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June 11, 2019 at 4:55 pm in reply to: Participate in the June 2019 Member Challenge – LAST Chance to WIN a Kanile’a! #28165
AndrewKeymaster@robinboyd – that works!
June 10, 2019 at 11:52 am in reply to: Participate in the June 2019 Member Challenge – LAST Chance to WIN a Kanile’a! #28148
AndrewKeymasterlildevil – You are a great player. 🙂 I liked the transition into Aloha ‘Oe, it fit perfect and flowed well. No worries on the ending, you can target your practice to touch up that part, but truly fantastic overall. I really enjoyed watching your performance!
June 9, 2019 at 2:32 pm in reply to: June 10th, 2019 – Live Lesson Topic: Playing with Finesse #28141
AndrewKeymasterHey Zion, it’s called Tremolo Picking 🙂
June 8, 2019 at 2:50 pm in reply to: Participate in the June 2019 Member Challenge – LAST Chance to WIN a Kanile’a! #28138
AndrewKeymasterplanetfink – That was awesome! Here is my tip for you 🙂
AndrewKeymasterHi Tony! You have have to compare it against it’s parent scale, which would be A Major. A Major contains 3 #’s:
A (1) B (2) C# (3) D (4) E (5) F# (6) G# (7)
Now apply the minor formula to above to get A minor:
A (1) C (b3) E (5)
This is why C# becomes natural.
This is covered in a few spots, including the pdf eBook from the songwriting course. And a more step-by-step (better for beginner) explanation in module one of the theory course.
June 7, 2019 at 12:55 pm in reply to: Participate in the June 2019 Member Challenge – LAST Chance to WIN a Kanile’a! #28107
AndrewKeymaster@deadbuggy – Tasteful variations, as always Sara! Sounds super cute on that uke too. Only critique I have is to smooth out some of the rough transitions. But awesome overall! Great start to the month 🙂
AndrewKeymasterJust talked to Matt, we’ll tackle this for July’s live lesson 🙂
June 5, 2019 at 1:01 pm in reply to: Participate in the June 2019 Member Challenge – LAST Chance to WIN a Kanile’a! #28059
AndrewKeymasterAww, so adorable! Yes you def can. I look forward to watching it 🙂
AndrewKeymasterI feel you, it used to confuse me too. Keep working at it. I’ll talk to Matt about doing a live lesson on this subject. I think it would be a good one for him to cover.
AndrewKeymasterMy pleasure! And yes, I understand what you are saying. Give that lesson a go, and if you need extra help, I’d recommend a Skype lesson with Stephen. He’ll be able to clear any confusion you may have.
AndrewKeymasterHi Betsy, what you want to do is count and handclap rhythms alongside the metronome. This should always be done before playing, as it helps ingrain the rhythm. Our beginner lesson, which teaches this method and explains rhythms, can be found here.
In the video tutorial (at 13:34 into it), I use this method to work through all 11 exercises with you. I would recommend doing it with me, and then trying it on your own with the on-screen tab viewer, with the metronome activated. Count and clap, and when you feel comfortable with that, count and play the rhythm (which is only the open A string) on ukulele.
The above lesson is a great start, but if you really want to develop rhythm and timing, the best way is by learning to read notation.
June 3, 2019 at 10:20 am in reply to: Participate in the June 2019 Member Challenge – LAST Chance to WIN a Kanile’a! #27910
AndrewKeymaster@joe150 – Check out this thread, I broke down the rhythm and shot a video suggesting an easier way to play it.
AndrewKeymasterWell this is hard to answer, b/c everyone does it diff. As long as you are playing the rhythm correct (8th note triplet), any finger combo works.
For example, here are 3 diff ways but each end at the same result.
AndrewKeymasterYes!
AndrewKeymasterOh sorry, misread. “Me” starts in measure 9, beat 1.
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