet how would you pan these on a song bass guitar and kick in center so im told what about guitar ??
Well, I'm certainly no mixing expert but I would probably pan guitars slightly to opposite sides
It totally depends on the other instrumentation in that particular mix. like you may want to add horns, or an organ witch both can take the same frequency range of guitars. But I'd say generally you would pan two different funky rhythm parts to the sides, although usually not hard panned. As for the Bass, to bring it out of the mix, you often want to pan the bass also, but by using say, a stereo modulation effect on it. The kick can also go _slightly_ off center if you are recording the kit in stereo.
In the end, you need to use your ears to judge what sounds best in each different case. There is no golden rule that will work for every situation when recording. That's why adding effects during mixing is better than when recording the actual track. Get your tone (and all important room sound if not direct input) as close as you can to what you want in the end, but I suggest added a tiny bit more treble than you want because adding treble can add noise, whereas adding bass to your tone will not add noise.
It's also important to reference your mix on alternatives sources besides your monitor speakers. A clock radio, a phone and a car stereo are all good to listen to your mixes on. For checking your bass and kick in particular, it's super important to have a sub woofer with a cross over so you can listen to bass frequencies by themselves.
If there is a golden rule for this, it's do your best to give each instrument their own sonic space, and a lot of that is what he is teaching here as far as how you play and song writing goes, the same rule works for recording though, and is even more important.
Hope some of that helps. ^-^
So tasty
Thanks Ben!
Can you play funk without a plectrum?
GREAT LESSON HOWEVER I THINK THAT YOU SHOULD INTERVENE ON THE TRUSS ROD OF YOUR GUITAR
Very sweet playing. So damn funky with such great feel!!
Thank you!