SNEAKY TRICK of Dickey Betts. It’s SIMPLE (Learn in 5 Minutes)
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Most of the time I play alone. To get a decent Allman touch just play the pentatonic scale parallel on two strings at once. I call it my Fake Allman mode.
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
Fun!
@denisechetty4019
11 ай бұрын
😂👍🎸
@JDBodine
11 ай бұрын
Fake it till you make it, or don’t have to fake it anymore. Whatever works.
@kennewton6626
11 ай бұрын
It’s not fake. If it sounds good it is good. In fact, it might also be considered an exercise in double stops.
@Christopher-ci3mq
11 ай бұрын
Hate to ask, but I’m not following what you mean here…
Dickey Betts, the man, the legend, what a legacy....
This was awesome. Simple, short, well recorded and edited. One the best song movie placements was Jessica in Field of Dreams. Every road trip since 1989 starts with the ceremonial playing of Jessica. Thanks for the video.
@MarkZabel
9 ай бұрын
Thanks Craig!
OMG I've been playing guitar since 1962 and it never dawned on me how difficult I was making it and how easy this trick is. It's a whole new thing!
@MarkZabel
9 ай бұрын
I had the same reaction!
@DThompson55
9 ай бұрын
@@MarkZabel I have to put this into my own construct of how I think about the fretboard rather than these pentatonic positions. So I'm thinking about playing the inversions, but on the same string in the same pattern as the original melody, which was the first great insight I got from you. This is very exciting. Running through my looper all last night and coming up with a lot of Les Paul/Mary Ford sounding stuff because I'm not sticking to purely pentatonics, doing bends, etc. But also, you're last trick, the Betts note is just killer. thank you for opening the eyes of this old man.
Thank you! Love your lessons your outlook and your positive vibes.
@MarkZabel
11 ай бұрын
You are so welcome!
Nice! I wish I had your KZread videos 45 years ago to learn from. Thanks for the lesson.👍👍
@MarkZabel
11 ай бұрын
Glad you like them!
I loved how May, used this technique, Jimmy Page as well, then really got into it when I understood what was going on. I've used it on many songs to give it a tonal width with great effect. Thanks for the post Mark.
@MarkZabel
11 ай бұрын
Thanks John!
Dickey is the most UNDER-RATED guitarist of the rock era. I can't play guitar at all, but your video was clear and understandable. I love Dickey and often wondered what it was about his style that was so appealing. Thanks for explaining it.
@MarkZabel
6 ай бұрын
Cool, thanks!
@NetCerpher
Ай бұрын
my neighbor dickey betts passed today... 4.18.24
After years playing I picked out, by ear, Southbound. From there I have always used what I call a minor pentatonic in C with the “house shape” up from that scale. It’s all Dickey and it has gotten me by for years now. 😊
This formula is transferable to any of the 5 Pentatonic shapes. As long as you skip a shape in between two Pentatonic shapes you will find the harmony. Great trick thank you!
@MarkZabel
13 күн бұрын
Exactly so! Thanks!
Great guitar lesson. Thanks for breaking it down. Keep 'em coming Mark.
@MarkZabel
9 ай бұрын
Thanks, will do!
One of the best articulations of his style for sure. I have been seeking this. Thank you!
@MarkZabel
10 ай бұрын
My pleasure. Thanks for watching!
Thank you. Never even thought about that. Great tool to add to the toolbox. Always just worked through my harmonies this makes it so easy.
@MarkZabel
11 ай бұрын
Glad to help!
Thanks Mark fantastic lesson. Your right that one note makes all the difference! 👋🖤🦋🖤
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
Thanks Kris!!
Very nice content. Enjoyed your breakdown of the Betts style. Thanks, mate. 👍
@MarkZabel
10 ай бұрын
Thanks!
😲😃Very cool Mark! I'll have try that with my looper. Never knew you could just go up to positions like that. Nice!
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
Thanks Mike! Yes, it's easy once you get the hang of it, and very addictive!
Yep....That's the sound I love to listen to...harmonized lead....Awesome!
So SWEET the sound! \m/
Excellent video brother.Well done. Blessings.
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
Thanks, you too!
Great stuff! Just remember... there's NO lick like Dicky Betts' "One Way Out" groove. Divinely inspired I think. Then Betts' solo is perfect, and then Duane comes in with the slide on top of it... wow! "One Way Out - Live at the Fillmore East" - 6/27/1971"
@MarkZabel
3 ай бұрын
Thanks ... and yes, nothing like that!
Great video.... You had me at Dodge Dart. I had a 1969 Dodge Dart, slant 6 engine.. I just need your guitar skills to match our choices in 70's Dodge's..
@MarkZabel
11 ай бұрын
Thanks!
Very good , great information indeed. Thanks .
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
You bet. Thanks for watching!
Dickey Betts is probably my favorite guitarist. My band plays a lot of Allman Brothers including Jessica but without the harmony part since I'm the only lead guitarist. We still rock it including the piano solo. The main riff is from the D chord structure or actually C. Its an A scale. At least thats how I see it.
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
Cool. Yes, that's the structure I used to play it in the video.
Very cool! Thank you!
@MarkZabel
9 ай бұрын
Glad you liked it!
Great content here! I have been playing out of the Allman's catalog since about 1975. Your breakdown could not have been more concise or accessible. Really a cool Deluxe by the way. I have had her twin since 1980. Original pickups in mine but yours sounds great! Cheers!
@MarkZabel
9 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
Very cool, thanks Mark. It's interesting to note that Dickey was influenced by Western Swing and tried to incorporate that sound and style into his playing.
@MarkZabel
5 ай бұрын
Thanks! You can hear that influence in his double-step picking style. Very good point!
Love the Deluxe Les Paul, thanks for this lesson. Never could figure that out.
@MarkZabel
9 ай бұрын
Happy to help!
Thanks for making this easy to understand! Where is the link to the next video you point to at the end?
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
You're welcome. Here's the link: kzread.info/head/PLSVfUQKkNUqZr6jUIMbjUnmEAdKMVgL7T
Great lesson!!!! Please more of it!😊
@MarkZabel
10 ай бұрын
Thanks!
PHENOMENAL VIDEO LESSON... FANTASTIC...
@MarkZabel
11 ай бұрын
Thanks!! Glad you enjoyed it.
Great lesson Mark!!! Dickie was and still is overshadowed by Duane. Great guitarist and still rocking!!! Keep up the great work. See ya on the next Livestream!!!!! Keep em coming!!🎸
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
Thanks a ton Paul! See you soon!
@joerectifier
11 ай бұрын
Not to take anything away from Duane - but I have always focused on Dickie. Dickie is a very expressive player and truly channels his inners. I also loved his tone
the lesson is great and all, but can we all just take a moment to appreciate the mini humbuckers?
@MarkZabel
11 ай бұрын
LOL!
I'm such a huge Dickey, Duane, and especially Jack Pearson fan
Too much fun!! Thank you!
@MarkZabel
11 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
I believe, on the recording, there are three parts - the main melody line is played by Dickey Betts, the low harmony is Gregg Allman on Hammond organ and the high harmony is played by Chuck Leavell on Rhodes piano. Chuck also played the acoustic piano part on the recording. I think the twin guitar thing came from their live performances of the song, since Chuck could not play both the Acoustic piano and Rhodes parts at the same time live. The song sounds brilliant played either way, though the original recording does have something very special
Brothers And Sisters was the first ABB album without Duane Allman. Les Dudek, a Florida free lancer and friend of Dickey’s, played most of the second lead guitar parts. To hear Les tell it, “Jessica” was his idea. He’s a great player and he did play a lot on that record. About the “Dickey Betts Scale:” Nice description of that. Indeed-it’s a thing. When you have something named after you in music, you’ve had an impact. The “Dickey Betts Scale” and the “Jimi Hendrix Chord” fit the bill. Two giants, two additions to the “slang” of music.
@NeverTalkToCops1
10 ай бұрын
No, Dudek is a non thing.
@MarkZabel
10 ай бұрын
I don't know much about Les. Dickey definitely was the real deal, as you say. Glad you liked the bit about the "Dickey Betts Scale". Thanks!
@larrypower8659
10 ай бұрын
@@MarkZabel I knew about Les Dudek from guitar mags, etc. About 30 yrs ago I met him through a friend down in Florida and jammed with him a bit. Quite a player.
Enjoyed that tip,and I had to laugh when you talked about your dodge dart, because I was a teenager in the 70's and my first car was a 67dodge dart.😉
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it! That's great, mine was a 1973 version. Great car, but a total rust bucket near the end.
Great lesson 👍
@MarkZabel
10 ай бұрын
Glad you liked it!
Love it!
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
Thanks!!
My best friend (and conveniently next-door neighbor) Tom was one year ahead of me including with his driver's license. Tom also was an only child and both his parents owned cars.......so generally we got stuck cruising in his mom's Dodge Dart (identical to yours only bronze colored with a vinyl roof) which represented great independence, but the true treat was borrowing his dad the judge's sweet baby blue colored Ford Galaxie 500 XL! Then we moved from a Harmony guitar to a sweet Strat or LP!! Jim C.
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
Awesome! The one pictured in the video wasn't my car, BUT it appeared to be the same year, model and color. (Dart Swinger ... Sky Blue) Loved that car. Sad day when I took it to the junkyard, but man I drove the heck out of it.
@stevenday9687
Жыл бұрын
I had a 1965. Galaxy 500 2 door when I was a kid. How I wish I had it now. Galaxies ended up being bigger cars but this was before that. 289cc . Be worth a fortune these days.
Yes, sir, very nice indeed. If I may draw your attention to the live 1971 Fillmore concert briefly; on Hot 'lanta, consider those lead harmonies that bend and flow in and out so subtle yet with the power of Godzilla breaking out and wreaking havoc upon the listeners. The point is it wasn't what they played so much as how they played it. And that, my fellow guitar masters, is why they are the legends that they are today; never to be duplicated, only imitated. Oh, and add in some bass and organ harmonies while you're in there. I'm hardly worthy to even be talking about them.
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
Any comment referencing Godzilla gets a thumbs up from me!
@kevinallison2227
9 ай бұрын
Yes Very nice description Thanks for sharing that analogy!
Huge western swing influences w Dickey Betts❤
@MarkZabel
4 ай бұрын
Absolutely!
I love the simple things in everything, especially music which can seem overwhelming 👍
@MarkZabel
10 ай бұрын
Me too.
Mark, I appreciate that you eschew the use of the pedal to "mimic" this technique. In the guitar community and on KZread especially it sometimes feels like interesting music couldn't be created without the use of pedals, when in fact great guitarists and musicians like Betts and many others found the way and most pedals only try to replicate it. My guitar "guru" once told me..."All pedals are cheating and with a little more practice and imagination you won't need them." He did recommend an amp with spring reverb and was ok with an EQ and drive pedal, though. This video was a great display of how an inventive approach can produce a legendary sound.
@MarkZabel
11 ай бұрын
Thanks Charlie! Steve Cropper's advice for pedals was to throw them away. While I'm not quite there, I do know my playing and sound got much better the less junk I put on it. What happens is that you're forced to use your hands to get the sound you want. There are limits of course, but not as many as people think.
@julesbrunton1728
7 ай бұрын
@@MarkZabelhaving a second musician to play a harmony with is awesome but in reality... a bit extravagant. You can do it by yourself with overdubs but live? Pedals have their place
Always good to see a Mark Zabel viddy and then improvising on it, thanks!
@MarkZabel
11 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@giulioluzzardi7632
11 ай бұрын
@@MarkZabel A little thanks for a job well done is obligatory!
@giulioluzzardi7632
11 ай бұрын
A
1:34 - Dicky Betts with a PRS?!?! Yeeeah!
Lord, have mercy. Dickie Betts!
@ayoung1
Ай бұрын
Sorry: Dickey.
Cool. The few times I've done that, I calculated the harmonies for each corresponding note of the main line. More fun than a harmonizer to DT yourself, imo.
@jimschiltz5343
11 ай бұрын
Right on, Maud dib
I play that extra note all the time in my pentatonic solos! Knowing that Dickey Betts is my likely influence makes it more special!
@MarkZabel
11 ай бұрын
Yes, sounds great over the V chord especially.
This is cool , I need all the help I can get .
@MarkZabel
11 ай бұрын
Glad to help.
I love playing that song Jessica
Good tips and explanation! The harmonies between Duane and Dickey have a unique sound that has made ABB one of my favorite bands ever. I've managed to learn most of Blue Sky (through Duane's solo + harmony part) and will soon get Dickey's solo + harmnony down. Playing both solos back to back is relatively straightforward, but I was wondering how on earth would I be able to do both harmony parts on one guitar? Do I just choose one and/or use a pedal? This really helps to at least approximate that sound so I won't go crazy. Thanks!
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
Thanks! You could either use a looper to lay down the primary line and overdub the harmony or try a harmonizer pedal. Either way it's really fun to do!
@officialfanofrichiebricker8324
Жыл бұрын
A looper pedal can work but you have to start with just one guitar then play the second on top of the loop
I do love Dickey Betts. Some time after Duane died, Dickey seemed to add a certain kind of bend to some of his notes and it sounded out of key, to me, but evidently not ot him because he kept it up. He was certainly a fine player and of equal rank with his early-in-life buddy, Duane Allman.
Nice little trick, I'll have to try that! You can actually play both notes yourself by just using the 4th above the original note, playing 2 strings at a time. A little tricky to work out the fingering but 4ths are an easy interval to grab and it sounds great.
@MarkZabel
10 ай бұрын
Fun to try. And yes, 4ths (and 3rds) are fairly easy to finger and play. (Not necessarily as fluidly as single note phrases though)
@pauldigirolamo600
10 ай бұрын
@@MarkZabel Definitely not, but a nice way to incorporate the sound if you're the only lead guitarist!
@georgejasper8794
9 ай бұрын
Gotta make sure you get the right mix of 4ths and 3rds or you sound like you're playing a samesan! Happened to us one time when we incorrectly worked out the beginning to Don't Want You No More.
As fantastic and iconic as this song is, unfortunately Duane Allman was dead by this point. 😪🙏🎸 Dickey Betts played alongside an uncredited Les Dudek, who played the harmony part as well as the acoustic rhythm part, and he was a session musician for Capricorn Records at the time. The Allman Brothers' management were really pushing for Dudek to be in the band, and their encouragement had him believing that he'd really gotten the gig, so he began telling people that he was a shoo-in for the band...but that wasn't the case, and the rest of the band were furious that he was making this publicly known, least of all that he or anyone could actually replace Duane...😮 That in itself is an entirely different story, but in spite of the circumstances, Les Dudek deserves credit and his due for being in a right place albeit wrong time scenario and lent his great talents to this classic!
@koshersalaami
11 ай бұрын
I always thought the upper voice in Jessica was organ.
@guitarkis4969
11 ай бұрын
I use to play City Magic by Les Dudek decades ago. Loved the harmonized lick that started the song and continued throughout.
@derhandtrommler
11 ай бұрын
@@koshersalaami nope. Gregg played the organ and he wasn't all that proficient at it at this point in their history.
@derhandtrommler
11 ай бұрын
Dudek dated Cher after she and Gregg split. He had a minor hit in 1976 with "Old Judge Jones" Dickey really wanted to be the only guitar player in the ABB after pianist Chuck Leavell joined in 1973. That's the primary reason Dudek was never asked to join.
@clos5700
11 ай бұрын
Les Dudek is underrated as a guitar player.
Well, that was awesome!
@MarkZabel
9 ай бұрын
Thanks!
Great lesson on harmony without theory. A friend told me “If you’re thinking you’re stinking”.
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
LOL! Rock on!
Very nice.
@MarkZabel
11 ай бұрын
Thanks!
Wonderful lesson. More ABB & Dickey please. Do you still have the Dodge?
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
Thank you! Yes on ABB ... alas, no on the Dodge.
yes!
Thank you
@MarkZabel
11 ай бұрын
My pleasure. Thanks for watching.
You know whats funny is after watching this... i never realized how much Allmans was in my lead playing haha! Im a Jerry Garcia type of player but i add this Allmans feel to stuff that keeps the energy going where the music sometimes crashes. Anywhoo thanks for the video. Also give us the scoop on that guitar ! I love no binding on a LP
@MarkZabel
11 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it. The guitar is a 1970s Studio Tribute LP. So I guess because it's a Studio tribute, they left the binding off.
@kevinallison2227
9 ай бұрын
I read where Duane loved Jerry's playing
No other song has so influenced my own playing as much as Blue Sky. It's all about MELODY.
Hey Mark, love your playing and lessons, but like others, there seem to be some inconsistencies in this one that I found confusing: 1) At 2:30, you show the alleged notes of 3rd position Em pentatonic; except it's not because it shows 3 C# notes.... not part of Em pentatonic. It's F# minor pentatonic. I think you just missed by two frets. 2) The notes to be played that you show in blue (I think that's what you're trying to do) on frets 6,7,9&10 are not the notes you actually play which are down on frets 4-8?? What you play is in 3rd pos. Em penta. 3) If by "play the same pattern" you mean play the same relative fret positions on each string but just moved up, that's not what's happening. The fret pattern played in the harmony is NOT the same as the pattern played in the melody. For example in the melody, the third note, G is on the same fret as the starting note; that is, fret 0. In the harmony the 3rd note (B) is on fret 4 while the starting note is fret 5. I think you mean play the same relative note in the 3rd position as was played in 1st position.... the two licks each start on the 5th note of their respective positions and the 1st four notes are 5,1,2,1 Most of my confusion stemmed from the incorrect display at 2:30. I get it now... cool trick!
@MarkZabel
11 ай бұрын
Sorry I messed up the diagrams. Thanks for letting me know. I check pretty thoroughly, but sometimes I miss it. It's all done by hand, and mistakes can be made. Yes, the same relative note 2 positions up from the primary lick.
Yes. It does sound like like Dickey and Duane. And like Mark. And hopefully soon, me 😁🎸
@MarkZabel
6 ай бұрын
Rock on!
Ah, this is the longer version of your TIkTok. Thank you! So seeing the two parts together, it's just the entire riff moved up three frets-exactly the same across the board? I get confused when you say "play it in this other position." We're not finding the unison notes in that different scale pattern, we're just moving up the exact move?
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
"It" equals the same pattern - same strings and same sequence. Different notes, because it's in a different position. Slow down (using the gear icon) the video during one of the double-guitar sections and you'll see what's going on.
Dat SWEET
I played ina a couple bands with another guitarist. We played a lot of harmony guitar parts. Counting is the easy way to figure out the harmony notes.
Mark, thank you for the great video. Wanted to let you know that the follow-up video that you pointed to his about ZZ Top, not a deeper dive into Dickey Batts. Let me know if I am missing something. Thanks a bunch for your awesome work
@MarkZabel
10 ай бұрын
Thanks! I change the order of the playlist sometimes. I guess I switched Dickey out of the pole position. Thanks for letting me know.
@jaykuchera5058
10 ай бұрын
please post link to your deeper Betts dive ( the other one went to your ZZTop piece)
What is the model Les paul that you are using here?
@MarkZabel
9 ай бұрын
2012 Les Paul 1970s Tribute.
I like these OG guitar stories. My biggest fail/success was not realising Arlo Guthrie played Alice's Restaurant with a capo as there was no video or photos! So I learned it by ear from the LP without a capo. Craziest chords ever! None of them looked like normal chords. My left hand was in a perpetual claw shape. It took about 6 months to be able to play it. 20 years later I saw a video on YT and realised my mistake. It took about 15 minutes to learn and all the chords were simple, standard open chords🤣
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
LOL! Yep, that was what it was. Maybe someone down at the music store knew or you'd see them in concert and see their hands (with binoculars and a contact high!).
@texasbelle6111
10 ай бұрын
Similar story, I learned pieces by Doc Watson and Roy Buchanan with a flatpick. Then when I went to see them they were fingerpicking. No wonder it was so difficult.
@WarrenPeaceOG
10 ай бұрын
@@texasbelle6111 🤣
So in the final result, you're just playing notes an octave above correct? Because I think at the beginning you were playin the fourth or fifth notes or something like that relative to the "primary" sequence. Both sound great, but just wanted to ask since its something I noticed
@MarkZabel
10 ай бұрын
No. The notes are either a 3rd or 4th above the original. (Pentatonic scales omit 2 notes, so the intervals are not 100% consistent.) Skipping 5 pentatonic positions would give you an octave.
Thanks Mark Dicky is #1 in my book! He was responsible for all the Allman Brothers best songs !
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
My pleasure. Dickey definitely doesn't get as many props as he should. I love Duane and Greg too though, so it's a toss-up for me! But yeah, Dickey ... totally awesome. Thanks for watching!
I do that in many songs and sometimes parte of the notes I play them one octave above or below.
@MarkZabel
11 ай бұрын
Cool.
Hi, let me thank you for your time for putting your videos out. You are a fucking awesome guitarist...love this. The one on Leslie west!..I work a lot but i will subscribe and look for other videos you have, again thank you so much😂
@MarkZabel
10 ай бұрын
Thanks!
I had the exact same Dodge Dart Swinger and same color.
I'm no guitar professor. I am here because youtube keeps goading me to watch this video. The logic I always used is add the 4 to the R. ie. If in key of E, the harmony riff will be played in A. Simple theory for a simple man. Again, if it's in C, the harmony is in F. With that said, there are no steadfast rules, just whatever sounds good to the player. Just so happens using the 4 sounds tasty. Don't forget to add some unique grace/expression (bends?) to both. When the notes are played exactly the same it sounds robotic and starched, might as well use the harmony pedal. Sometimes the riffs are not played exactly the same, this is probably due to modes and/or mixing major with minor which can sound awesome. In this case there will be times when the R riff has to use a whole step, but the harmony uses a half. Now that's where it gets "tricky".
Dude! I had the same car. The blue was darker though. ❤
@MarkZabel
11 ай бұрын
Right on!
Before you added the hexatonic you had what we used to call the "asian" harmony. That note makes all the difference in the world - without it, sounds like something from a kung fu movie. Nice lesson.
@MarkZabel
9 ай бұрын
Cool, thanks!
Is the Emaj pent the same as Aminor?
@MarkZabel
Ай бұрын
No. It's the same as C# minor pentatonic.
The first time you display the second minor position graphic (position #3, at 2:30), I believe it's a whole step (two frets) up from where you're actually playing the lick. Or did I miss something?
@MarkZabel
10 ай бұрын
Correct.
Was the graphic overlay for Em pentatonic #3 on the wrong frets?
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
Oh dear! Yes, it's 2 frets closer to the bridge than it should be. Wish I could edit that. Darn!
@Breakrite
Жыл бұрын
@@MarkZabel Mark, I’m subscribing anyway. Lol. 😂 Really like your videos. I wasn’t nitpicking, I was harmonizing and said whoa, I’m off..
@PhilBaird1
Жыл бұрын
@@MarkZabel I thought something wasn't right. I'll have another go at it. Appreciate your help Mark.
Ok....that was cool!
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
Glad you dug it! Thanks for watching!
@jeffrowlette
Жыл бұрын
@@MarkZabel I'm a pretty good guitarist, advanced by anyone's standards....so I don't get to learn new tricks as often as when I was younger. But YOU just gave me something! I've never met you and probably never will, but you gave me something. Thank you!!!! I'll do my best to pay it forward! Jeff
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
Thanks! That's what it's all about.
I wish you still had the Dart 🚙
@MarkZabel
10 ай бұрын
Long gone my friend. Over 40 years gone.
Very nice lesson! I wish I had taken time to master this concept years ago. too much of the BB box, lol......I just always thought of Allman Brother's sound as major scale guitar wanking minus the 7th.... no dissonant notes from them boys...all the sweet stuff only.
@MarkZabel
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
The e minor pentatonic diagram shown around 2:30 of this video is wrong
I love your goldtop! That's the thing about learning guitar, you are kind of let downby how easy it is to copy your idols. But, it is not the playing, so much, as it is coming up with something unique and GOOD! 5:06
@MarkZabel
8 күн бұрын
Exactly. The information about scales, chords, the notes of the fretboard, etc. is all there for all of us equally. Good players think about what to do with the ingredients.
Dicky loves his major pentatonics.
Interesting but complicated. Probably because I play by ear and learned all the notes by listening to records and copying the notes. Now I know what note goes with what sound and what fret. An easy but precise bit would have been from the introduction from Mountain Jam. Duane used that kind of pattern, too.
ive always found that there is always a note that sounds off playing straight 5ths and always add a4th in there. Dont know why, maybe to add tension then back to the perfect 5ths(wait, theyre not always perfect so add a 4th)
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
That's true ... BUT if you use pentatonic scales shifted by 2 positions, the intervals are going to be 3rds and 4ths. Harmonizing in 5ths is less common. The usual reason for going away from the typical harmonizing (for example, harmonizing in 3rds using the major scale) is to fit the end of a phrase to chord tones. So when you hear it vary, it's often to accommodate a chord on a sustained note.
Duane had been dead about two years when 'Jessica' was recorded.
Great lesson, minor correction one typo is the ‘3rd position’ is written two frets too high.
@MarkZabel
10 ай бұрын
Thanks. Yes, I noticed that after publishing. Wish KZread would allow a correction. Oh well, I'll live with it! Thanks again!
I'm getting some strong David Van Driessen vibes, but that's not a bad thing.
Good stuff Mark, can this be played on a strat 🤭
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
Thanks! Hmmm ... don't know if I've ever seen Dickey (or Duane) with a Strat. PRS maybe. LOL!
@ThaiThom
Жыл бұрын
No, only on a Mustang. :)
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
@@ThaiThom LOL!
Is it applicable to a full scale or there's something to avoid?
@MarkZabel
11 ай бұрын
Good question. It's applicable to a full (major) scale too - or mixolydian mode or whatever. The trick when using a full major scale is to use the 3NP systems. That way you have the same number of notes on each string and the harmony part is easy, because it's the same pattern as the primary.
@Hicky33
11 ай бұрын
@@MarkZabel thanks 😀
I see you are preparing for the Southern Rock Live Stream! "Guitarmony"? Did you just make that up?
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
A friend of mine used that word. I liked it so much I "stole" it from him! LOL!
I always thought of it as not playing the 7 of the major scale.
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
That works too. Both ways are fine. Start from what you know best.
Can't I just capo up 3 or 4 frets to play the harmony part?
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
Good question. No, that's a great idea, but you need to play the notes of the same key. So, it's possible, but not "just" ... you'd have to play over a different shape of the scale still.
What do you mean by "the same sequence of notes" in the next position? Do you mean you start on and play the same exact notes, or are you speaking of a fingering pattern?
@MarkZabel
11 ай бұрын
Fingering pattern.
So, it's all about the added 4, right?
@MarkZabel
Жыл бұрын
3 things. 1. Play the harmony 2 positions up. 2. Play major instead of minor type scale patterns. 3. Add the 4th into the major scale pattern.