I like this, it's so moody and fluid. You've demonstrated that even in the Blues/Blues Rock genre YOU GOTTA KNOW THE CHORDS!!!!! If we just meander on the pentatonic scale with no regard for chord tones, guitar solos would not have much meaning to the song nor harmonic connection with your band, track, nuttin'! Thanks Paul🎯
@@RonHagadoneGuitarCoach Hi Ron, your expert analysis is spot on. With students who rely solely on pentatonic scales there is little unique phrasing, I call it “pentatonic hell” and all players need to traverse it until enlightened as to the value of chord tones and context become clear. Also all good slide playing prioritizes access to resolution which gives context to the music bed, something as a player I always aspire to. Looking forward to your upcoming work with steel, your music theory depth will enable your quick progress!
@@kevinlurker1 I have developed over the last 35 years. It was slow to really get good, but working with the steel guitar really helped form and skill.
I like this, it's so moody and fluid. You've demonstrated that even in the Blues/Blues Rock genre YOU GOTTA KNOW THE CHORDS!!!!! If we just meander on the pentatonic scale with no regard for chord tones, guitar solos would not have much meaning to the song nor harmonic connection with your band, track, nuttin'! Thanks Paul🎯
@@RonHagadoneGuitarCoach Hi Ron, your expert analysis is spot on. With students who rely solely on pentatonic scales there is little unique phrasing, I call it “pentatonic hell” and all players need to traverse it until enlightened as to the value of chord tones and context become clear. Also all good slide playing prioritizes access to resolution which gives context to the music bed, something as a player I always aspire to. Looking forward to your upcoming work with steel, your music theory depth will enable your quick progress!
Beautiful performance 💕🙏😊🎵
@@kenji1968x Thank you!
Very cool!
@@dkarpel79 Thanks Derek!
Where do you learn to play slide or do ya just jump in and figure it out?
@@kevinlurker1 I have developed over the last 35 years. It was slow to really get good, but working with the steel guitar really helped form and skill.
@paulschelly1 Thx, enjoyed this😊
@@kevinlurker1 You’re welcome Kevin