... in the name of guitar
Lost your password or username? Click here

Not a member already? Join now It's free!
PlaneTalk
GFB&B Radio
Members Online: 434 | Discussions: 23,090 | Replies 241,226 | Members: 127,136 | Register here

 
If you are seeing this text, you need to download the latest version of Flash Player here.

Welcome to the Guitar For Beginners & Beyond Forum, the fastest growing Guitar Community on the Internet.

You are currently viewing our site as a guest which limits your access to many of the great features available. By joining our free community you will gain access to over 100 free guitar lessons, be able to post topics, ask questions and communicate with other members (currently we have over 100,000 guitar players from all over the World). By becoming a member, you will also be able to respond to polls, upload and get feedback on your playing and access many other special features... Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free, so why not join our community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

Finger-Style Lessons Over 65 free finger-picking guitar lessons with movies.

Forum Home > Guitar Lessons Forum > Kirk Lorange's Guitar Lessons > Finger-Style Lessons > Slinky A minor

   Be sure to check out our Lesson Value Packs... and save yourself a heap of $$$
lesson packs
Buy the Hi-Res Pack 2 (15 hi-res Movie Lessons) for only $40.00 instead of $60.00 and Save $20!
Buy the Hi-Res Pack 1 (13 hi-res Movie Lessons) - only $35.00 instead of $50.00 Save $15!
Buy the Blues Pack (24 Blues/Country Blues/Jazz style Lessons) - only $40.00 instead of $50.00 Save $10!
Buy the Christmas Pack (13 Christmas Lessons) - only $25.00 instead of $50.00 Save $25!
Buy the Lo-Res Pack (50 lo-res Movie Lessons) - only $30.00 instead of $40.00 Save $10!


Reply
 
Thread Tools
  #1  
Old October 14th, 2007
Kirk Lorange's Avatar
Kirk Lorange Kirk Lorange is online now
Site Founder
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Last Online: 1 Hour Ago 07:29 PM
Location: Tamborine Mountain, Australia
Posts: 3,525

  Slinky A minor



Like this lesson? The downloadable version includes extra files, making it much easier to learn.

More details here



Refresh the page to watch the movie again.
The movie or movies in the paid downloadable versions are high resolution and come in Windows Media Video format with all the Start-Stop-Pause buttons.
Click on the movie to find out what you'll get when you buy this lesson.
Here's a fun one. Not for beginners, but as always, to those really really diligent twangers who really really want to learn any of these lessons: all the elements are there. If you have the dedication, time and patience to piece these together note by note, phrase by phrase, you can watch, listen, read to get these pieces down and happening. That's the way I did it back in the early 60's, but with one huge difference: all I had was my ear and the ability to slow the old vinyl records down to make it a tiny bit easier to hear what was going on. Sometimes it took me weeks to listen and decipher, but I persisted.

I couldn't come up with a good title for this one, but it's a neat slinky kind of rhythm thing in Am with a bit of everything thrown in: walking bass lines, hammer-on/pull-offs, rhythm plucks, single note runs, changes in timing, a strummed chord. Lots of fun and a challenge to assemble all the bits and pieces into a seamless, flowing piece... in other words: to make it music.

It's pretty up there tempo-wise. I tried it slower and it just didn't have the same oomph, but, you can start out slow and speed it up later. If you buy the downloadable version, there's a half-speed movie included which makes it much easier to see what's going on. You also get the virtual fretboard to watch.

It's in Am ... in the opening passage I show one little bit as a D chord, which it is, but it's all Am, really. It's a fairly common movement of chords in this genre, to move up from the i (the Am) to a fleeting IV (the D). I'm sure you'll find it familiar sounding.

The opening section is another sort of question/answer format: the bass line asks the question and the chords answer back. It's a tried and true way of structuring a piece of music -- our ears seem to enjoy it -- and one worth remembering if you get into composition.

That opening bass line is a four-noter with just two plucks. The first note (the open bass string) is plucked, then the next note (the G note, third fret) is hammered on then immediately pulled off back to the open E string. So, just one pluck for those three notes. The last note is the second pluck on the open A string. It might take you a couple of minutes to work that one out and convince your fingers to execute it. You then need to move halfway up the fretboard for the next bit in a hasty manner so as to get there in time for the chordal bits.

The second half of the piece is a neat walking bass line on the bottom, chords on the top, all woven together in a neat rhythm. The part that may confuse the fingers is the way an open A string becomes incorporated into the bass line. Other than that, everything is quite compact fingering wise and not too tricky. The two chords are F9th and E9th ... you've seen these 9th shapes in previous lessons and I've suggested to you that you should remember them. They're back! You can clearly see in this lesson how the same shape moves down a fret from F to become E. Shapes can move on guitars, just like this case, and retain their flavor. That's the beauty of the guitar.

Then we're back to Am, but this time four flavors of Am. First plain old Am, the 'A minor Major seventh', quite a mouthful to say, but totally logical musically. It's an A minor chord with a major 7th note included. Next a Am7 (the minor 7th) then Am6. If you're observant, you'll see that one note in each chord moving down a fret each time. The first time it's a 1 (root), then it's a 7 (Maj7), then it's a flat 7 (7th), then it's a 6. Music is all numbers, always, and it pays to learn which are which. By the way, this series of Am flavors is exactly the same one used in "Stairway to Heaven" ... and a hundred other tunes.

Finally, we get to the single note melody run over F and E that leads us back to Am ... and a nice jazzy 6th to end it on.

Have fun with this one ... it's a great rhythm to get those fingers familiar with. Here's the tab:




Like this lesson? The downloadable version includes extra files, making it much easier to learn.

More details here




Reply With Quote
Reply

Forum Home > Guitar Lessons Forum > Kirk Lorange's Guitar Lessons > Finger-Style Lessons > Slinky A minor


   Be sure to check out our Lesson Value Packs... and save yourself a heap of $$$
lesson packs
Buy the Hi-Res Pack 2 (15 hi-res Movie Lessons) for only $40.00 instead of $60.00 and Save $20!
Buy the Hi-Res Pack 1 (13 hi-res Movie Lessons) - only $35.00 instead of $50.00 Save $15!
Buy the Blues Pack (24 Blues/Country Blues/Jazz style Lessons) - only $40.00 instead of $50.00 Save $10!
Buy the Christmas Pack (13 Christmas Lessons) - only $25.00 instead of $50.00 Save $25!
Buy the Lo-Res Pack (50 lo-res Movie Lessons) - only $30.00 instead of $40.00 Save $10!



I'm also the author of PlaneTalk - The Truly Totally Different Guitar Instruction Book. The lesson that this book, slide-rule and DVD teach is the most powerful of all: the 'trick' to seeing the entire fretboard as friendly, familiar territory. If you're beyond the beginner stage -- you know your chords, scales, maybe even modes -- but you're still wondering how to turn it all into music, how to invent and improvise, how to access all the bits and pieces, then this is the book for you. You will also be able to join the private PlaneTalkers' Forum and discuss the simple visualization technique with me and many others. - Read more here .

Testimonials

Kirk I'd just like to thank you for making available the lessons in Planetalk and particularly for making it so much fun. I purchased it a couple of days ago and have learned more since I got it than I have in years. My 5 year old daughter is keen to learn guitar and I was pondering how on earth I'd teach her. She might be a bit young for it yet, but when the time comes, I'll be placing my next order. I'm also looking forward to the video also. Thanks again & kind regards

    -- Mark Rodger from Australia
Read more testimonials for PlaneTalk here


Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:18 PM.

 



Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.0.0 ©2007, Crawlability, Inc.