CAGED SYSTEM MASTERED for Chords! | anchor chords | Website providing Australia’s #1 song chords

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CAGED SYSTEM MASTERED for Chords! | You can find all the song chords here

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CAGED SYSTEM MASTERED for Chords!

CAGED SYSTEM MASTERED for Chords!


CAGED SYSTEM MASTERED for Chords! and information related to this topic.

Today I’m bringing you an acoustic guitar lesson for She Talks to Angels by the Black Crowes. I’ll start off by going over the Open E tuning used for the song, then break down the guitar riffs, chords and strumming patterns!

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CAGED SYSTEM MASTERED for Chords!.

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47 thoughts on “CAGED SYSTEM MASTERED for Chords! | anchor chords | Website providing Australia’s #1 song chords”

  1. I've ben working on my triads lately and you have given me some good ideas that I haven't thought of before. From one tribesman to another. Happy Passover!

  2. I understand the idea and method behind using CAGED, but no one really references the F shape, which is so easily transferrable up and down the neck.
    Plus if a beginning learns the low E, they’ll evidently know the high E for finding their root.

  3. This reminds me of tutoring math in college. One time I was working with this girl and I was getting frustrated, I just couldn't understand how she couldn't understand what we were looking at. I puked away and started thinking happy thoughts to maintain my outer composure and suddenly I remembered having to get extra help with whatever math we were working on…back when I learned it! So the good news is that some day, I'll understand this. The bad news is that, that day isn't today.

  4. What is the point Marty? It makes absolutely no sense. I'll study the
    neck and make my own system. I've already begun by making a
    diagram of the neck with all the notes on it. I see patterns already.
    Now I'll play the notes until I become more familiar with each tone.
    Then I'll play 2 notes at a time, 3 notes (triads to form a chords, and
    their inversions) 4 note chords, and 5 note chords. Flats, Sharps,
    Major, Minor, 7th, 9th, 13th, augmented and diminished. THERE!
    Now all I need is Marty so I can learn to play everything fluently. LoL

  5. My pinky doesn't stretch that far………… It will never be done unless I am born again with longer pinky hopefully…

  6. I just found this video.. literally started playing guitar a few months but I could only afford an acoustic not an electric..at least for now
    I wonder if these apply to acoustic but it's so much harder to voice some of these chords on acoustic..imma have to look for an electric cause hell yeahh I wanna play these

  7. I don't know why I can't wrap my head around this… say you are doing a C chord with a G shape as demonstrated. Why a G shape? Is it because it's the only chord shape that uses the 6th string? The next example demonstrated being the C in a A shape. Why not a D shape?

  8. Marty you're a darn good and patient instructor. I've been playing piano and guitar for over 60 years and still you gave me some musical tips I had never even really considered or cared about.

  9. Why does nobody ever finish explaining the rest of the chords?
    Like you spent almost 10 minutes explaining variations of C but spent no time explaining how to play A, G, E, D all over the fret board.
    I understand how to play C but I don’t understand how you play the rest of the open chords because nobody ever explains it.
    It’s extremely frustrating because everyone says it’s important to learn but nobody teaches it properly.

  10. one of my favourite uses of the d shape is in the song black by pearl jam 🙂 Mike uses it to play an A chord on the 8th fret with the open A string.

  11. Always a blast to learn from you Marty. One suggestion. As you show and play the CAGED system along the neck your picking is out of frame. That is some thing I've noticed frequently in your videos. Showing that vantage point would help me.

  12. If you look at the 5 positions of the CAGED system, it's important to look at the positions and patterns as being position 1 Locrian and Ionian (Major), position 2 as Dorian, Position 3 as being Phrygian and Lydian, position 4 being Mixolydian and position 5 being Aeolian (minor) modes. Then just remember EDCAG, position 1 E shape, position 2 D shape, position 3 C shape, position 4 A shape and position 5 G shape, to make the 1 chord (tonic) of the key you're in. Most folks show it the way Marty is showing it here, but I think it confuses people too much. It's better I think to learn the 5 positions of the Major scale as I stated above, understand how they contain the 7 modes and then understand what CAGED chord shape goes with each position.It's best to start on G Maj because that lines up the scale positions with the neck in logical order. When you look at the fretboard you should see the 5 positions as reference points as from there you can find anything you want from kind of a top down perspective. Eventually the goal is to just see the entire scale as one big shape.

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