What the Pros Know About SPREAD TRIADS | Lesson
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- čas přidán 16. 06. 2024
- Learn These 6 Arpeggios to DOMINATE Instagram :) Spread Triads are the Key To Melodic Guitar Playing. Learn these 24 chord shapes. These are an important part of Pat Metheny and Eric Johnson’s guitar styles.
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Eric Johnson and Pat Metheny mentioned in the same video....instant like.
Jesus, I am so old and have been playing for a long time, but every time I watch one of your instructional videos I learn something new that is instantly playable. I would say that you should go back and be a professor again, but then again, you already did! And now you have a much bigger classroom. Hell yeah I bought the Beato Book, and I didn't even wait for a live stream to get a discount! I'm a fan.
Same goes for me.
right? ive been playing 15 years and can pick up on alot of this stuff quickly. but still things ive never even thought of. so damn informative!
Agreed as well. 34 years playing experience but I've been diving into as much theory as I can. As much as I felt I knew-some things weren't a surprise-, there were a ton of things I didn't know. Love discovering what I don't know. And much mahalos to Mr. Beato.
The ending solo with the PRS is the most beautiful thing I've heard in a long time! I really need to start working on these! Thank you, Rick!
Mega! You have transformed my thought process when I watch lessons over the last 3 years. I understand everything you say now where I just used to wish I could. I do a lot less noodling and have a logical and musical approach when I pick up guitar or sit at the keyboard. Thank you. I have a new purpose and a friend in music now.
Spread Triads, and triads in general, are some of the most fundamental at the heart of melodies and soloing! Quite beautiful sounding, and you can expand so much on them!
I like dyads too.
Monads are where it's at. Nonads are great when you're sleeping. 😴
Instant classic episode Rick. This is why we keep coming back. You bring freshness to our lives with real examples, theory and practice we can put into place to make us better musicians. Gold. Thank you.
Also remember that every sus4 is also a sus2 up a fourth, so by the time you have gotten your Csus4's down, you'll also have all the Fsus2 inversions free of charge! :)
Thanks a lot for sharing, would you mind clarifying yhe "up a fourth" please? I'm kind of new and didn't got that, would appreciate (:
@@UltraMonable It also took me some time to understand that. The Csus4 shape = Fsus2. Okay so let's assume you have learned the Csus4 shape. Now you play a song which only goes C to F. You could play the Csus4 shape all the time and then only would change between Csus4 and Fsus2.
*If you dont know what a fourth is the keyword is "intervalls" which is the foundation of western music and a understanding of this will improve your playing tremendously.
@@UltraMonable Up a fourth means up 5 frets
@mon productions the sus4 and sus2 chords are inversions of each other. If we have C (1) F (4) G (5) and we put it in first inversion we have F (1) G (2) and C (5). I show how this relates to the guitar in my latest video!
Not "all" inversions
This is something I've put a lot of work into lately. After watching one of Tim Pierce's excellent videos about the same subject, I've started to look for chord-shapes all around the neck, and playing with and around those. I've only dvelved into basic minor and major harmonies for now, bit this has already done wonders familiarizing me with my neck, understanding scales and harmony-knowledge. If only I knew this when I started playing, my solos wouldn't have sucked as much the last 20 years!
Great video as usual Rick. Thanks for all the lessons, and take care in these strange times we live in.
Great video! Very clear description of notes and intervals, helpful graphics, and awesome step by step instructions. Thanks Rick and team!
Thanks for publishing this very important lesson, Rick! One of the great little "secrets" in the ambient/new age genre to create widest soundscapes is literally "expanding" (spreading) the chords. Glad you are such a huge Pat Metheny fan & proponent - I've been a fan since "New Chautauqua" so we share this 6 string hero, lol. Hope you can get Pat as a guest on the show someday! PS: Eric J is amazing too!
I just love how you're using the orchestra like string sound to highlight each chord
Just wonderful! Thanks a lot Rick!
Up tonight till 12pm mapping out this lesson. Thanks so much for including tabs. Looking forward to ordering your book and future lessons. Can't thank you enough. Dan Bonner
One of the best resources on CZcams, thanks for being awesome
Excellent stuff Rick! I love the lighting in this video too. It looks so slick!
I have just watched the first minute and I really like how you get to the point so straight-forward!
This is exactly what I’ve needed to expand my playing. Thank you!
As always, great stuff! Thanks for getting into the fingerings.
EXACTLY what I needed to improve my melodicism! Thank you Mr Beato once again 👍🏻
Thanks Rick. You always post amazing useful content. I’m gonna work in these. Keep it coming. We love it. Who the hell would give this a thumbs down?? Really. Come on Rick is helping all players with his knowledge. Some people are just haters and are jealous. We love u Rick.
Love you so much man! Thank you for what you do for the world, the music, the culture. You're a role model, thank you
Thanks, Rick! You’ve made several videos on Spread Triads and each one has helped deepen my familiarity of the guitar. Julian Lage’s “Etude 1” is a dazzling display of spread triads. I’ve been using 4 measure sections as a warm-up. Not nearly as fast as Julian though 🤯
As always, so nicely done and we'll organized! Thank you Rick!
Hey, thank you, Rick, for sharing your knowledge. You are one of the best people/teachers I've come across.
I finally bought the Beato Book & pdf bundle. Combined with your videos it’s a great resource. Thanks for all the work you put into it.
Thank you Rick! You are a wealth of knowledge and I appreciate all that you give.
Knocking it out of the park as usual prof .. 💫thanks
One of the best lessons on using triads I've come across. Thank you Rick. (And explained so well)
You’re the best at using the darker scales and chords. It’s open so many possibilities for me.
Thanks so much for the introduction of the tab charts! so helpful for these arpeggios when you're learning to get the sound and want to get the distilled fingerings.
Dude I know ALL about spread triads, that's so basic I was using them in high school. Except I apparently was flat wrong because this was a total revelation!! I love those sounds you're getting and I can't wait to practice them like that tonight. I already know that is going to open up my playing and writing with a new tool in the toolbox. Thank you as always Rick, you're the man!
Amazing. Short, simple, clear and challenging.
That Lydian spread is quite a monster. Amazing lesson.
One of the best guitar lessons i have ever watched!!! Thank you!
That blue guitar looks and sounds amazing. What a blaster.
This is really helpful, thank you Rick.
Thanks Rick. This was exactly what I needed.
Rick,that wa brilliant, im so impressed how educated and darn good you are!
Just keep getting better and better Rick! Thanks again.
This is really great thank you Rick! I've started incorporating this into my routine immediately and can't wait to burn it in. Will check in on this thread in a year to report back.
Rick always leaves me feeling inspired :)
Amazing Rick, Thank You for This..
Amazing analysis!!! And thank you for referencing Eric Johnson and Pat Metheny, two of my top ten favorite artists/bands of all time. And The Beatles are included in that top ten.
This guy is a great teacher, right to the point!
Hi Rick, great lesson as usual!
As a way of organizing all the different shapes (3 inversions x 4 types of triads) I like to start from the shape of an augmented triad, as for that one the tonic could be any of the notes, and then lower the 5th, 3rd and 5th again to derive the shapes of the major, minor and diminished triads for the same tonic. Clearly which note is the 3rd and 5th follows from the choice of the tonic. The same approach works for the "closed" triads.
Wonderful Rick! Thank you. Total eye opener for me...
You are in perfect tuning. Beautiful in itself.
Beautiful PRS!! And a great video
really useful lesson. thanks so much!!
Man I really love your Videos and that one was one of the best, thanks for that and keep on rocking, cheers from Vienna, Austria
Thanks a lot for the shapes, especially with augmented, sus4 and lydian sound really interesting.
Very nice synthesis of the concept, short but with full coverage , and indeed (one of) the best vids you already did on this topic. Inspired me to use introduce a Bb aug. spread triad arp in a G harmonic minor piece I'm playing . Though I most fancy the Lydian Triad arp. Thanks ! Take care & stay safe.
You are incredible at explaining these things Rick...
Thanks for all your videos.
these are great, definitely took notes immediately.
You really break it down, Rick. Very comprehendible!
Thank you for this concept. I started using it and trying to figure out how to apply it to melodic solos. ☺️
Thanks for the video, great. You don't need to be musical to really enjoy them and you can't fail to learn. Respect. Be safe to stay well to all.
Honestly am really in love with this ,at frist I thought I would do them maybe in order or just a few,but this has been a great idea
Great lesson, thank you
I was just arriving at this in my practice - thanks for showing me how to so it right Rick! 👍👏
Great video man! This is gonna change my playing once I master them
Thank you for making this!
I love the m7 and maj7 shapes and use them all the time. Also the sus4 triad. Never knew about the other ones! So awesome.
I can tell Rick put a lot of effort into this vid, thank you for all of the awesome content my friend :)
Kudos to the Maestro!
These triads remind me exactly the playing of both Pat and Eric. Thank you!
If this stuff is in the Beato Book, you just sold me. Thanks for another amazing video.
Some great fingerings in there, can't wait to get them into my hands. Thanks for another great video Rick.
I've been working with neoclassical spread triads hybrid picking works great also with them. Great video I need learn more of those great chord🎸👍
Thank you for spelling it out like this. You've given me something to workshop on the guitar for the next little while, which is immensely valuable right now. You did the same with essential finger picking patterns (maybe you could return to this again?). Keep up the great work.
I needed this. Thank you
Wow. Great lesson. Thank you!
Incredible info Rick. Thank you for sharing!
I really like this short format of covering these. I think it's perfect for this kind of thing. The whiteboard lessons are my favorite though
Loved this episode! Learned a lot from this!
That was excellent and really opens up the scope of playing in a more melodic way! Thank you
Huge compliment Rick: I hear so much Metheny in your playing!
Great lesson!
2 minutes in and mind blown already! Going back to the music lessons I never really took...
Aloha from Maui, I bought a travel guitar and was searching for a cheap battery powered amp so I could learn to play the electric guitar while in quarantine. I had little knowledge of music and your videos frustrated me and made me mad because I was just beginning and trying to learn the basics of the guitar. Then you did the Led Z video describing the sounds in Ramble On. You took the time to find out from the man who did the work how he did it and destroyed a myth that I had heard for years. I Bought Your Book After That! Thank you for what you do and could you do more beginner videos for your daughters and loyal followers. Mahalo!
EXCELLENT! I WILL LEARN THESE! THANK YOU!
awesome lesson Rick
Your camera lighting is MUCH improved and looks pretty great! Your show is really looking good.
You're the man !! Rick
That sus4 triad run was one of the most beautiful things I've heard.
Thanks Rick. Identifying and singling out triadic notes within major and minor scales, and then incorporating them into my playing is my next step, I hope it will improve my melodic ability, I feel I've gained a better understanding at least.
Great lesson, and thanks a ton for adding the notation+tab to the video! For BB readers, fretboard diagrams with spread triad fingerings are in the Beato Book on p. 193. -Tom
This one is a true jem. Saved to favs.
Nice. I would have never realized they were the same triads if you didn't explain this. I had trou left hearing different inversions of dominant chords when I was less experienced. Thank you.
I like the "new look" of this! Very nice!
This is a great way to include triads into my playing!
Wow! you youtubers are lucky to have Rick, This reminds me when I studied at Berklee College of Music in 84. At the end of the semester I had to bring all my studies on the airplain, in a big heavy garbage bag. But I had to leave most of it behind, to heavy.
Great video Rick!
Just a small mis-speak around 3:45ish when introducing the diminished triad you first say "one flat three five" but correct the rest of the time during the examples. just wanted to mention for anyone that may get confused learning this stuff for the first time!
Thanks for all the great videos Rick!
I caught that too... I must be learning!
I think he just meant one flat (three and five)
Thanks for pointing this out. I usually go over his lectures at least twice so I can just listen without questioning and not take notes the first time. I just finished my pass thru.
That does it! Rick is cancelling your subscription. 😲😀
Took me 6 hours to learn them correctly. Thanks Rick you made my day !
great stuff - thank you Rick!
Very helpful, Rick!
Hi rick I will never understand those people who give a thumb down to you what do they not get are they simply just jelous back in the day you would be lucky to own a guitar or keyboard book and yet all this what you and other guys provide to us so glad I stumbled on your channel Dave from uk big fan *****
Great vid Rick. Lydian triads ftw!
I've been working on some of these since January. They are nice!