Oh wow- OK, now this is some good stuff! LOL! Thanks for the site help! Sorry for the newb question! I was definitely missing those buttons!!
Hi Mojo321,
In addition to Gab's reply - I have now set parts 3 and 4 as free as well (in case your paid access has expired).
Also, just to clarify here is how you access all the parts in the lesson:
Please let me know if it makes more sense now
Stay safe 👊
Killer playing! But I guess I'm confused. The post says "But please also note that the concepts explained here apply to all levels....."....where exactly are any concepts explained? All I see is the base pentatonic map and the base diatonic map, and a comment to check out Guido's lesson. Is it Guido's lesson where the explanation is? Or is there something else I am missing?
Awesome you like it Darius - cheers!
Now that's a really kick a$$ workshop! Awesome playing Kris
Big thanks man, yes this is actually Ola's guitar which I got to borrow from the man himself. Cheers!
Oh never mind. Nothing that a chrome extension couldn`t fix. Rock on!
Awesome lesson, as well as the guitar! Might you be buddies Ola?
On another hand: Where has the volume switch in the new video player gone? Made my life really hard without one, as I can`t practise properply with headphones...
Awesome to hear Gab!
These insights were a huge boost for my inspiration as well. Not only was progress much faster - but my practice sessions became so much mor fun when I got rid of the repetitive elements.
Let's hope we can get som beginner and intermediate people to watch this lesson as well.
Brilliant! I've watched each second of this lesson and now I can't stop playing! It's very inspiring.
The fast monster playing in the first video can scare many of you, but this lesson is a treasure for every level.
This approach, combined with some standard "building speed" metronome practice can be the key to become a unique and creative guitar improviser, as guys like Guthrie Govan, Nick Johnston, Steve Vai, and obviously Kris are.
Don't wait until you can play fast to get into this lesson! Start now!
@MisterM - if you think like that you will never get there.
This is probably closer than you think - if you change your practicing method to what I suggest in this lesson.
Please consider this is a unique method - and as fas as I am concerned there is currently nobody else relying on improvs like this for their lead work.
Hi Kris
Amazing playing.
It seems so inaccessible...
Maybe in few years or few decade ;-)