Gorgeous chord progression. I appreciate how you kinda talk us through how you put it all together so we can see the process and make that our own rather than just saying "play these exact notes in this exact order." Thanks for another great lesson
Thank you Marco another great lesson. Unfortunately I have just sold my baritone in order to purchase a Moon Bird so any chance you do a follow up for low g tenor. Thank you in anticipation
Oh Marco This is one of my all time favourite songs. I particularly like the Carmen Cuesta cover, so I was delighted when I received the notification that you had posted this video. I don't play or possess a Baritone.... Any chance of a tutorial with low G tuning on a Tenor Ukulele.
Such a beautiful song! Thank you for piecing it together! Took me a few rewinds to understand the final component, but worth it! I’ve been watching your videos since I first picked up a baritone uke two years back and this piece feels elevated, more complicated, and so different than what anyone else offers. Thank you for sharing and teaching me
God bless you! You do such a great job! Your lessons are so high quality! And you are also just a good person and it also makes your videos as good as they are. Thanks for you and your smile and gentleness and your wit!
I commented on Patreon, but after a day of working on this gorgeous chord progression, I wanted to thank you again! Not only is it lovely to play, but it got me to pick up my baritone (instead of always playing my tenor ukes). "Fields of Gold" would also be great to learn.
My favorite song Sting recorded with the Police. “Everything Thing She Does Is Magic”. Definitely, it is in my top 5 song list. Possibly, my most favorite song. “Fields of Gold” was a beautiful song by Sting. I bet you could make a great arrangement of it on the Uke.
Every songs in the album "Ten Sumoner's Tale" are my favourite. Also, song I like "When we dance". From "The Police", from the album that has "Don't stand so close to me". Reminded me of the time I spent summer in Madrid back in 1981. I was always playing that album on my uncle's record player. Have that album now. 30 plus years later.
This video is an excellent example on how to break down any chord progression and melody. Divide and conquer. learn the melody then learn the root of the chord. Then put it altogether.
Hi Marco, I have an all mahogany Kala baritone, 5 years old and still love it but, could you tell me which model you play or, just which woods it's made of please? Much appreciated, thank you.
Nice presentation. Except it's classical guitar playing! Sounds good because we are so familiar with it. Finger picking so we like it. " seven days" lots of very intelligent works from Mark S . I'll be watching you." ? Police every move you make? His monster orchestral productions. From guitar ideas. Turned pop song. Just wish we all could take our own song & produce it.
@@MC-zr7hl I think I would get it mixed up...I am still trying to get the hang of my concert ukelele. Is the baritone ukelele more like playing a guitar in terms of sound AND chord locations?
@@montanacrosses to me the baritone sounds very unique, but it's similar to a guitar in that the strings are basically the 1-4 strings on a guitar with the same tuining. The chord shapes are the same as the concert uke (and guitar as well) just in a different key. Like the C chord on a concert is a G chord on the baritone, the F on a concert is a C on a baritone, etc. I played a concert for a couple years before getting a baritone it's been easy going back and forth between the two. Maybe a little normal confusion at the beginning trying to remember the different names but it wasn't a big deal. A lot of songs can even be played the same on either, especially with low G tuning on a concert, but they just sound a little different due to it being in a different key.