Description
In this week’s guitar lesson, you’ll learn some creative ways to enhance a rhythm track by adding a complementary layer to the song. No need to strum the same rhythm chords, instead learn how to play something over them that adds to the song.
Part 1 - Free Guitar Lesson
Part 2 - For Premium Members
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Slow Walkthrough
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Video Tablature Breakdown
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i dont know how you do it but its working, great lesson
Great composition and arrangement Brian !
I didn’t know how good this week’s lesson is until I started playing it! Sounds incredible and I can see how this would fit in with a band. I’m trying it in another key..any suggestions?
Sweet Sweet Sweet Brian – Thank you !!! I’m going to just stop playing full chords and only focus on triads or even smaller parts of chords –
love the breakdown your always coming up with new ideas to incorporate into your teaching style. I know its not new but hey over 600 lessons who can remember everything you have covered in the past? The other point is that we are all at different levels and sometimes it just fits so well with where we are at. I like this lesson!
Beautiful. <3
I like this a lot.
Brian, Just beautiful.
Myra.
Maybe for next weeks micro lesson show us a lead played over the top of this?
Very good lesson Brian. Full of usefull ideas on how to play somethimg different. Plus the melody is so cool and relaxing….a great song itself. Not hard to play but an opportunity to improve touch and personal expressiveness. Many thanks.
That sounds so nice and mellow! I love it! Thanks Brian
Brian. When you hammer on in the second fret A position to B minor isn’t it also going to a D which makes sense because Bmin is relative minor of D.
Yes, I hadn’t thought of that – but you are correct.
Simple and beautiful, another seminal lesson. It seems finding sus 2, sus 4 sounds and dissonance are a key to a second guitar voice. Triads have definitely become my focus this year. The focus on finding ways to imply the chords is also a middle ground to breakthroughs in lead playing.
Great lesson. I keep telling the members of my band “less is more”! This lesson covers that concept so beautifully.
This style makes me want to grab my acoustic, sit by the fire place, and just improvise over a slow 1-4-5 using triplets, harmonized 3rds, harmonized 5ths, occasionally substitute the 1 with its 6 chord, and just let it ring out.
I like when you introduce new chord ideas and refresh us on other shapes less frequently used. You covered good bases this lesson. Thank you Brian!
Triads, not triplets!
Excellent lesson on basic rhythm skills to stay out of the other players parts and enhance the overall sound of a song. The tendency to over do it is a very strong compulsion, so dialing in tones that compliment other players is a key part of becoming a better musician. This was fun to realize that simplicity is a better way to go most of the time.
It’s actually easier to be inspired to deviate from the simple elements in a creative way for lead parts for me. I have been improvising the lead over this all morning and this particular progression has been very easy for me to extract a beautiful lead part. The hard part is not over doing it. I’ll work on it some more and post a video soon with the results. For those of you that are more experienced, try and do your own lead part before Brian shows us his version which will surely come out in the next week or two. That way we are not influenced by his take on it and then you play using your own licks.
For those who like this lesson Iregularly play EP 504, about harmonized 3rds and 6ths.
and Brian, still working on EP 624 standalone Ragtime Blues. great little standalone piece
Great lesson, as usual. When I saw the title my first thought was, “Surely he’s going to mention Bob Weir”, since he’s generally regarded as one of the best “second guitar” players ever. So, Brian, how about a lesson that gets into the weeds a bit on how Weir played? I’ve seen a few things on YT, but none of them have been done with your level of detail and expertise. Just a thought.
I second that motion!
Thirded!
I’m sure many of us have been revisiting Weir’s wonderful playing since he died. Personally I’ve been listening again and again to the incredible interplay between him and Garcia (and of course the rest of the band) on that breathtaking medley of Not Fade Away / Goin’ Down The Road Feeling Bad from the 1971 NY
(dammit, hit Enter too early)
recording on Skull & Roses. A very different kettle of fish from what we’re looking at here, of course, but a closer look at Weir’s style in any kind of mood would be most excellent.
Sounds like Brian listened to some of Weir’s moves and did this lesson. If not on purpose its in here. A focused Bobby Weir in the style and fashion of; mini series would be brilliant coming from Sir Brian.
I never get tired of this kind of lesson/music Brian. It’s a very cool sound with valuable material. Thank you!
Lot going on with 2 and 3 strings. And it sounds so good.
Love the color lesson. The nuance, the nuance.
Fantastic lesson Brian. I just love this style.
Hey Brian, you sing?
One of your best Brian. Thank you.
I just emailed Brian requesting a Bob Weir esque rhythm. This is possibly in that family as he would play complimenting chord tones.. I’d still like to see Brian’s interpretation of Bobby’s style, in honor of his memory
I just played with the Measures video. that is so helpful to see when the chords are coming!!! love it
This was a great lesson. Lots of great take aways on how to complement chords. Thanks Brian
Great Lesson! Love these type of lessons. I think you learn something that sticks with you as a great take-away. Love to see more of these lesson tips. Thanks
Brian: Fun lesson. I haven’t seen it presented this way before. The simultaneous tab is a great help.
Brilliant …just simply beautiful tune.
I liked it so much I sat up till dawn practicing it.
Nearly there I just need to polish it further
Thanks Brian
I love this kind of sound. It has a Knopfler vibe for sure. It would be fun to hear how you would solo over this progression. Maybe a part 2 lesson?
I’ll be jamming on this all week!
Excellent lesson. What guitar players play in this style Brian? Lucinda Williams guitar player Stuart Mathis comes to mind. Any other players?
Thank you so much Brian. This is pure gold! The composition and explanation. Played softly and slowly. Sounds so sweet.
Would love more lessons like this.
Great Lesson!
The melody reminds me of Here Comes the Sun by the Beatles.
I have Eva Cassidy in mind here, maybe “songbird” 💁
A thousand thanks for this!
I love the slow, melodic lessons (the ones you often call ‘soulful’)
You have a genius for coming up with beautiful, limpid melodies that make us all want to play them- and then we find, hells bells, we’ve learned a whole load of useful stuff.
Ive always wanted to be able to improvise like this. What a great lesson. In my opinion, and I mean it in the nicest way possible, a very Daniel Lanois-esque lesson. Love your lessons Brian they’ve helped my playing more than anything else I’ve tried.
G’day Brian,
I don’t comment very often, but I just have to say that you, yourself are the Master. I am so sure that you, yourself have made so many of us think yea, I’m a guitar player, and all gratitude to you. I do believe that you have a very special gift, let alone talent.
M.J. Oz.
Fantastic lesson that once again opens up the fretboard and gets you thinking about chord shapes and what’s lurking inside.
The combination of using the 1,3 or 5 sharpens up the ears.
Thanks Brian.
Quite happy to spend the next 30 minutes listening to that on repeat.
Dear Brian and friends of guitar
Once again a fantastic lesson. Question to all of you: I struggle with hybrid picking and could this composition also be played without a plectrum i.e. finger picking Chet Atkins style? What is your opinion?
Regards from Switzerland
Brian, you are so relaxed in your presentation and playing, it is infectious. Brings down my tension and everything is better. Great lesson this week. Another one where I can ‘see’ caged like never before.
If everyone would just learn this one arrangement on guitar, we would finally have world peace. Good stuff.
Hi Brian,
You mention playing the 9th of the five chord over the D in the very first bar.
Could we also consider that by moving to the 2nd fret of the B string you are playing the major 7th of the D?
Thanks for your response.
Very pretty and relaxing, not boring at all !
My first thought was to skip this one and then I stared playing along. And I’ve just been through it all again and it’s inspiring so many other ideas! A deceptively wonderful lesson!
Funny you mentioned Jim Croce. I heard his songs and Maury Muehleisen all over this lesson.
When I first listed to this, I almost decided to go to a different lesson, and I’m glad I didn’t. Soooo many ideas came out of this. I’m going to be having fun with this for quite a while.
Dear Brian,
What a wonderful lesson.
Maybe your no. 1 in my opinion.
/Peter
Slow and beautiful is best for me. This is a lovely composition. When someone asks me to play something, I’ll absolutely choose this.
I know the Blues is popular and all, but I like this pretty stuff.
Wonderful lesson, and a lovely melody to learn and finesse. Every week is another block in a sound foundation of understanding the fretboard.
Great stuff here, Brian! Thanks
This is exactly what I want to play. You’ve captured it Brian and made it so easy to understand! Thank you!
Love this. Simple, elegant, and easy to play!! Make a hack like me sound like a sensitive guitar guru!
Great lesson. I been looking for something like this. I’ve been working on a song from Gary Stewart( The Honky Tonk King) called Drinking Thing. But licks are all steel guitar. I think lesson will help me get something to fit in. Beautifull song about the same tempo. He did it in F , but I do it in D. I can capo at three if I want wanted to copy it. But not much of a singer except in D. Anyway, thanks for this lesson. Good stuff !
Simple, manageable, quite pretty and a little Jackson Brown-ish! My fingers and my ears are both happy! Thx!