video,youtube_link,musiccaps_caption,youtube_published,youtube_channel,youtube_description,musiccaps_names,musiccaps_aspects,musiccaps_author,youtube_id,musiccaps_rowid https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M0njWKFsME&start=30&end=40,"{""label"":""C minor rock power ballad guitar backing track"",""href"":""https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M0njWKFsME&start=30&end=40""}","Here we have a powerful rock ballad instrumental in a minor key. The guitar is grungy and overdriven, and the piano is clean and plays the same chords as the guitar at the same time.",2012-05-13T21:33:38Z,Iain MacLeod ,"Hey guys! Sorry I haven't uploaded any tracks in a while. I made this one today and I hope you enjoy playing over it as much as I did :) Thanks for all the amazing support so far! Happy shreddin'!","[""Electric guitar"", ""Guitar"", ""Acoustic guitar"", ""Music"", ""Musical instrument"", ""Strum"", ""Plucked string instrument""]","[""rock music"", ""piano"", ""electric guitar strumming"", ""minor key"", ""rock power ballad"", ""ballad"", ""grungy electric guitar strumming"", ""overdrive""]",3,4M0njWKFsME,560 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EBpa2CADNJA&start=140&end=150,"{""label"":""Eric Sardinas Slide Blues Force"",""href"":""https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EBpa2CADNJA&start=140&end=150""}",This is a live recording of a blues piece being played by a guitarist. The audio recording is vintage and the quality could be improved. The guitarist plays an intricate finger picked piece with slides embedded between the plucked notes.,2006-07-22T12:48:35Z,Laurent Lecoutre,"Eric Sardinas for Young Guitar Magazine .Open G and Open D with a capo at the 2nd Fret.","[""Guitar"", ""Acoustic guitar"", ""Music"", ""Musical instrument"", ""Strum"", ""Speech"", ""Plucked string instrument""]","[""live recording"", ""tutorial"", ""blues guitar"", ""guitar slide"", ""blues"", ""mellow blues""]",3,EBpa2CADNJA,1536 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQ9HlWProm0&start=30&end=40,"{""label"":""How to Practice Flamenco Scales | Flamenco Guitar"",""href"":""https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQ9HlWProm0&start=30&end=40""}",This is a clip of a tutorial where we have a male teacher playing a minor scale on a nylon string guitar. The energy of the video is calm.,2013-07-15T03:45:07Z,Howcast,"Full Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLLALQuK1NDrjihYqVBYe63py71wnGVUNi - - Like these Guitar Lessons !!! Check out the official app http://apple.co/1IFMYeJ Must Haves for any Guitar Player: On Stage XCG4 Black Tripod Guitar Stand: http://amzn.to/1KHP6HO Dunlop Trigger Curved Guitar Capo: http://amzn.to/1UrBL7c Korg GA1 Guitar and Bass Tuner: http://amzn.to/1Nafqfs Dunlop Standard Tortex Picks: http://amzn.to/1L4YMYy Ernie Ball 4037 Black Polypro Strap: http://amzn.to/1O8zLiu Watch more How to Play Flamenco Guitar videos: http://www.howcast.com/videos/510747-How-to-Practice-Flamenco-Scales-Flamenco-Guitar Okay, so I'm going to show you a good method to practice your scales and to get better and a little faster when you practice scales. It's very important that you practice with a metronome. Like I said in the previous video, if you don't have a metronome on, you're probably not practicing. So let's put our metronome on and we're going to pick a scale, whatever scale we're working on. For right now I'm just going to choose, just the regular E Minor scale. Fingering and I'm going to start with my root on the fifth string. Okay, and then we're going to do one, two, four; one, two, four; move to the fifth fret, one three four; one three four. Okay, so that's my E natural minor scale and I'm going to put my metronome to do this slow. I'm going to put it on 70 bpm, 70 beats per minute. This is a good way to practice your scales. First we're going to go up and down, just playing quarter notes and you'll go down the same way. I't's important when you practice scales that you know how to subdivide the beat accurately. So the next time we go up and down, we're going to do eighth notes, so we're going to divide the beat in half. Okay, and we're going to do that a couple of times. Next time we play our scale we're going to do triplets, which means we're going to fit three notes in the beat. It's important that we sing this or we feel this, before we even attempt to play it. So it's going to be one, two, three; one, two, three; one, two, three; one, two three. Okay, and we do this a couple times up and down. Next step would be to do sixteenth notes. That means we place four notes inside the beat. Okay and again, if this is the first time you're doing it, make sure you can sing before you play it. Most likely, if you can't sing it to yourself, you're not going to be able to play it accurately. So one-e and a two-e, and a one, two, three, four; one, two, three, four. Okay, when you can do this at least four times on sixteenth notes up and down, then you're ready to increase the speed of your metronome. I would go up I don't know, two-four, maybe ten bpm's and do the whole thing again. Then try it with another scale and do it again. Okay, if you feel like it's getting bumpy, always bring it back down. Never practice with mistakes. If you practice with mistakes, you will play with mistakes.","[""Flamenco"", ""Guitar"", ""Acoustic guitar"", ""Music"", ""Mandolin"", ""Musical instrument"", ""Strum"", ""Speech"", ""Plucked string instrument""]","[""minor scale"", ""acoustic guitar arpeggio"", ""nylon string guitar"", ""male speaking"", ""male guide"", ""tutorial""]",3,HQ9HlWProm0,1799