This is cool. I love content like this. Regarding the scales, is it left to your own discretion which position to play it in and/or which finger to begin the scales on? Similar to the technique exercises, it'd be kind of cool to also say, start the chromatic scale with your 4th finger one day, your ring finger another, etc. Help you to play the scale from any finger. Starting with descending on scales, triads, and arps would be kinda fun/beneficial in addition to playing them linear in an ascending fashion. Anyway, thanks for the cool content. I subscribed and liked. I look forward to seeing more.
@timmeshkov9942Ай бұрын
can you explain more about the metronome settings please? what does it mean that the metronome ends on a number?
@louismaiden8360Ай бұрын
I think the idea is to play at a pace slow enough so you don't make mistakes or are out of time, but alternate the exact speed of the metronome (so you're not only playing at 60, 65, 70, etc). He mentioned in the video that 61 can feel very different from 63. So the number in the column refers to the last digit (one's place) of the metronome BPM.
@jazzguitartutorialАй бұрын
It is the last digit of the metronome. For instance metro ends with 0 could be 60, 70, 90, 50, 110, 130. I also recommend applying this when playing tunes for that day. You just have to adapt the first numbers if it’s medium, slow or up tempo.
@ovenklovenАй бұрын
Ok. Its easy. I just do it, like Charly Parker said: first you have to learn all this boring theory stuff, and then you better forget about it.😂😂😂
@jazzguitartutorialАй бұрын
Yes that is the goal!! But sometimes feel really hard to just let it go. Mick used to recommend drawing and dark chocolate also to help calm down the brain and let the creativity flow.
@jakemf1Ай бұрын
Imagine if all those hours waisted on scales and those finger exercises you learn lines from players that challenge you. You would be decades head of this. Mick is also far from a technical player so I would not use his playing as a technical example
@asarcadyn2414Ай бұрын
It's a balance surely? You need to improve physical dexterity, fretboard knowledge, timing and rhythmic ability while also learning to be creative with musical lines.