Ricky I must say most everyone here Sir would agree, you are the Einstein of guitar! Thank you. Again you have not only unlocked the fret board but thankfully gave me that puzzle piece I needed on my path. After hundreds of videos and great teachers, Thank you. I learned the board the way you explained it. I first learned the board by modes which I convert to seven feelings using those patterns and notes from this little yellow handbook I wish I still had. Then I went on “like this comment” to the world of blues and minors. And exactly with the kings and knights and the creations of the guitar. You are a God Sir. Thank you.
Hi Ricky - I have watched thousands of videos and I have to say you are the first to truely unlock the fret board for me - I just watched your videos and I find it absolutely amazing how this works and I could never understand and how the scales fit with the major chords and finally now I do - thank you - I’ve been playing for about 30 years now and this is the first time anyone made it make sense. I’ll be purchasing your book - again thank you
Got up early thinking this through watched again put it on guitar and realised penny dropped with what I already have learned from you with triads this lesson is gold gold gold 🥇
Perhaps I’m missing something with the comments during the video… They may be spot on with the flavor of mnemonic… I saw the pattern and an easier way of understanding the fretboard. Ricky, you’re a fantastic teacher and that’s a true gift. As a child, I fought through Dyslexia like a wizard fights a dragon. As an adult, I remained cognizant of this and was rigorously patient when teaching children karate or as an instructor in the military or working with young adults. Conveying information to others takes a creative and bold mind. Sometimes it takes more than reciting definitions (like a robot)or demanding a reaction after introducing someone to new material. A “Dynamic Leader or Teacher” must possess the skill set to inspire others. You definetly have this gift… Kudos from across the pond!
Yes …. It is very hard to find teachers that can change or alter his method to accommodate different minds … my husband for example, will tell me instructions, but refuses to consider my queries; probably because he’s a very busy man. He thinks brilliantly but in a linear fashion. I’ve had teachers in school (long ago!) that have their explanations or demonstrations firmly entrenched, and prefer not to quibble with the student’s lack of understanding! I love you Ricky Comisky! You are a “true” Teaching Master! Thank you so so so much !
When I was in middle school (grades 6 - 8) I took music classes. My music teacher didn't teach us this. I had a few tutors and even took private lessons. NONE of my teachers taught me this. This is so simple to understand. Now in my mid-fifties thinking of all that wasted time when I could have been reading and writing music instead of being relinquished to the rhythm section playing tablature. I look back and all I can think is how stupid my teachers were. How does that happen? How do we end up with the bottom of the barrel when we should have the best at what they do teaching. My father use too say, "Those who can, do. Those who can't, teach." Not true, as you have plainly demonstrated, but I'm just sayin', WTF?
The reason was well known in the 60s and 70s... those can't... because everyone with a college degree could teach for applying at k-12. Usually, they ended up teachers because they could not qualify in college for other demanding disciplines. It really is ironic that our teachers are usually the best or bightest.
This is by far the single greatest guitar lesson I have ever seen! Ricky is such an incredible teacher. I can’t believe how much info is packed in this single hour, but also explained in a way that is 100% digestible and practical.
Wow you just explained the modes After 5 years l beginning to understand the guitar and the modes made simple Thanks again Ricky. Love your channel l always learn something when l watch your videos. Oh yes l have purchased your book xx great work mo bullshit like other teachers on the net. Thank Ricky
Semordnilap: A word, phrase, or sentence that has the property of forming another word. If you look carefully at the word semordnilap, you might notice that it’s palindromes spelled backward. While a palindrome is a word or phrase that reads the same in both directions, a semordnilap is one that spells a different word or phrase in reverse.
This video finally motivated me to print pages and start writing down the notes of the frets to practice. Thank you! Knowing these intervals between notes in a key is so important and I'm finally practicing.
Funnily enough, I finish watching this right before the 3pm (uk) games start. Thanks a lot for the great lessons, I will also have to re-watch and start writing like you do so I can improve my knowledge. Happy holidays, Rick.
Brilliant explanations! Thanks for sharing your theory teacher’s take on the modes, and accidentals. I’m positive they are going to be useful. You are consistently clear and easily understandable.
Happy Christmas Ricky. Love what you do here. thank you. I don't even have a guitar, and I'm following along drawing guitar necks and filling in the notes and nashville numbers and roman numbers. I think drawing it with my own hand makes it stay in my brain more than just seeing it.
HOLY SMOKES!!! Mr. Comiskey, this one video has unlocked my brain!!! I have been trying to understand the fret board for an embarrassingly amount of time and now I get it! Thank you!
Thanks Ricky for an amazing linked up lesson. Three lessons in one I'd say. Lot to unpack and store away in memory, will be back to this lesson several times. Watch your viewing figures go up 🙂 Have a restful Christmas, health and strength for the New Year. A Good New Year, Bliadhna Mhath Ur (Blee-ah-na Vaa Oor) Your time, knowledge and effort is of huge benefit and is appreciated. Many thanks, Alan
Where the lolly have yo been all my life! I've been stumbling and bumbling on guitar for 61 years, (started at 12 years old) and in the last 40 minutes I've learned more about music and history than I did in the two years I was playing in a garage band. I'm ordering your book today and subscribing to your channel for every lesson. I'd hug you if we weren't an ocean apart. Your a genius of a nutter!
Wow, this is like nothing else! I've learnt so much from this video compared to any other video I've ever watched. And I've been playing guitar for over 20 years...
Merry Christmas Ricky thank you for this gold dust my present to you is doing the work to get better iV already bought the book can't wait for you next one see you in the new year can't wait for more lessons.❤
I been reading the book " Advanced modern rock guitar improvisation" by Jon Finn. I have not finished but what I read explains the fretboard in a way I can understand it in a totally different way.
Very clear, succinct and informative. I have been using 73625 for incremental differences from mixo-dorian-Aeolian etc. I found your 6251473 very useful in bridging and cementing the fretboard chordally. Thank you.
Me having to rewind the video for the class because im still spelling racecar forward and backwards. 😂 Ricky, you sir are an amazing teacher. Thank you for all you do to put these classes together. Learning so much!
Oh it’s “Battle Ends..”I always heard it as “Bottle, Ends And Down Goes Charles’s Father” 😂 I pictured a late night in a latern lit pub in Scotland era.
The first scale I ever learned on guitar was the C major scale starting on the lower E...and it wasn't until like 15 years later that I realized I was also playing in E Phrygian. Guitar is a heck of an instrument.
and the F Lydian…and G mixolydian, and the B locrian..and the A minor, and the D Dorian….🤣. Once you learn C major inside and out you know all the modes haha. I remember when it clicked for me too
LOL I would play the B minor scale over E Blues. I had no idea why it worked until I learned I was playing E Dorian mode. Now I know all my modes inside and out. Except for Locrian lol
@@aleonyohan6745 I never figured out how to make locrian sound right 🤣 One day, if I ever figure it out I’m gonna gimmick the hell out of it and be a innovative musical gazillionaire lmao
Oh man, Ricky! So much important useful information in a manner that explains guitar geography and music theory! Deep stuff but I can sequence the logic and knowledge and pull it out as I reach each level of comprehension. THEN, I got to get it into my fingers. But this video explains so much, contains so much. (How do you eat an elephant?) I will be re-visiting this video and of course I've got your book, good to see on a page and also good to watch you develop the ideas. I appreciate your time and talent not only on guitar but also in teaching. Brilliant!
This is very helpful BTW, (And I’m saying that as a Berklee Alum, they never gave us any angles like those you are giving. It was just, “welcome to the deep end of the pool, oh you need to learn how to swim for these classes.” So I’m very serious-and thankful now to finally really learn how to swim.)
My experience in college as a student (as a self taught guitarist at that point with no experience at reading the dots) I had to double think everything on the program syllabus and "sink or swim" like you mentioned. This was extremely difficult for a great many of the other self taught students in my class, as formal music education is 90% pianocentric. In a way that helped me develop a more rudimentary way of understanding music theory in terms anyone could understand so that I could apply it immediately to guitar. In the end I found singing in the college choir to be the best way to start sight reading, and a few basic piano classes helped to bridge the information. It's crazy a formal educational establishment would accept students who didn't have any idea of the route the pedagogy would take. I really think without my absolute obsession to make guitar my life I would have dropped out of college. That's partly why I set up my music school over 18 years ago. To decipher the stolid, staid methods of transferring workable music theory concepts to the guitar. Thank goodness for CZcams!
Eyup Bob! It's all there waiting to be discovered. Our job is to share our findings with those that need it. I shall check out your book. Thanks for watching :)
the word u were looking for was mnemonic. i find the keys with sharps is easy to remember by the phrase " cows go drink at ed"s bar" eg: C{no sharps or flats) G: 1sharp, D; 2 sharps, A; 3 sharps etc, The mnemonic for the order of keys with flats is " Fat boys eat all day green corn" eg; F (1flat) Bb (2flats) Eb (3flats) etc. A Palindrome is a word spelled the same forwards or backwards, examp;e a phrase like " a man a plan a canal panama"
A mnemonic device is a memory trick that helps a student memorize something. Some examples of mnemonic devices include: Songs and rhymes Songs and rhymes are effective mnemonic devices for both children and adults. For example, children can memorize the alphabet by reciting it to a simple rhyming tune.
Hi Ricky, first of all thanks a lot for taking the time to show this approach. Very helpful! Just discovered your channel. I have a question that I hope will unlock my fretboard view. When you look at your whole fretboard, then do you see just it as a C key organized way and modes with their associated numbers for that C key? I understand the importance to connect the numbers but I want to know on a practical level what is the first thing you see when you look at the fretboard to get those anchors. This will help me move forward. Thanks a lot! And also what do you make of everything when its the key of A let say. You just apply it the same as C but on a different level? Thats the thing that confuses me is when we have to change keys and it becomes a new puzzle...
It’s called a mnemonic: noun. A device such as a pattern of letters, ideas, or associations that assists in remembering something, for example Richard Of York Gave Battle In Vain for the colors of the spectrum (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet).
mnemonics...........the study and development of systems for improving and assisting the memory. A device such as a pattern of letters, ideas, or associations that assists in remembering something, for example Richard Of York Gave Battle In Vain for the colours of the spectrum (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet).
I learned the order of flats by simply breaking the sequence into the word "BEAD" - and then just memorized "GCF" as a 3 letter sequence, so BEAD-GCF. Not sure if this is easier than remembering the Battle acronym for anyone else but I found I was much faster answering questions in theory class using my method.
If it works it works!! The reason I use this to teach is BEADGCF is the flats as you add them to the key signatures, If you reverse them you get FCGDAEB which is the sharps as you add them to they key signatures. I've always been intrigued by the way "Battle Ends And Down Goes Charles' Father" sets a memorable scene that could be in a movie. By reversing it we get a weird palindrome like effect of the order of sharps, "Father Charles Goes Down And Ends Battle". I always imagine them in the same movie, with swords, knights and priests.
@@rickysguitar Yeah I had a friend tell me a pneumonic for FCGDAEB that I heard once and have never forgot. Unfortunately, it's not very polite, so I hesitate to share in public. So by the time I heard the battleship story, I had already memorized what I needed. But yes, order of sharp/flats or the circle of fifths is pretty magical for understanding key signatures. My issue is, I learned theory in a classroom without my guitar, so now I'm still putting them together.
Also something to think about when it comes to modes. Is that there is a relative major associated with it. Take for example the phrygian mode the relative major is E major in the key of C major. Additional reference. Along with the other modes. in the key of C Dorian - d e F G a b(dim) C d if you sharp the F and C you get the D major scale. Phrygian - e F G A b(dim) C d e if you sharp the F, G, C and D you get the E major scale. Lydian - G a b(dim) C d e F G if you sharp the F the relative major is G major Scale mixolydian - a b C D e F G a b(dim) no sharps or flats a natural minor scale and the relative major scale is C major Locriandim) - b(dim) C D e F G a b(dim) the relative majoin scale is B major. There are only 7 scale patterns for these,,
Not sure if anyone has said this yet, but the word you are looking for is a semordnilap. It’s a word or phrase that makes sense forwards and backwards but has a different meaning. Hilariously it is the word palindromes backwards.
Great lesson Ricky, I have one question if you have time. Are the shapes and patterns you showed only applicable for the Key of C, or can you use them for all keys and just move the position of the shapes and patterns on the fret board according to key you want to play in?
So up tonand on the 7th fret is repeatable 8th fret has two broken being the low CF, the high GC and then the 9th is BE. 10th resets for one 11 set of frets are the only sharps on the neck (didnt know that) 12th resets
The term you're looking for for the down goes father charles bit is just a Mnemonic, maybe a mnemonic acronym if you want to get a little more specific (EDIT: actually that'd be more like ROYGBIV, turning letters into words is theopposite, an Acrostic Mnemonic). Personally, since BEAD is already a word and easy to memorize I just remember BEAD Go Catch Fish. :p it doesn't work as well in reverse for the sharps as Fish Catch Go DAEB, but the order of flats is so instantly memorizable this way that the trade-off is worth it for me. :p
How about looking at it this way. Everybody starts with learning power chords. The fret board is setup for power chords all over the fret board, taking into account for the B string +1 stretch. Once you learn all the notes on the fret board, then finding all the proper triads comes easier.
6251473 is indeed a chord progression. Look up “perfect day” by Lou Reed. (Change the em to an E - you’re essentially modulating to harmonic minor for that sound) am dm G C F bdim E
Every guitarist should start off with THIS lesson.
Ricky I must say most everyone here Sir would agree, you are the Einstein of guitar! Thank you. Again you have not only unlocked the fret board but thankfully gave me that puzzle piece I needed on my path. After hundreds of videos and great teachers, Thank you. I learned the board the way you explained it. I first learned the board by modes which I convert to seven feelings using those patterns and notes from this little yellow handbook I wish I still had. Then I went on “like this comment” to the world of blues and minors. And exactly with the kings and knights and the creations of the guitar. You are a God Sir. Thank you.
You just closed so many gaps that so many teachers couldn't. Thank you.
Hi Ricky - I have watched thousands of videos and I have to say you are the first to truely unlock the fret board for me - I just watched your videos and I find it absolutely amazing how this works and I could never understand and how the scales fit with the major chords and finally now I do - thank you - I’ve been playing for about 30 years now and this is the first time anyone made it make sense.
I’ll be purchasing your book - again thank you
Got up early thinking this through watched again put it on guitar and realised penny dropped with what I already have learned from you with triads this lesson is gold gold gold 🥇
Perhaps I’m missing something with the comments during the video… They may be spot on with the flavor of mnemonic… I saw the pattern and an easier way of understanding the fretboard. Ricky, you’re a fantastic teacher and that’s a true gift. As a child, I fought through Dyslexia like a wizard fights a dragon. As an adult, I remained cognizant of this and was rigorously patient when teaching children karate or as an instructor in the military or working with young adults. Conveying information to others takes a creative and bold mind. Sometimes it takes more than reciting definitions (like a robot)or demanding a reaction after introducing someone to new material. A “Dynamic Leader or Teacher” must possess the skill set to inspire others. You definetly have this gift… Kudos from across the pond!
Yes …. It is very hard to find teachers that can change or alter his method to accommodate different minds … my husband for example, will tell me instructions, but refuses to consider my queries; probably because he’s a very busy man. He thinks brilliantly but in a linear fashion. I’ve had teachers in school (long ago!) that have their explanations or demonstrations firmly entrenched, and prefer not to quibble with the student’s lack of understanding! I love you Ricky Comisky! You are a “true” Teaching Master! Thank you so so so much !
When I was in middle school (grades 6 - 8) I took music classes. My music teacher didn't teach us this. I had a few tutors and even took private lessons. NONE of my teachers taught me this. This is so simple to understand. Now in my mid-fifties thinking of all that wasted time when I could have been reading and writing music instead of being relinquished to the rhythm section playing tablature. I look back and all I can think is how stupid my teachers were. How does that happen? How do we end up with the bottom of the barrel when we should have the best at what they do teaching. My father use too say, "Those who can, do. Those who can't, teach." Not true, as you have plainly demonstrated, but I'm just sayin', WTF?
Me too, I was taught fat cat gets drunk at Eddie's bar. In 5ths. I'm learning alot now. Rock on my friend.
The reason was well known in the 60s and 70s... those can't... because everyone with a college degree could teach for applying at k-12. Usually, they ended up teachers because they could not qualify in college for other demanding disciplines. It really is ironic that our teachers are usually the best or bightest.
This is by far the single greatest guitar lesson I have ever seen! Ricky is such an incredible teacher. I can’t believe how much info is packed in this single hour, but also explained in a way that is 100% digestible and practical.
Wow you just explained the modes
After 5 years l beginning to understand the guitar and the modes made simple
Thanks again Ricky.
Love your channel l always learn something when l watch your videos. Oh yes l have purchased your book xx great work mo bullshit like other teachers on the net. Thank Ricky
Semordnilap: A word, phrase, or sentence that has the property of forming another word. If you look carefully at the word semordnilap, you might notice that it’s palindromes spelled backward. While a palindrome is a word or phrase that reads the same in both directions, a semordnilap is one that spells a different word or phrase in reverse.
This is the best description so far.
@@rickysguitar
Actually the word you are looking for is mnemonic.
!yo banana boy!
Thank you for the really nice lesson! So much information packed in.
This video finally motivated me to print pages and start writing down the notes of the frets to practice. Thank you! Knowing these intervals between notes in a key is so important and I'm finally practicing.
Thank you Ricky. This is very generous of you.
Funnily enough, I finish watching this right before the 3pm (uk) games start. Thanks a lot for the great lessons, I will also have to re-watch and start writing like you do so I can improve my knowledge. Happy holidays, Rick.
That will be called an anagram the way the letters are the same front and back. Love the lessons. Thank you so much.
Brilliant explanations! Thanks for sharing your theory teacher’s take on the modes, and accidentals. I’m positive they are going to be useful. You are consistently clear and easily understandable.
You, sir, are quite brilliant!!! Thank you very much.
it amazes me that you teach and I learned so much
Uploads such as this gem, beat any review of overdrives that have been sprinkled with Germanium fairy dust. Thank you.
Happy Christmas Ricky. Love what you do here. thank you. I don't even have a guitar, and I'm following along drawing guitar necks and filling in the notes and nashville numbers and roman numbers. I think drawing it with my own hand makes it stay in my brain more than just seeing it.
You are great, and have helped me a lot,so thanks.
Thank you so much I have never seen the board like this 🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸💫
HOLY SMOKES!!! Mr. Comiskey, this one video has unlocked my brain!!! I have been trying to understand the fret board for an embarrassingly amount of time and now I get it!
Thank you!
Great teacher! Not in a rush! I love your videos!
this has to be my favorite video ever, thank you so much
Well I sat through the whole video tonight and liked it a lot. Bought your book and look forward to getting it. And to more really interesting stuff.
you transformed my understanding of the fretboard (electric uke in my case) with this fantastic video. thank you so much. thank you so so much.
Thanks and merry christmas, your book and videos are helping me with this journey of learning to play.
Eyup Jason! Stoked to read that buddy! Keep at it! Guitar is the best!
That was the best mind map of the fretboard I have ever seen.
Thank you.
Thanks Ricky for an amazing linked up lesson. Three lessons in one I'd say. Lot to unpack and store away in memory, will be back to this lesson several times. Watch your viewing figures go up 🙂 Have a restful Christmas, health and strength for the New Year. A Good New Year, Bliadhna Mhath Ur (Blee-ah-na Vaa Oor) Your time, knowledge and effort is of huge benefit and is appreciated. Many thanks, Alan
Where the lolly have yo been all my life! I've been stumbling and bumbling on guitar for 61 years, (started at 12 years old) and in the last 40 minutes I've learned more about music and history than I did in the two years I was playing in a garage band. I'm ordering your book today and subscribing to your channel for every lesson. I'd hug you if we weren't an ocean apart. Your a genius of a nutter!
Another great lesson by the greatest teacher of music in the Universe.
Thank you❤
thank you for the lesson. really understandable
Hello from Boogerwoods, Fl (Lake Wales) Love your lessons. You speak the way I can understand.
I learned so much. That Nashville numbers, the progression that’s built right into the guitar.
Wow, this is like nothing else! I've learnt so much from this video compared to any other video I've ever watched. And I've been playing guitar for over 20 years...
Merry Christmas Ricky thank you for this gold dust my present to you is doing the work to get better iV already bought the book can't wait for you next one see you in the new year can't wait for more lessons.❤
Thank you for supporting my work! Glad you enjoyed the video. I can’t wait to get the new book out as well! Have a wonderful Christmas 🎄
Excellent!! ❤❤❤
BAM!
Smacked in the face with logic. Thank you Ricky! New subscriber here.
I been reading the book " Advanced modern rock guitar improvisation" by Jon Finn. I have not finished but what I read explains the fretboard in a way I can understand it in a totally different way.
Very clear, succinct and informative. I have been using 73625 for incremental differences from mixo-dorian-Aeolian etc. I found your 6251473 very useful in bridging and cementing the fretboard chordally. Thank you.
Thanks Ricky. Very helpful
Very good leson
Me having to rewind the video for the class because im still spelling racecar forward and backwards. 😂 Ricky, you sir are an amazing teacher. Thank you for all you do to put these classes together. Learning so much!
Thanks for the video Rick
Merry Christmas Rickey and we will see you all participants in the new year.
Merry Christmas. You are the best guitar teacher on CZcams.
Thank you *blushes. Have a wonderful Christmas!
I love your content.🎸
Oh it’s “Battle Ends..”I always heard it as “Bottle, Ends And Down Goes Charles’s Father” 😂 I pictured a late night in a latern lit pub in Scotland era.
The first scale I ever learned on guitar was the C major scale starting on the lower E...and it wasn't until like 15 years later that I realized I was also playing in E Phrygian. Guitar is a heck of an instrument.
and the F Lydian…and G mixolydian, and the B locrian..and the A minor, and the D Dorian….🤣. Once you learn C major inside and out you know all the modes haha. I remember when it clicked for me too
@@jmgmetal And we're still learning and barely scratched the surface. At least we can say that it'll never get dull.
LOL I would play the B minor scale over E Blues. I had no idea why it worked until I learned I was playing E Dorian mode. Now I know all my modes inside and out. Except for Locrian lol
@@aleonyohan6745 I never figured out how to make locrian sound right 🤣
One day, if I ever figure it out I’m gonna gimmick the hell out of it and be a innovative musical gazillionaire lmao
From the Oxford English Dictionary. Palindrome: A word or a sequence of words that reads, letter for letter, the same backwards as forwards.
Hello from Sunnny South Africa
Brilliant!
Oh man, Ricky! So much important useful information in a manner that explains guitar geography and music theory! Deep stuff but I can sequence the logic and knowledge and pull it out as I reach each level of comprehension. THEN, I got to get it into my fingers. But this video explains so much, contains so much. (How do you eat an elephant?) I will be re-visiting this video and of course I've got your book, good to see on a page and also good to watch you develop the ideas. I appreciate your time and talent not only on guitar but also in teaching. Brilliant!
I can't get over how amazing this lesson is.
It's pretty revelatory!
Very nice sir❤
This is very helpful BTW, (And I’m saying that as a Berklee Alum, they never gave us any angles like those you are giving. It was just, “welcome to the deep end of the pool, oh you need to learn how to swim for these classes.” So I’m very serious-and thankful now to finally really learn how to swim.)
My experience in college as a student (as a self taught guitarist at that point with no experience at reading the dots) I had to double think everything on the program syllabus and "sink or swim" like you mentioned.
This was extremely difficult for a great many of the other self taught students in my class, as formal music education is 90% pianocentric. In a way that helped me develop a more rudimentary way of understanding music theory in terms anyone could understand so that I could apply it immediately to guitar.
In the end I found singing in the college choir to be the best way to start sight reading, and a few basic piano classes helped to bridge the information. It's crazy a formal educational establishment would accept students who didn't have any idea of the route the pedagogy would take.
I really think without my absolute obsession to make guitar my life I would have dropped out of college. That's partly why I set up my music school over 18 years ago. To decipher the stolid, staid methods of transferring workable music theory concepts to the guitar.
Thank goodness for CZcams!
Super, looks like the BEAD Method of Fretboard Mastery... which I wrote in 2007. You add some fresh concepts that I'm going to ponder.
Eyup Bob! It's all there waiting to be discovered. Our job is to share our findings with those that need it. I shall check out your book. Thanks for watching :)
@@rickysguitar Always up for fresh insights! Great video!
liked and subscribed, thank you.
Great video! This channel is so underrated. Every beginner guitar player should check this channel out. You're a great teacher Ricky, thank you.
Merry Christmas Ricky and Family 🏴
12:35
OMG.... I've unlocked every scale in my head now......
This is your *BEST* video yet!
By the way... I am Charles Father! 😂
Awesome ! Took me a few views but I got it. Thanks for the GOLD :) !
Thanks!
Eyup Randy, very much appreciated, thank you. Ricky
the word u were looking for was mnemonic. i find the keys with sharps is easy to remember by the phrase " cows go drink at ed"s bar" eg: C{no sharps or flats) G: 1sharp, D; 2 sharps, A; 3 sharps etc, The mnemonic for the order of keys with flats is " Fat boys eat all day green corn" eg; F (1flat) Bb (2flats) Eb (3flats) etc. A Palindrome is a word spelled the same forwards or backwards, examp;e a phrase like " a man a plan a canal panama"
"palindrome" is a word or phrase spelled the same forward as backwards.
Great video!!!
A mnemonic device is a memory trick that helps a student memorize something. Some examples of mnemonic devices include:
Songs and rhymes
Songs and rhymes are effective mnemonic devices for both children and adults. For example, children can memorize the alphabet by reciting it to a simple rhyming tune.
Definitely a mnemonic!
The manual the first guitar builder never gave.
I have learned in more in the last 5 minutes than the past 50 years trying to teach myself.
that shouldn't be....
I got it ... Looks like it could be very useful to play and find progressions, as well as chords
Hi Ricky, the Forwards Backwards thing (in English) is called a "Palindrome" - Racecar, Radar etc....Great lessons by the way !
Stirling Scotland 😎
A sentence that explains a series of letters is called an "acrostic mnemonic".
Hi Ricky, first of all thanks a lot for taking the time to show this approach. Very helpful! Just discovered your channel. I have a question that I hope will unlock my fretboard view. When you look at your whole fretboard, then do you see just it as a C key organized way and modes with their associated numbers for that C key? I understand the importance to connect the numbers but I want to know on a practical level what is the first thing you see when you look at the fretboard to get those anchors. This will help me move forward. Thanks a lot!
And also what do you make of everything when its the key of A let say. You just apply it the same as C but on a different level? Thats the thing that confuses me is when we have to change keys and it becomes a new puzzle...
It’s called a mnemonic:
noun. A device such as a pattern of letters, ideas, or associations that assists in remembering something, for example Richard Of York Gave Battle In Vain for the colors of the spectrum (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet).
❤
mnemonics...........the study and development of systems for improving and assisting the memory.
A device such as a pattern of letters, ideas, or associations that assists in remembering something, for example Richard Of York Gave Battle In Vain for the colours of the spectrum (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet).
I learned the order of flats by simply breaking the sequence into the word "BEAD" - and then just memorized "GCF" as a 3 letter sequence, so BEAD-GCF. Not sure if this is easier than remembering the Battle acronym for anyone else but I found I was much faster answering questions in theory class using my method.
If it works it works!! The reason I use this to teach is BEADGCF is the flats as you add them to the key signatures, If you reverse them you get FCGDAEB which is the sharps as you add them to they key signatures.
I've always been intrigued by the way "Battle Ends And Down Goes Charles' Father" sets a memorable scene that could be in a movie. By reversing it we get a weird palindrome like effect of the order of sharps, "Father Charles Goes Down And Ends Battle".
I always imagine them in the same movie, with swords, knights and priests.
@@rickysguitar Yeah I had a friend tell me a pneumonic for FCGDAEB that I heard once and have never forgot. Unfortunately, it's not very polite, so I hesitate to share in public. So by the time I heard the battleship story, I had already memorized what I needed.
But yes, order of sharp/flats or the circle of fifths is pretty magical for understanding key signatures. My issue is, I learned theory in a classroom without my guitar, so now I'm still putting them together.
Also something to think about when it comes to modes. Is that there is a relative major associated with it. Take for example the phrygian mode the relative major is E major in the key of C major. Additional reference. Along with the other modes. in the key of C
Dorian - d e F G a b(dim) C d if you sharp the F and C you get the D major scale.
Phrygian - e F G A b(dim) C d e if you sharp the F, G, C and D you get the E major scale.
Lydian - G a b(dim) C d e F G if you sharp the F the relative major is G major Scale
mixolydian - a b C D e F G a b(dim) no sharps or flats a natural minor scale and the relative major scale is C major
Locriandim) - b(dim) C D e F G a b(dim) the relative majoin scale is B major.
There are only 7 scale patterns for these,,
Not sure if anyone has said this yet, but the word you are looking for is a semordnilap. It’s a word or phrase that makes sense forwards and backwards but has a different meaning. Hilariously it is the word palindromes backwards.
Great lesson Ricky, I have one question if you have time. Are the shapes and patterns you showed only applicable for the Key of C, or can you use them for all keys and just move the position of the shapes and patterns on the fret board according to key you want to play in?
Each mode can be played in every position on the neck because they have the same notes just in different order right
Absolutely spot on!
Great video, thank you. Did you know Robert Mugabe's surname spelt backwards spells something completely different? E-BA-GUM
Now then Jon!
I bought your book
I want to learn guitar
So up tonand on the 7th fret is repeatable
8th fret has two broken being the low CF, the high GC and then the 9th is BE.
10th resets for one
11 set of frets are the only sharps on the neck (didnt know that)
12th resets
Now I get what a fourth is.
The term you're looking for for the down goes father charles bit is just a Mnemonic, maybe a mnemonic acronym if you want to get a little more specific (EDIT: actually that'd be more like ROYGBIV, turning letters into words is theopposite, an Acrostic Mnemonic).
Personally, since BEAD is already a word and easy to memorize I just remember BEAD Go Catch Fish. :p it doesn't work as well in reverse for the sharps as Fish Catch Go DAEB, but the order of flats is so instantly memorizable this way that the trade-off is worth it for me. :p
Oh snap didn't realize this was a live stream originally and someone answered in the video…
This one helps remember the modes in order: I don't play loud music at lunch. You just can't forget that !
Pythagoras didn't die, he just moved on, memory intact!
I've unlocked
How about looking at it this way. Everybody starts with learning power chords. The fret board is setup for power chords all over the fret board, taking into account for the B string +1 stretch. Once you learn all the notes on the fret board, then finding all the proper triads comes easier.
Where can I get the book, cause I'm thinking of giving up guitar....I'm stuck. Help me please.
Mnemonic device would be what you’re talking about in the 1st 15 minutes where you’re creating an acronym to help memorize something.
Hi Ricky comisky , this is very nice lesson , can you give me the book title?
I'm interested in getting your book. Will i be able to learn to play the guitar. I'm a beginner. kindly advice.
Is this 6251473 a chord progression so in key of C would be Amin D min G maj or G7 C F B dim Emin or am I just lost?
6251473 is indeed a chord progression. Look up “perfect day” by Lou Reed. (Change the em to an E - you’re essentially modulating to harmonic minor for that sound) am dm G C F bdim E
@@rickysguitar Thanks a lot, thought had it right but theory so not my strong point. Thanks again and hope you and yours have a great Xmas.
It’s an Entendre-Pneumonic Palindrome.