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Profile picture for user brianbowes
Full name
Brian Bowes
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405 points
Location
Savannah, GA
Website
http://brianbowesillustration.com/
Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/studiobowesart/
Youtube
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCRRsoh4ET6kw50wkM1jxkLw
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Lifetime member
Completed 1 course
Completed 25 lessons
Uploaded 25 videos
Got 100 likes
Created 5 posts
Posted 50 comments
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Guitar
Fender Jazzmaster
Favorite music
Garcia, Kimock, Fripp, Anastasio, and more!
Biography
Hi! I'd love to connect with other players here! Reach out via my guitar Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@BowesTones. I also have my primary channel which is dedicated to my illustration work: https://www.youtube.com/@BrianBowes. Available for freelance illustration work as well!
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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Dec 24, 2025

Pulsar marks the completion of Fundamentals Level Two on Guitargate. The first video I posted for this set of lessons went up in January of this year, which means it took me nearly a full year to work through the material. I am actually glad it unfolded that way. Spending real time with foundational skills has been especially valuable for me as a fairly loose and intuitive player.

This level helped reinforce my visual understanding of the guitar neck. While shape based learning is not new to me, revisiting pentatonic scales, seeing how chord shapes connect to those positions, and finding the seven chords that belong to any key helped solidify how these ideas relate across the neck and transfer to other keys.

For those who notice these things, bonus points if you can name the band on my shirt. I am a huge Steve Kimock fan. While I am not trying to emulate him directly, years of listening to his playing have clearly settled into my bones. This piece is slow and legato, and I like the openness and space that allows. My technique is not at a place where rapid fire playing feels natural yet, so I tend to let things breathe.

One thing I want to keep developing is a stronger sense of connection between phrases so there is more narrative flow from one idea to the next. Still, I am very pleased with the overall musicality of this piece.

The loop I am playing over has been on my looper for a long time. At this point, guitar is not only about learning something new but also about relaxation. My job can be stressful, and playing gives me a way to express or release that stress. This jam is unhurried and long, and I am comfortable sitting with the same idea for extended stretches of time. That feels central to what music can be for me.

I am deeply grateful to Michael at Guitargate for creating these lessons. I have learned a great deal this year and I am looking forward to 2026 and continuing to build on these foundations.

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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Dec 6, 2025

The Guitargate prompt said to play in the dirt, and sand is close enough.

I decided to channel my nineteen-year-old self and blow the dust off of Enter Sandman. Back when I was playing in a band, this was one of the first songs we learned, so it felt good to revisit it. This take is a little sloppy, and there is probably a drummer somewhere losing his mind over the tempo, but honestly it was fun to do, and sometimes you just have to kick up a little sand!

Guitargate Tone 201 - Dirt And Boost

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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Nov 26, 2025

Recording my playing has been really beneficial. In part because I usually rehearse and do multiple takes trying to get things down as well as I can. While my playing and theory have grown over time, the experience of trying to get it β€œcorrect-ish” for recording has pushed me to focus on details that might otherwise have just slid by.

There’s still a long way to go, but my goal is to have fun, and to do things as well as I can for now.

If you’ve read this far, I have a sincere question for you! 🀠 What are the strengths you hear/see in my playing, and what is one thing that could be better?

Guitargate Fundamental 202 - Recording Yourself

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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Nov 22, 2025

Turn the lights down low and play.

I told myself when I first started doing these practice, guitar videos, guitar practice videos that I was gonna simply just try to do my best with them. Sometimes that means just getting it done, and other times it shows up as Play. This is what’s at the heart of improvisation and expressing oneself.

Of course in hindsight, you can the patterns that I leaned on. The loop is in Bb Minor so the Bb Minor Pentatonic shapes across the neck are the main structure. I’ve been practicing how to spot the tonic of both the minor chord and the diatonic major shape within that pattern. While I’m able to find those, I wouldn’t necessarily say target them yet, but at least I'm able land on them. I still struggle to find the chord tones of a minor chord under-finger.

One of the suggestions for practicing was to move between a major and a minor feel within the context of a minor cord. In this case, it’s Db major which is the diatonic One in the key of Db/Bb min.

I reeeealllly like the dissonant sound you get when you bring in the major second color over a minor context basically a Dorian flavor inside an Aeolian setting. It creates these tensions that I think is fun to explore. After doing some digging, it looks like the color/tension is coming from a G natural, rather than a Gb. Diatonically speaking this seems to give us a "flat 3rd." But in the context of the Bb Minor, it's a Major 6th?

But this is all after the fact. While I'm playing, its the ear that is leading.

Thank you for listening!
✌️❀️🀘

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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Nov 15, 2025

πŸ§™β€β™‚οΈ Smokey McFrybush is the lead guitar wizard for Unseen University's Sedentary Band. They play infrequently as well as irreverently, and often on their own. Less of a band, really more of a silly man in a room wailing to the stars. ✨

🐰 No actual bunnies were harmed in the making of this video.🐰

For this exercise I took a note from another Guitar Gate subscriber, and chose to learn this Jerry solo from 9/10/89 which is full of bend, slides (up and back!,) hammer on's, and more Jerry-isms.

Guitargate: Technique 203 - Bends And Slides

Credits!
Thank you to @WeepingWillowGuitarLessons Willow Guitar Lessons for posting this solo: https://youtu.be/geg-ACAX_Cc?si=Hlf6d1j9PkpMO5PH
Thank you to @Whoaduderighteous for posting the original Jerry Garcia Band show: https://youtu.be/oDa71ongR8w?si=npGrNNVBPcqwwWK4&t=4015
Thank you to @JeffWilliamsGuitar for posting this awesome backing track: https://youtu.be/3h6KEgpOJB4?si=A2detJfzgGXAnEaC

Thank you for listening!
✌️❀️🀘

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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Oct 17, 2025

What do Roy Buchanan, John Cippolina, and Spaghetti Westerns have in common?

Is it this?

Part of my challenge with the minor pentatonic scale is in knowing the relationships/ intervals between the notes. Because the root of the pattern moves the pattern is 1,3,4,5,7, as compared to the major pentatonic which is 1,2,3,5,6.

This is one of those things that I understand mentally, but in practice I am still having to learn.

Thanks for tuning in!

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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Sep 26, 2025

Always up for a cheap trill, for this exercise I wanted to keep it simple with a C tone pad. Then working up and down the Cmaj pentatonic shapes.

I really like the combination of a lot of overdrive almost to the point of fuzz, and the jazz circuit on the Jazz Master. Some people refer to this as a muddy tone, but I find it is just perfect for taking off all of the edges on the overdrive to achieve something like a cello or a string instrument sound. Of course, ironically a guitar is a stringed instrument… but I think you know what I mean.

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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Sep 15, 2025 in Request a REACTION

Clarence β€˜Gatemouth’ Brown gives a BREATHLESS performance while Roy Clark and the band keep the train rollin’ on time.

Clarence is a multi-instrumentalist who has a unique finger style. His phrases are tasty as they are fast. And yes, in case you’re wondering, that IS a leather pick guard!

Oh, and Roy Clark ain’t that bad. πŸ˜‚

Buckle up kids, we’re taking the A-Train

Country Lead Guitar
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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Aug 23, 2025

Two keys, the 5 major chord shapes and their associated pentatonic patterns.

I try to express how I see the pentatonic pattern in positions Hamburger and Hotdog. Two interlocking rectangles that flow across the fretboard. By the way, in my case these are vegetarian hamburgers and hotdogs! 😁

Hamburger is a set of six notes in a 3 across and 2 down rectangle. Each set of notes are a whole step apart, and the one is in the upper right corner.

Next is Hotdog, a 2x2 rectangle where each pair is a minor third apart, and the one is in the lower right corner.

So if we can find the one of the chord we can easily find our way through the pentatonic pattern.

That’s my two cents. πŸ€™

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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Jul 10, 2025

Experimenting with Pentatonic scales over an A7 backing track.

First is the A major pentatonic scale. Then the D major Pentatonic scale because that is the key this is in. Next things get interesting! G major Pentatonic. This is because G is 7th in the A7, AND it is the fourth degree of the key of D, making it a major.

Next I got to a Major Second, E major pentatonic. This includes non-diatonic notes, but also works because it’s also the 5th of A. I’m sure someone could explain why tis works, but whooo-eey! I like it!

Finally it’s just all the notes of the D major scale.

Music Theory Scales Technique
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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Jun 2, 2025 in Request a REACTION
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Haunting, achingly beautiful, exquisitely crafted.

The tone is in the fingers, the song is from the heart.

Acoustic Country Lead Guitar
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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted May 6, 2025

Chose the key of C major, and its relative minor, A minor. This way, the pentatonic scales are connected between the major and minor. It’s all one pattern.

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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted May 4, 2025

Would love some feedback on ergonomics. While making many of these chord shapes, especially the fifth position of major, and first position of minor I found that my hand was really clamping down on the neck. This of course, makes it very difficult to move between shapes fluently. Also, I am continuing to get a buzz on the G string when I use a barre chord.

So far my solution has been to try to make adjustments to my guitar strap. That has helped. But I would love some more feedback on how to properly position my thumb on the back of the neck, and any other suggestions.

Thank you in advance!

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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Mar 16, 2025

I posted an earlier video with just the major shapes. This is the minor shapes, and mostly so that I feel like I can move onto the next lesson! Lol.

Chords Effects
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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Feb 19, 2025

Worked on getting this solo run to take flight for a month. My effort was to create and build energy throughout the solo. One of the unique features of cold rain and snow is that Jerry seems to be playing the D major pentatonic over the D major scale, and the E major pentatonic over the E major scale. Nicely tucked into this structure is that the cord tones align nicely with the pentatonic scales. I also really liked moving through the different effect levels. Enjoy✌️

Chords Effects Electric +6
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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Jan 2, 2025

I feel like I discovered a gem buried in this song. Please bear with me as I try to explain.

So the verses are made up of two couplets. I view them as the D part and the E part, which it is important to note are the 4 and 5 of the Diatonic key we are in.

Now, the D part, β€œI married me a wife…” is 5 measures long, BUT, the E part is 4 measures long.

Hilariously this means that 5 on the 4 chord, and 4 on the 5. πŸ˜‚

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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Dec 24, 2024

Oh we goin where that chilly wind don’t blow.

Would love some tips for improvement of the fretting hand, and rhythm. πŸ‘

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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Dec 24, 2024 in Request a REACTION

Fabulous and way too short… but as the man said, you know know our love not fade away!

Love seeing the Grateful Dead being honored as the embodiment and spirit of love and adventure.

Bomp bomp bomp, bompbomp

Jam Band
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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Nov 23, 2024

Feeling a little clunky moving up and down. The rhythm isn’t the same as the song… and yet, I like it. It’s progress.

As ever, I’m open to any suggestions for improvement.

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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Nov 17, 2024
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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Nov 16, 2024

Slow going, trying not to get lost in the sauce.

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brianbowes Posted May 12, 2024

Really struggled with that Position 5!! It's taken me forever just to get this 90 seconds of gold. πŸ˜… Wanted to post something just to get something up for now, and will post again once I've tackled the Minor Shapes as well. Struggling to maintain motivation, any tips?

Chords
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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Apr 4, 2024 in Request a REACTION

Howdy Michael,

Oh sure, you know "Eyes," but this seems to be a refreshing take. Full of guitarobatics, tapping, tone cascades! Fascinating to see how the music of the Grateful Dead continues to inspire, mutate, and invigorate. Enjoy!

Cheers,
Brian

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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Feb 18, 2024

Rough cut and the struggle is real!

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brianbowes
brianbowes Posted Feb 9, 2024

Question: Notice that I'm having trouble with my left hand's pinky. When doing A-shaped barre chords my pinky falls behind the neck, and won't come around quick enough. Any suggestions? I know that you play barres with your pinky. Training tips?

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