He's humble for sure, but there are times when he explains something really poorly. These techniques come mostly naturally to him, so when he tries to explain it, he doesn't realize it doesn't come naturally to everyone else. Imo he may be slightly acoustic.
@@joshuastubbs1930 I think you mean autistic right ? He’s obviously a little bit shy or introverted. he knows how to play guitar, dude, I think just the explanation of djent is a poorly explained one. If he has autism he is on the end of the spectrum that is fully functional. -edit: rewatching this. Yeah he did a really bad job explaining it even attempting to play djenty riffs. Fair enough it’s not his cup of tea.
@@jessejive117 because he's answering the questions in a very direct way and isn't cutting any corners or showing off. he seems like a great guitar teacher
The fact that Tim Henson cited John Mayers neon as a difficult song is just awesome. They’re nothing like each other but they can appreciate each other. True musicians
@@greatvaluecorndog very true. I’m glad Mayer is finally getting his flowers. When I was younger everyone knew how good he is but no one liked admitting it. The fact that someone like Tim Henson is openly appreciating him is just really refreshing to someone like me who’s seen Mayer be hated on for so long
I don’t know who Tim Henson is, I just clicked because his tats look sick. But watching him break down how he wrote “Playing God” is one of the most interesting guitar clips I’ve ever seen. He makes each stepping stone seem simple, but the resulting sound is SO complex
In one of Vito Bratta's interviews, he described his melodies as something that can be sung, then played on guitar. He's not the first guitarist to do it and I'm glad he's not the last, melodious solos, riffs and verses are amazing
I like how he breaks down Playing God in great detail, plays the main riff flawlessly and then just stares expressionless at the camera like "yeah, whatever".
@@treborkroy5280amn what kinda asian chicks you have been seeing that can take that much of a resemblance to this henson mf 🧐 btw somehow henson is the whitest last name i have ever seen. kinda controversial but my brain is telling me that.
Thats because musicians are much more objective and less biased than singers. At the end of the day, guitar players stick together whether they play rock, metal, blues, jazz, folk, or anything else. So they all reckognize Mayers skill and they disregard all the garbage media spews about him
My favorite bit was when he was like "I don't know music theory." And then started describing all the stuff he was doing with music theory. Tim's too good for his own good.
Knowing the letters of the notes and what scales/degrees are is something any musician will pick up through osmosis if they spend any amount of time hearing other musicians talk about it. It's more like music arithmetic than theory.
I’ve never seen anyone who’s so consistent with their taste in style that they’ve coordinated their tattoos to their sweater, guitar, and pants. Even the hole in his jeans perfectly reveal the tattoo on his knee. This is what I aspire to be (besides ofc being insanely attuned to a musical instrument).
He's so matured now. Explaining even the very basic stuffs with enthusiasm. He could be a really great teacher (like Tosin). Down to earth. Zero show off.
Yeh…I like him now way better than the edgy douche boy that he used to act out for no reason at all, when they started out…I guess age may be…also musically matured leaps and bounds too
In another interview a while back, he got asked what he thought about the 10,000 hours of practice theory. (10,000 hours of practice of something, classes you in the pro level of experience in whatever you're practicing). And he replied with he's probably over 60,000 hours on guitar so where would that put him. :| :| :| :|
@@Sir-Bane Oh wow. I wonder where the dude will be when hes 50 years old or so. I already doubt that many people have reached the 60k hours in their entire lifetime
@@Sir-Bane 60k is kinda pushing it. Assuming he only sleeps 6 hours each and every day and plays guitar every minute of each day would mean it would still take him around 10 years to reach 60k hrs. but not even him plays 9hrs per day. Take that away, then take away the time for school, living an actual life (eating, going somehwere etc.) and the numbers go down a lot. he's probably at around 40k hrs and that's already insane as it means playing 6hrs of guitar each day for 20 years
Polyphia doesn't really intersect with my taste, but I love that younger guys like Tim are bringing guitar driven rock to other generations, and iterating on the epic prog/metal genre. He is truly a student and master of his craft and instrument, I love it.
@@Th3BadThing That's not the reason we hate, we hate because his music loses it's feeling and soul when you just spam a bunch of notes and try to look flashy. It's ironic because in the video he said that a good guitar solo is one you can sing, but his music is the exact opposite.
His mum forced him on Violin as a kid, and he defied her by secretly practicing Guitar Probably a good way to motivate someone, to reject the control of a parent ahaha
He can pick up any instrument, dabble with it for a bit and run through all the notes and play a sound by the end of the day. By no means a pro but he’s got such a good ear for music he can figure it out.
You can tell how much time he put into "fixing his walk", optimizing and perfecting his technique and craft overall. His explanations are crazy straightforward and accessible even if you're nowhere near his skill and mastery level, what a great teacher!
old guy relearning the guitar here, and this guy does a way way way better job teaching than all the "guitar teachers" I see here on youtube. I like how he breaks things down, you dont need a masters degree in music to know what he talking about, and you can see exactly what it is he is doing. thank you Tim Henson!
I'm in the same boat with an arm injury that messed up my picking hand. This band and a handful of others has me annoying the neighbors again, and I love it.
He's very at peace with himself and knows he's a borderline god on the instrument, but doesn't feel the need to put on false bravado or showboat. And I love that he treated every question the same regardless of complexity or technique and was never condescending or sarcastic.
I like how said it’s important to be able to sing the solo. A lot of shredmasters turn playing guitar into a flex fest, but it really helps if they can do melodic too. That’s probably why Tim and Polyphia have gotten so big.
No cap, this is the reason why Noel Gallagher is one of the best guitarists of all time even though he literally only knows minor pentatonic, live forever has one of the best solos for example
Tim is a great guitar teacher! He can not only explain the theories behind the different ways of playing a guitar, but he can play each one very well. Presenting a great visual and audio presentation.
I honestly can't believe that Tim isn't well educated on theory. When he plays it seems like he knows every scale, mode, chord,... you name it. Truly inspiring stuff to say the least!
A lot of musicians (specially guitarrists) say the don't know theory, but they actually do. They may not have learned it in the "standard way" but they learned it somehow. Also, the most of musical theory you'd use in practice is the basic stuff, so maybe they say they don't know theory because they don't know the advanced stuff (but then again, if you know the basics you know pretty much everything you're gonna need in a practical sense). Just like you said, he plays scales, modes, chords, progressions... generally speaking, if someone does this and claims they don't know theory, it is very contradictory IMO, since they just did everything they claimed not to know
@@jeffersoncarvalho8822 this x1000. When I was first starting off and “pretty proficient” I didn’t know the theory. But I remember learning theory little by little and learning some basic concept like the relationship between Ionian (Major) and Aeolian (Minor). I already knew that they were the same scales to create different feels but I didn’t know why. When I learned why and how simple of a concept it was it inspired me to learn more.
No, he definitely knows music theory. Both his parents are musicians & he’s played & been taught since he was very young. Literally said he doesn’t know, then proceeded to use it & explain music theory concepts right after
@@chrismostdope I think it's coz he didn't study it formally, compared to someone like Adam Neely who studied in a conservatory (tho idk if Henson also did, but doesn't seem to indicate so). So all the fancy terms, the intricate details and relationships between them, different modes or whatever, it's less emphasized.
I totally thought this dude was just full of himself, but he just gave me more knowledge than any other TH-camr or artist has in 16 minutes. I still think it’s funny how his examples with riffs are just these super complicated riffs that he flawlessly pulls off. I am now a Tim Henson fan.
He mentioned in some of his interviews that putting on that "full of himself" persona was a way to get attention when Polyphia just started, but he quickly learned that it's way more productive and mentally healthy to stay humble and be human.
You should check out his youtube channel. He always shares his knowledge and process of writing music. Even if it's not the style you would want to write, you can still learn things to apply to your own style.
@@mattrogers1946 Projecting much? Based on how your acting you don't exactly come across as the humble type. Instead of wasting all your time in this comments section you should go outside and touch grass every now and then
Obsessed with his style and how his badass tattoos match his gorgeous guitar and aesthetic. Even his hair has that electric look!! Such a chill and talented guy who's so majestic and well spoken too. In awe of him and it's SO interesting just listening to him explain⚡
I'm not a huge polyphia fan, but I'm always jawdropped watching tim Henson play, I feel like it must be the same feeling people had when EVH was just coming up on the scene
10 years playing guitar (just playing, never had a class or smth like that), and Tim Henson teaches me what's the Tone nob purpose, it was worth my day!
Any tips for a guy who has been playing for 1 and a half years by himself? Should I take lessons? Or is possible to be a good guitar player without proper teaching
@@Luismayer77 I am somewhat good, I’d say I know how to do most things this guy said on the video. Classes are great and I’d recommend them but I taught myself and it’s just a matter of practicing
@@Luismayer77 You can be a good player without a teacher but a good teacher will speed up your progress immensely. Sometimes you just don't know how to google a question you have so having someone irl that can see what you mean and explain it is incredibly helpful
@@Luismayer77 You can definitely be a good player without a proper teacher. I'd say if you find yourself having a hard time structuring your learning/practicing or feeling overwhelmed about what to learn and practice and when, finding a good teacher could be worthwhile. I say that because I was the type to run before I could walk, as Tim was saying, but unlike Tim I haven't been able to go back and learn to properly walk - I get overwhelmed and impatient. Probably my adhd lol
@@Luismayer77 teachers are great for when you don't know what you should know to advance to where you wanna be. To come back to the walking vs running analogy, a teacher can teach you how to walk so you can learn to run on your own, or they can help you clean up your walk when you already know how to run. For me personally especially in the beginning it helped a lot and even shaped my taste. I started out playing classical which makes fingerstyle picking a lot easier and taught me the basis of music theory and reading sheet music. But everybody is a little different!
@@Brenda-kb6di honestly, I live in australia and have been saving up for a ticket to go to their concert in sydney! Polyphia creates a one-of-a-kind experience with their music!!
i'm very happy tim has come a long way with being in front of a camera and an audience. saw them live in 2019 and it he was a little disappointing to be honest, but saw them again last year in 2022 and my god was that one of the most hype concerts i've been to.
The " I was a runner, then I learnt to walk to clean up my run" is such a mantra. I sprinted out the gate and caught up later on, but it really pushed me to be a fairly good guitarist. Also a by ear guy on both guitar and piano. My music knowledge is meh
I'm a lifetime guitar player that, in my 40s, finally started getting into actual soloing instead of just chord jamming. This kind of informational video is extremely helpful. You mentioned Rick Beato; his soloing videos are also that way. Your breakdown of sweep picking may be the easiest way I have ever heard it described! Absolutely helpful and I love it!
Tim Henson breaking down Playing God is so mind-blowing. Those simple sounding steps and the end result goes back to his roots on "going back and fixing my walk after learning how to run."
I'm not a fan of polyphia and super complex rock and roll. But that is so interesting that he pointed to such a simple solo as to what a great solo is. Definitely gives me a new perspective on how someone who does go for the challenging music style approaches their music.
YT is an amazing resource. I'm not a massive fan of Polyphia's style, but I do recognise their talent. And to hear Tim answer a lot of pretty basic questions without condescension and demo what he means is pretty heart warming tbh. He seems like a good guy. I especially liked his learning by ear tip.
2:06 it's a cool explanation about solos being memorable, that's probably my favorite thing about Polyphia is all of their music "fits" the band, but it has such as wide range of sounds where some bands just only sound like one thing and are easy to forget, Polyphia sticks in the memory as being so unique each time
He plays so flawlessly. It just hits my brain in such a good way haha. Hearing him speak is all the better, a monster on guitar but a sweetheart in communication 🤣
“No emotion” They’re giving an example, the man’s not trying to perform like in an actual concert in this Q&A video on Wired of all places. That’s kind of an unnecessary comment to just throw out.
What a cool, humble, smart dude. He knows what he knows and knows what he doesn't, and he's not afraid to speak plainly and just be real with this stuff. Such a cool video!
Single handedly fixed all the problems I had playing guitar. All the tutorials for pinch harmonics I’ve found have been really vague. This literally showed me how to do it and after watching it, literally 5 minutes later, I can play pinch harmonics.
it's really one of those techniques where most people headbutt into a wall until they figure it out, so it's really hard to explain. Congrats on figuring it out
This is so rad. Explains everything in such simple terms, while still being complex enough for those who know not to be bored. I’m a drummer by trade but started on guitar and this made me want to pick up my guitar and play through a few records
I was unaware of this band and Tim himself but I'm going to check them out now. I love how simply he breaks down fairly lofty concepts without coming off cocky or anything of the sort.
@tc7719 my point is kids these days don't know what actual guitar playing is they just hear a bunch of chords strung together and oh yeah dony forget the whammy bar to make it sound even "more badass" lol
My Boy Tim teaching people about his passion lets go many people think he is a bit too serious or even stuck up but when you hear him talk you realize he just loves what he does and is dedicated to it so it comes off a bit odd, but in reality he is humble and just enjoys the ride
I loved this. I think he underplayed how much music theory he knows. He demonstrated quite a bit of it. All his answers were honest and not really hiding anything. Quite a talented musician. Thanks for the Video.
Its so refreshing hearing somebody asking him about barre chords i can do those in my sleep but the fact somebody asked tells me people are still willing to learn and its nice
One of my good friends who I played with in my first band, is heavily influenced by Tim's playing. I used to think Tim's licks are pretty insane (and they are) and unplayable due to the complexity but my friend played "GOAT" on a roughly built acoustic guitar and nailed every note and harmonic. That told me two things: 1. The compositions are unique and fun to make people want to learn them 2. With enough and right practice, they ARE accessible. It's not easy but it's not rocket science either.
Love this guy. I listen Polyphia since Muse, and they evolved so much since then and made huge steps forward. The amount of knowledge that he’s sharing, the skill that he’s showing like it’s the easiest thing in the world let you understand how great he is. Big up to Wired for this AMAZING content.
I love when people like him say that you don’t need to know theory to get the melody out of your head, while being technically true let me just tell you someone like him has enveloped themselves in as much knowledge as they could so I’d say he is very well educated. Music just becomes their lens of viewing the world. If you love it enough you will have no other choice to learn it, just get started is all you need to do.
Some people look at Tim as just a one off but I really think Tim will go down as a huge innovator of the guitar and people will look back at him the way we look back at someone like Hendrix. Any guitarist that has tried to learn a Polyphia piece can attest to just how crazy it is, you can instantly know a song is a Polyphia song when you hear it even if its your first time hearing the song.
Just on the theory question, having played for about a decade now and improving in blues pentatonic for the majority, I'd say theory is actually massively helpful. It's not the be all and end all, feel is feel, but learning your major and minor scales and intervals gives you options and the means to make your playing much more complex and deliberate. Play what you want, but trying to understand what you're doing helps you understand why it works and where to deploy it effectively in future. Most important thing is to just play what makes you happy and what sounds good to you though, naturally.
Tim is an absolutely incredible guitarist. I feel bad because I didn't actually know about him until he showed up on Rick Beato's channel a while back, but I've thoroughly enjoyed his music since. Way to go man, and there's a ton of great ink everywhere.
this is crazy. I had listened to Polyphia in 2013, hopped around to different music genres and now listening back and seeing how successful they are im blown away. last thing i remember was them announcing Clay joining the band
Tim needs to start a metal school 🤘🏾
Nice to see you here chris
Oh dang, even the big bro pulled up 😂
yo its chris!
Be careful Chris...... he might create ethereal beings capable of such power-
You two remind me when in an rpg you decide to take the warrior route and your friend decides to go full rogue
Its wild to hear this guy talk. I imagined him as some silent monk who only communicates through shredding
He streams and talks through his tracks on his channel, and he has a super cute dog!
watch him play bloodborne its hilarious
Its too funny, but i thought the same
Who could POSSIBLY look at this person and think "Yeah, bet he never makes a sound. Seems very introverted"?
@@darraghtate440 He used to be quite camera shy so it's a fair assumption tbh
I really like the fact that Tim never seemed condescending, nor did he he give an over complicated answer.
Great answers, Tim.
Jesus, only if the play some very obscure instrument. Most classical musicians I met are incredibly arrogant and elitist.
@@SpaceDisco1I try not to be but its hard
agreed up til he explained how to play djent really poorly lol
He's humble for sure, but there are times when he explains something really poorly. These techniques come mostly naturally to him, so when he tries to explain it, he doesn't realize it doesn't come naturally to everyone else. Imo he may be slightly acoustic.
@@joshuastubbs1930 I think you mean autistic right ? He’s obviously a little bit shy or introverted. he knows how to play guitar, dude, I think just the explanation of djent is a poorly explained one. If he has autism he is on the end of the spectrum that is fully functional.
-edit: rewatching this. Yeah he did a really bad job explaining it even attempting to play djenty riffs. Fair enough it’s not his cup of tea.
I love how much tim just genuinely wants to be helpful. Dude seems so chill
How does he seem genuinely helpful and that’s his desire?
@@jessejive117 because he's answering the questions in a very direct way and isn't cutting any corners or showing off. he seems like a great guitar teacher
@@jessejive117 he doesn’t gatekeep guitar technique
@@jessejive117 bcz he is genuinely and patiently answering all the questions and not hiding or misguiding the ppl who wants to learn
"Chill"? The dude is 100% affect, nothing about him is chill or genuine.
I am genuinely shocked at how well of a teacher he is for a 15 minute interview. This is bonkers
He’s a smart guy
*good
He has likely thought a LOT about this stuff while learning through the years.
He has cool interesting looks ,awesome personality ,definitely smart and well spoken.
he used to teach guitar at some point I think
The fact that Tim Henson cited John Mayers neon as a difficult song is just awesome. They’re nothing like each other but they can appreciate each other. True musicians
any good guitarist has to be honest about one thing no matter what style they play, and that is the fact that john mayer is goated.
@@greatvaluecorndog very true. I’m glad Mayer is finally getting his flowers. When I was younger everyone knew how good he is but no one liked admitting it. The fact that someone like Tim Henson is openly appreciating him is just really refreshing to someone like me who’s seen Mayer be hated on for so long
the crazier thing is that it sounded like it would be easy to him lol
@@TheGuitarislove funnily enough there are now a lot of people who have trouble admitting how good Tim is
One of the things I like about Tim and the Polyphias is their eclectic tastes. Their recent album really showcases that.
I don’t know who Tim Henson is, I just clicked because his tats look sick. But watching him break down how he wrote “Playing God” is one of the most interesting guitar clips I’ve ever seen. He makes each stepping stone seem simple, but the resulting sound is SO complex
I'm new to Polyphia as well but I think Tim has carved himself into the Rock God title he deserves.
@@NoogaPlease eh idk if I'd put their music into the "rock" genre. Lol
Tim is genuinely one of the greatest guitarists of our generation
Tim is one of the bright young guns in the guitar world, helping take rock guitar into the future
@@bobach6083 yes i feel it comes under Math Rock but some just try to club it under rock
Perfect answer of what makes a good solo, “if you can sing it” never heard someone give that perfect an answer before. Well done young man
There's so many amazing solos in a ton of different genres and instruments that a person can't sing though lol
@@ViperOfMinohell, you can’t sing some of HIS solos
In one of Vito Bratta's interviews, he described his melodies as something that can be sung, then played on guitar. He's not the first guitarist to do it and I'm glad he's not the last, melodious solos, riffs and verses are amazing
Well I sing a lot of his songs so I guess he called it lol
Me singing Tim's solos 😂
I like how he breaks down Playing God in great detail, plays the main riff flawlessly and then just stares expressionless at the camera like "yeah, whatever".
My exact thought. Acted as if it was so simple and easy
Yup lol
yup lol
I mean, you would too, if you played it 1000s of times.
@@skivvytv6229 That is not Playing God
Wow...i wasn't expecting him to be here. The man's going places
This man has already went far and wide. He's way past going places. Places are now looking for him.
Going? He's been there for years lol
Modern steve vai
On TH-cam?
My thoughts exactly. Didn't expect to see him on Wired.
If you don't know guitar, just know that even skilled guitarists stare at this man with jaws dropped to the floor.
for some many reasons.... 😏
@@cicciolin0 cause they thought it was an asian chick playing guitar? Lol
@@treborkroy5280amn what kinda asian chicks you have been seeing that can take that much of a resemblance to this henson mf 🧐
btw somehow henson is the whitest last name i have ever seen. kinda controversial but my brain is telling me that.
@@treborkroy5280 people can find guys attractive too :) and not all guitarists are straight guys also~
@@fauraway jeepers you speak like one of them devil kids who do evil stuff, bless your heart
Guitarists always give John Mayer his props. Awesome stuff tim!
As any real guitarist would.. Mayer is a god
any self-respecting guitarist with an ounce of dignity and honesty will recognize that JM is an amazing guitarist.
In what world…
I’ll only give him props on his guitar playing. Dudes got creep vibes.
Thats because musicians are much more objective and less biased than singers. At the end of the day, guitar players stick together whether they play rock, metal, blues, jazz, folk, or anything else. So they all reckognize Mayers skill and they disregard all the garbage media spews about him
My favorite bit was when he was like "I don't know music theory." And then started describing all the stuff he was doing with music theory. Tim's too good for his own good.
Ikr with some players
That's not exactly what he said. Go back and listen.
the only theory he sorta mentioned was scales
I mean the scale degrees isn't necessarily deep knowledge, and at least knowing scales is very helpful tbf
Knowing the letters of the notes and what scales/degrees are is something any musician will pick up through osmosis if they spend any amount of time hearing other musicians talk about it. It's more like music arithmetic than theory.
I’ve never seen anyone who’s so consistent with their taste in style that they’ve coordinated their tattoos to their sweater, guitar, and pants. Even the hole in his jeans perfectly reveal the tattoo on his knee. This is what I aspire to be (besides ofc being insanely attuned to a musical instrument).
Seriously the dude is just an ARTIST
yes!! I love doing that with my aesthetic too it feels so put together. Honestly so badass and cool of him too, even his hair has that electric look ⚡
yeah, his hair mesmerized me the whole video...
I think his hair makes him look like a baby dragon.
It should be the other way around. First of all become a great artist, then the superficial stuff. All though you can skip the second part really.
He's so matured now. Explaining even the very basic stuffs with enthusiasm. He could be a really great teacher (like Tosin). Down to earth. Zero show off.
Yeh…I like him now way better than the edgy douche boy that he used to act out for no reason at all, when they started out…I guess age may be…also musically matured leaps and bounds too
@@NavidKhan84 i agree. He matured a lot
Tattoos are gross.
@@brandonbp122 No u
@@psychcake1108 Your momma
Clicked because dude looks majestic, stayed because he’s so chill and knows how to explain simply
I love how effortlessly he executes every technique like it's nothing
In another interview a while back, he got asked what he thought about the 10,000 hours of practice theory. (10,000 hours of practice of something, classes you in the pro level of experience in whatever you're practicing).
And he replied with he's probably over 60,000 hours on guitar so where would that put him. :| :| :| :|
he makes playing look easy lol
@@Sir-Bane Oh wow. I wonder where the dude will be when hes 50 years old or so. I already doubt that many people have reached the 60k hours in their entire lifetime
@@Sir-Bane 60k is kinda pushing it. Assuming he only sleeps 6 hours each and every day and plays guitar every minute of each day would mean it would still take him around 10 years to reach 60k hrs. but not even him plays 9hrs per day. Take that away, then take away the time for school, living an actual life (eating, going somehwere etc.) and the numbers go down a lot. he's probably at around 40k hrs and that's already insane as it means playing 6hrs of guitar each day for 20 years
His playing has gotten better over the years. When polyphia were getting big around 2016/2017 they did not sound as tight.
It is truly inspiring to listen to a talented guitarist like Tim. You can easily tell that he has so much knowledge to give
Seems like a really sound guy too.
@@bryanmack7463 He seems like a wussy too lol
Yeah. Just don't ask him how to write a song with an actual hook or riff that people will remember.
@@steven5054 yeah because the hooks and riffs in Euphoria, Champagne, and GOAT aren’t memorable….
You should give him a lesson…please..
@Steven lol. Yeah his music is boring in the extreme.
Not only he's a guitar god, but is also really good at explaining stuff
He is Real Musician,Real Prodigy
Not really. For sweep picking the only thing he said was play slow and then go faster
@@Johnny-tw5pr I mean what else is there to say besides slanting your pick. It just takes time
If you understand something well enough, you will be able to teach it
@@MetalizedButt Not really... I wish all of my professors at uni were like that lol
“I’m gonna play a riff quick” *uses entire fretboard* this dude is a legend
Polyphia doesn't really intersect with my taste, but I love that younger guys like Tim are bringing guitar driven rock to other generations, and iterating on the epic prog/metal genre. He is truly a student and master of his craft and instrument, I love it.
he thought me how to Nollie flip in this videooo thanks mark
Exactly
Good music as no genre my man ...
@@rymns Also a good point.
@@vxkid1.5 bro fr i learned how to front heel and sweep pick bc of this vid
To see someone like Tim Henson in such a mainstream way is mind blowing. Guitar’s making a big comeback and it’s so great to see
Kinda the opposite, tim came on the scene and destroyed the ones wanting guitar to come back
@@davidp6913 I don't understand what you mean. Care to elaborate?
@David P disagree
The ones who are hating on Tim and Polyphias success are the ones who typically want guitar based music to not be in the mainstr
@@davidp6913 you mean gatekeeping?
@@Th3BadThing That's not the reason we hate, we hate because his music loses it's feeling and soul when you just spam a bunch of notes and try to look flashy. It's ironic because in the video he said that a good guitar solo is one you can sing, but his music is the exact opposite.
This guy didn’t mentioned he is also a violinist. The guy is straight up super talented.
He dropped that at a young age tho
His mum forced him on Violin as a kid, and he defied her by secretly practicing Guitar
Probably a good way to motivate someone, to reject the control of a parent ahaha
@@elijahizere typical asian mothers :x hahahaha.. relatable.
@Arcination. playing god... by him!
He can pick up any instrument, dabble with it for a bit and run through all the notes and play a sound by the end of the day. By no means a pro but he’s got such a good ear for music he can figure it out.
Tim has the chillest vibe in front of the camera. No clue what he's like irl, but his vibe is very calming when he does stuff like this.
🙄
You can tell how much time he put into "fixing his walk", optimizing and perfecting his technique and craft overall. His explanations are crazy straightforward and accessible even if you're nowhere near his skill and mastery level, what a great teacher!
old guy relearning the guitar here, and this guy does a way way way better job teaching than all the "guitar teachers" I see here on youtube. I like how he breaks things down, you dont need a masters degree in music to know what he talking about, and you can see exactly what it is he is doing. thank you Tim Henson!
I'm in the same boat with an arm injury that messed up my picking hand. This band and a handful of others has me annoying the neighbors again, and I love it.
Ben Eller is fantastic
Go Tim, awesome job!
Yooooo I love yall
Hi herman
@@aoknights4425 We all know this is Herman lmao
omg, DragonForce we loves you
bring zp back
I love how tim explains something, walks us throuh it, then sheds his instrument apart without batting an eye
Got to photograph and meet this guy and the band a few times. He’s such a gentle and kind person. 10/10 human.
He's very relaxed alone in front of the camera. He didn't fret being solo at all.
He's very at peace with himself and knows he's a borderline god on the instrument, but doesn't feel the need to put on false bravado or showboat.
And I love that he treated every question the same regardless of complexity or technique and was never condescending or sarcastic.
good pun
badump! tsss!
He's definitely one of the best guitarists, if not the best, barre none.
Meh.
I like how said it’s important to be able to sing the solo. A lot of shredmasters turn playing guitar into a flex fest, but it really helps if they can do melodic too. That’s probably why Tim and Polyphia have gotten so big.
No cap, this is the reason why Noel Gallagher is one of the best guitarists of all time even though he literally only knows minor pentatonic, live forever has one of the best solos for example
to me, melody and emotion is way more impactful than speed and complexity
lol lemme just sing one of his solos blooploolooloodoododododododoeeiddiididieiiiiipoldodoldoododododoidididiiiiddiidoo
@@360.Tapestry It's a big music world out there and there's room for both.
@@1slotmech the real secret is that you don't need to choose one over the other, truly outstanding musicians can consistently offer both worlds.
Tim is a great guitar teacher! He can not only explain the theories behind the different ways of playing a guitar, but he can play each one very well. Presenting a great visual and audio presentation.
Tim really knows how to simplify and present difficult terms and concepts.
He’s a great listener, obviously.
I honestly can't believe that Tim isn't well educated on theory. When he plays it seems like he knows every scale, mode, chord,... you name it. Truly inspiring stuff to say the least!
A lot of musicians (specially guitarrists) say the don't know theory, but they actually do. They may not have learned it in the "standard way" but they learned it somehow. Also, the most of musical theory you'd use in practice is the basic stuff, so maybe they say they don't know theory because they don't know the advanced stuff (but then again, if you know the basics you know pretty much everything you're gonna need in a practical sense).
Just like you said, he plays scales, modes, chords, progressions... generally speaking, if someone does this and claims they don't know theory, it is very contradictory IMO, since they just did everything they claimed not to know
@@jeffersoncarvalho8822 this x1000. When I was first starting off and “pretty proficient” I didn’t know the theory. But I remember learning theory little by little and learning some basic concept like the relationship between Ionian (Major) and Aeolian (Minor). I already knew that they were the same scales to create different feels but I didn’t know why. When I learned why and how simple of a concept it was it inspired me to learn more.
Dunning-Kruger effect :) The more that he learned, the more he realized he didn't know.
No, he definitely knows music theory. Both his parents are musicians & he’s played & been taught since he was very young. Literally said he doesn’t know, then proceeded to use it & explain music theory concepts right after
@@chrismostdope I think it's coz he didn't study it formally, compared to someone like Adam Neely who studied in a conservatory (tho idk if Henson also did, but doesn't seem to indicate so). So all the fancy terms, the intricate details and relationships between them, different modes or whatever, it's less emphasized.
I totally thought this dude was just full of himself, but he just gave me more knowledge than any other TH-camr or artist has in 16 minutes. I still think it’s funny how his examples with riffs are just these super complicated riffs that he flawlessly pulls off. I am now a Tim Henson fan.
You're watching the wrong videos then.
He mentioned in some of his interviews that putting on that "full of himself" persona was a way to get attention when Polyphia just started, but he quickly learned that it's way more productive and mentally healthy to stay humble and be human.
You should check out his youtube channel. He always shares his knowledge and process of writing music. Even if it's not the style you would want to write, you can still learn things to apply to your own style.
@@FilinMXr So when is he gonna start doing that?
@@mattrogers1946 Projecting much? Based on how your acting you don't exactly come across as the humble type. Instead of wasting all your time in this comments section you should go outside and touch grass every now and then
Obsessed with his style and how his badass tattoos match his gorgeous guitar and aesthetic. Even his hair has that electric look!! Such a chill and talented guy who's so majestic and well spoken too. In awe of him and it's SO interesting just listening to him explain⚡
Timmy Hendrix
All I can see is what looks like facial cosmetic surgery.
someone seems jealous LMAO@@treborkroy5280
@@treborkroy5280 You can relax.
@@zakkosu727 what??
Mad respect for this guy. Super talented but also cool about sharing the techniques and methods. Watching him play is an experience.
Like watching a tree with a guitar in its branches
I'm not a huge polyphia fan, but I'm always jawdropped watching tim Henson play, I feel like it must be the same feeling people had when EVH was just coming up on the scene
Exactly! He is arguably the Eddie of our time. So influential.
Calm down, he's no van halen
@@paulgordon6949 in 1978 people probably said "calm down, he's no Eric Clapton"
@@paulgordon6949 ok boomer
@@dillonmacpherson3350 yep. He’s the guitar hero of our generation
I like listening to people who are very good at what they do talk about what they do.
Didn’t expect to see you here lol
We all do
He's like a philosopher on guitars and music. Respect tim
Seeing him playing 'playing god' is just phenomenal. Every time! Especially with this break down.
It was surprising to see how simple it is. When it sounds so insanely complex!
Gotta say, I'm not a huge Polyphia fan but they are incredible musicians and TH is a brilliant communicator
I could watch a 2 hour version of this. This guy is so cool and I learned so much in just 16min. Thanks Tim!
Then watch the Rick Beato interview
4:50 this man just casually played the most beautiful riff ive ever heard like it was nothing
th-cam.com/video/8YqvOLfkwq8/w-d-xo.html
It's an actual song I just don't remember the name
@@ZinityDropsdo you know it now? I’d love to hear it
I think it’s goat
th-cam.com/video/8YqvOLfkwq8/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=Polyphia
He is veeery good at explaining and teaching. He is very humble and his presence was super calm - I def want to sign up for a class!
10 years playing guitar (just playing, never had a class or smth like that), and Tim Henson teaches me what's the Tone nob purpose, it was worth my day!
Any tips for a guy who has been playing for 1 and a half years by himself? Should I take lessons? Or is possible to be a good guitar player without proper teaching
@@Luismayer77 I am somewhat good, I’d say I know how to do most things this guy said on the video. Classes are great and I’d recommend them but I taught myself and it’s just a matter of practicing
@@Luismayer77 You can be a good player without a teacher but a good teacher will speed up your progress immensely. Sometimes you just don't know how to google a question you have so having someone irl that can see what you mean and explain it is incredibly helpful
@@Luismayer77 You can definitely be a good player without a proper teacher. I'd say if you find yourself having a hard time structuring your learning/practicing or feeling overwhelmed about what to learn and practice and when, finding a good teacher could be worthwhile. I say that because I was the type to run before I could walk, as Tim was saying, but unlike Tim I haven't been able to go back and learn to properly walk - I get overwhelmed and impatient. Probably my adhd lol
@@Luismayer77 teachers are great for when you don't know what you should know to advance to where you wanna be. To come back to the walking vs running analogy, a teacher can teach you how to walk so you can learn to run on your own, or they can help you clean up your walk when you already know how to run.
For me personally especially in the beginning it helped a lot and even shaped my taste. I started out playing classical which makes fingerstyle picking a lot easier and taught me the basis of music theory and reading sheet music. But everybody is a little different!
Never heard of this guy before, but wow, what a clean sound and confident he is. Gonna take a look on his music, for sure...
Check out Polyphia, songs like GOAT, Playing God, and OD are good places to start
Alright time to check in, did you listen to Polyphia yet?
Update?
Come back, man, tell us what you felt :)
Polyphia is one of the best things I've ever met
@@Brenda-kb6di honestly, I live in australia and have been saving up for a ticket to go to their concert in sydney! Polyphia creates a one-of-a-kind experience with their music!!
I had no idea who this kid was before the BBL Drizzy and I'm so stoked he turned out to be this mellow, knowledgeable dude :)
Same 😂😂
i'm very happy tim has come a long way with being in front of a camera and an audience. saw them live in 2019 and it he was a little disappointing to be honest, but saw them again last year in 2022 and my god was that one of the most hype concerts i've been to.
It's cuz they stopped getting drunk before performing
Yeah they started taking live shows seriously. I'm glad they are they are!
Bro you sound like a neckbeard
@@JTguitarlessons you sound like a clown tf
Yeah they used to get hammered before every show lol glad they tightened up live
When I saw Tim I hated him but quickly realized I was jealous. He makes me feel like a boomer but what a chilled dude and monster player he is
Lmaooo I love the admittance
@@beckyc1904 #truestory
This is a vastly underrated comment. (Late Boomer/ early GenX here)
I mean he's also kinda bad unowamsaying💀
@@ibrahimismail5625i don't now what the feck yer sayin'; you forgot a "k"!
He clearly has well established way of making music. And he is genuinely sharing it. Love this support section.
The " I was a runner, then I learnt to walk to clean up my run" is such a mantra. I sprinted out the gate and caught up later on, but it really pushed me to be a fairly good guitarist. Also a by ear guy on both guitar and piano. My music knowledge is meh
🙄
I'm a lifetime guitar player that, in my 40s, finally started getting into actual soloing instead of just chord jamming. This kind of informational video is extremely helpful. You mentioned Rick Beato; his soloing videos are also that way. Your breakdown of sweep picking may be the easiest way I have ever heard it described! Absolutely helpful and I love it!
"People try to run before they can walk" there it is people, even Tim Henson said it. Don't skip on your basics. It's always one small step at a time.
I wasn't expecting him to be here, he is so chill in front the camera, effortless techniques tim is truly an inspiration.
you can tell that someone really understands what they do if they can explain it simply, Every answer he gave was perfect and simple. Awesome!
The collab we didn't expect but we never knew we needed
nice profile picture
Tim Henson breaking down Playing God is so mind-blowing. Those simple sounding steps and the end result goes back to his roots on "going back and fixing my walk after learning how to run."
Tim is like a humble down to earth legend on guitar. I love being able to watch him grow as a player and excited to see what's to come
4:40 THIS RIFF IS PERFECT
It's a polyphia song
What song is it?
@@egeardasenturk dont leave us hanging, give us the sauce!
@@egeardasenturk yea what song is it? it sounds killer!
@@egeardasenturkLet us know which please
I'm not a fan of polyphia and super complex rock and roll. But that is so interesting that he pointed to such a simple solo as to what a great solo is. Definitely gives me a new perspective on how someone who does go for the challenging music style approaches their music.
YT is an amazing resource. I'm not a massive fan of Polyphia's style, but I do recognise their talent. And to hear Tim answer a lot of pretty basic questions without condescension and demo what he means is pretty heart warming tbh. He seems like a good guy. I especially liked his learning by ear tip.
2:06 it's a cool explanation about solos being memorable, that's probably my favorite thing about Polyphia is all of their music "fits" the band, but it has such as wide range of sounds where some bands just only sound like one thing and are easy to forget, Polyphia sticks in the memory as being so unique each time
He plays so flawlessly. It just hits my brain in such a good way haha. Hearing him speak is all the better, a monster on guitar but a sweetheart in communication 🤣
For a person who doesn't know how to play guitar or any instruments, this is really fun and interesting to watch. Thanks, Tim and WIRED!
The more I look at Tim’s style the more I see how deliberate and aesthetically pleasing it is.
I love how he executes the boomer bend blues lick flawlessly
I dunno. There was zero feel in it. Mechanically perfect, but no emotion.
Wonderful people ❤
“No emotion”
They’re giving an example, the man’s not trying to perform like in an actual concert in this Q&A video on Wired of all places. That’s kind of an unnecessary comment to just throw out.
@@nuberiffic It's not that deep man.
@@Laughing_Individual It's not that deep, but the dude above you took it that deep 😭
What a cool, humble, smart dude. He knows what he knows and knows what he doesn't, and he's not afraid to speak plainly and just be real with this stuff. Such a cool video!
Glad Tim is getting exposure outside of the guitar world.
Tim is spot on on what makes a guitar solo memorable. Bohemian Rhapsody's guitar solo by Brian May is up there for sure. A great example!
Single handedly fixed all the problems I had playing guitar. All the tutorials for pinch harmonics I’ve found have been really vague. This literally showed me how to do it and after watching it, literally 5 minutes later, I can play pinch harmonics.
it's really one of those techniques where most people headbutt into a wall until they figure it out, so it's really hard to explain. Congrats on figuring it out
This is so rad. Explains everything in such simple terms, while still being complex enough for those who know not to be bored. I’m a drummer by trade but started on guitar and this made me want to pick up my guitar and play through a few records
I was unaware of this band and Tim himself but I'm going to check them out now. I love how simply he breaks down fairly lofty concepts without coming off cocky or anything of the sort.
guy is so chill, makes everything look effortless
No way we got Timmy Hendrix on this. Literally the last person I would have expected
I really believe tim could teach anyone to play the guitar. He explains things so effortlessly and concisely.
I like how they got one of the best guitarists of this era, and made him answer the most basic guitar questions
Nice feeling
Best??💀😂
@@slum6036 “one of the best”. What’s your point?
@tc7719 my point is kids these days don't know what actual guitar playing is they just hear a bunch of chords strung together and oh yeah dony forget the whammy bar to make it sound even "more badass" lol
@@slum6036 Care to give an example of "actual guitar playing"?
I know nothing about playing guitar and found him absolutely fascinating.
God you are so lucky
I found him nauseating...
@@mattrogers1946 most of your previous comments are about polyphia, you seem like a fan.
@OliverRey You're barking up the wrong tree Gomer...
@@mattrogers1946 bark somewhere else grandpa
I love the fact that Tim gives out the knowledge he has because he wants other guitarists to improve and learn as well
its always nice to see a person talk about something they're passionate about
My Boy Tim teaching people about his passion lets go
many people think he is a bit too serious or even stuck up but when you hear him talk you realize he just loves what he does and is dedicated to it so it comes off a bit odd, but in reality he is humble and just enjoys the ride
I loved this. I think he underplayed how much music theory he knows. He demonstrated quite a bit of it. All his answers were honest and not really hiding anything. Quite a talented musician. Thanks for the Video.
Its so refreshing hearing somebody asking him about barre chords i can do those in my sleep but the fact somebody asked tells me people are still willing to learn and its nice
I don’t know who this person is or the band but they are my favorite person now. Very intelligent seems humble and presents the info in a simple way
One of my good friends who I played with in my first band, is heavily influenced by Tim's playing. I used to think Tim's licks are pretty insane (and they are) and unplayable due to the complexity but my friend played "GOAT" on a roughly built acoustic guitar and nailed every note and harmonic. That told me two things:
1. The compositions are unique and fun to make people want to learn them
2. With enough and right practice, they ARE accessible. It's not easy but it's not rocket science either.
Yall went out and got one of the most technically and musicly competent musicians for gutar and it makes for a great episode!
Love this guy. I listen Polyphia since Muse, and they evolved so much since then and made huge steps forward. The amount of knowledge that he’s sharing, the skill that he’s showing like it’s the easiest thing in the world let you understand how great he is. Big up to Wired for this AMAZING content.
Proclaims not to known music theory but is capable of explaining the entire structure of playing god in detail at 12:00
Nah thats still like highschool level music theory. Listening to academic musicians talk about theory is like a whole other language.
I love when people like him say that you don’t need to know theory to get the melody out of your head, while being technically true let me just tell you someone like him has enveloped themselves in as much knowledge as they could so I’d say he is very well educated. Music just becomes their lens of viewing the world. If you love it enough you will have no other choice to learn it, just get started is all you need to do.
Some people look at Tim as just a one off but I really think Tim will go down as a huge innovator of the guitar and people will look back at him the way we look back at someone like Hendrix. Any guitarist that has tried to learn a Polyphia piece can attest to just how crazy it is, you can instantly know a song is a Polyphia song when you hear it even if its your first time hearing the song.
Dude. The way his brain works I envy. Imagine putting everything you had into your favorite hobby?! How amazing you'd become?!
So refreshing to hear Tim speak. What a humble dude with so much knowledge and experience to share. Thank you Tim! ❤
Just on the theory question, having played for about a decade now and improving in blues pentatonic for the majority, I'd say theory is actually massively helpful. It's not the be all and end all, feel is feel, but learning your major and minor scales and intervals gives you options and the means to make your playing much more complex and deliberate. Play what you want, but trying to understand what you're doing helps you understand why it works and where to deploy it effectively in future. Most important thing is to just play what makes you happy and what sounds good to you though, naturally.
Such a valid statement, you only improve by knowing more. Helps you reach your final form.
Tim is an absolutely incredible guitarist. I feel bad because I didn't actually know about him until he showed up on Rick Beato's channel a while back, but I've thoroughly enjoyed his music since. Way to go man, and there's a ton of great ink everywhere.
thanks for answering our question, Tim!
I’m a boomer and I consider it a compliment for the people who lived and played and learned the guitar like I did in the 60s and 70s
this is crazy. I had listened to Polyphia in 2013, hopped around to different music genres and now listening back and seeing how successful they are im blown away. last thing i remember was them announcing Clay joining the band
Tim is the reason I picked up the guitar. Such a huge inspiration
Might wanna set your standards a little higher 😏
@@mattrogers1946he should pick Matt Roggers as his inspiration, such a great artist that totally achieved musical success /sarcasm
@@mattrogers1946 this is your 4th or 5th comment (all negative so far, with some talking about his appearance) - are you ok in the head or
Me too
@@skully7383 jealousy
YES! Tim getting the recognition he deserve! He is a contemporary guitar master imo! Dude's skillful af holy
I love how honest and helpful he is. The guitar heroes of this generation are built different.