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With all that traffic noise in the back ground I would swear you live close to 485 during rush hour🤪. Looking forward to future lessons as I am transitioning from guitar to mandolin.
Thanks for all of this good practical info. Near the end a couple of times you played a slide with kind of a tremolo. Can you give a lesson on how to do that? Thank you I've got a ton of things to work on.
That was fun. I've been looking for awhile through various channels and can't find the next lesson in this. No one seems to have done a lesson on minor arpeggios, or 7ths. I get you have to start simple, but most songs have a minor or 2.
You may have learned you can flatten the major third a half step (one fret) to find your minor arpeggio - which would be the second note in the ascending lick taught here. I’d like to give some thought to a follow up video with this, thanks for the comments!
@@ChrisHenryVideos Yes, thanks. Your follow up lesson to this mentioned that, so I'm going through the common minors I need all the time, and closed positions so I can do it on the fly. I figure the 7ths will work the same way, will try that next. Still seems like there's room for an in-between lesson that spells it out. Took me a fair bit of searching. Thanks for doing this, great stuff.
The mandolin itself has excellent projection and I also often aim to pick the strings in a way that inspires the top to vibrate a lot. There is a decent amount of mechanical force happening.
Mind = blown. As a student of CZcams university I want to thank you for teaching me something
So glad you connected! Thanks for the kind comments and you are so welcome! 😀🎶
Love those Bengals!
Thank you so much for all the mandolin content! I love it!
so welcome Leanna! :D thanks for the kind comments!
Yes, I did learn something from this video that I wish I had known 50 years ago. Thanks so much.
Good stuff
Great building blocks! Thanks a bunch for the share! Hope yeh got yer siesta!
Siested!
And very welcome! Thanks for the kind comments 😀🎶
the extreme close up
I can see why you love that cat so much.
Yes, this wonderfully helpful! Thanks Chris!!
very glad you connected! you are so welcome! thanks for the comment :)
With all that traffic noise in the back ground I would swear you live close to 485 during rush hour🤪. Looking forward to future lessons as I am transitioning from guitar to mandolin.
Thank you. I’m learning to improvise. This lesson makes sense
Yay! So glad to hear! Thanks for your comments! 😀🎶🎯
Excellent!
brilliant
This is a great lessons just to review and learn another way to think. It is helpful to me! Thanks!
So welcome Dan! Glad you connected / thanks your the kind comments. 😀🎶
Nice!
Drive that mandolin highway!
Thanks for all of this good practical info. Near the end a couple of times you played a slide with kind of a tremolo. Can you give a lesson on how to do that? Thank you I've got a ton of things to work on.
Very welcome Jeff! I will mark that on a list of topics I’d like to cover, thanks for the suggestion. 😀🎶
That was fun.
I've been looking for awhile through various channels and can't find the next lesson in this. No one seems to have done a lesson on minor arpeggios, or 7ths. I get you have to start simple, but most songs have a minor or 2.
You may have learned you can flatten the major third a half step (one fret) to find your minor arpeggio - which would be the second note in the ascending lick taught here. I’d like to give some thought to a follow up video with this, thanks for the comments!
@@ChrisHenryVideos Yes, thanks. Your follow up lesson to this mentioned that, so I'm going through the common minors I need all the time, and closed positions so I can do it on the fly. I figure the 7ths will work the same way, will try that next.
Still seems like there's room for an in-between lesson that spells it out. Took me a fair bit of searching.
Thanks for doing this, great stuff.
How do you achieve the volume from your mandolin?
The mandolin itself has excellent projection and I also often aim to pick the strings in a way that inspires the top to vibrate a lot. There is a decent amount of mechanical force happening.
dog!