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Deleted9th June 2008Lezione semplice ma utile, good job!
Danilo Capezzuto15th May 2008Glad to see you here Juan and Pablo, keep on your nice lessons!
Pablo Vazquez15th May 2008Great lesson man!!
Juan M. Valero14th May 2008another great exercise 
Danilo Capezzuto14th May 2008Thank you Nemanja!
Nemanja Filipovic14th May 2008great lesson man.
Ivan Milenkovic13th May 2008Nice
Danilo Capezzuto13th May 2008Thank you guys. Thank you Carlos, but I think it's a nice and useful lesson...fantastic is a little bit to much...
Hisham Al-Sanea13th May 2008nice work Danilo.
Carlos Carrillo13th May 2008fantastic lesson Danilo!!
Gabriel Leopardi13th May 2008Excelent series Danilo!
Danilo Capezzuto13th May 2008Thank you Alejandro and Dejan!
Dejan Farkas13th May 2008Nice 
Alejandro Pinero13th May 2008Good job Danilo
Danilo Capezzuto13th May 2008Thank you Alex87. The sound comes from a behringer vamp2, with coil split on my guitar.
Alex8713th May 2008Nice exercise. Clean tone +1 !! 
at lights end13th May 2008cool
Danilo Capezzuto13th May 2008Thank you so much guys for your kind words!
To Joe: How many time spent on this exercises...
To Jerry: +1, I agree with you.
To Daniel: I still practice this exercise too, they are so useful, no matter your skills.
Daniel Robinson13th May 2008I really love these excersises, from a beginner standpoint they may seem boring. But even i find when learning and using these excersises everyday for warmups that i see marked improvement in dexterity, speed and accuracy in a short period of time.
Daniel
Jerry Arcidiacono13th May 2008I agree with berko. Practicing, we should use a clean tone as much as possible to really hear what we'are playing.
Great lesson Danilo. 
Joe Kataldo13th May 2008Nice One Mate 
Bogdan Radovic13th May 2008Very nice Danilo! 
Danilo Capezzuto13th May 2008Thank you so much guys! To berko: glad to see you here. I tend to use clean tone even when I'm playing cause I like to hear everything I play. Keep on practice mate!
Muris Varajic13th May 2008Love this!!
Marcus Siepen13th May 2008very useful
Nick Kellie13th May 2008very good series danilo
berko13th May 2008I think it's a very disciplined manner to use such a "pinched" clean tone for practising so that you can make sure every pick you do is accurate.
(My overdriven guitar-friends in school just tend to hide their inaccuracies behind the electric noise they make.)
So thanks Danilo for this series, definetaly a must do for beginners of all age!
Kristofer Dahl13th May 2008Thanks for these excercises/fingerings Danilo! 
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Tags:
Three notes per string, 3 nps, Hands sync, String skipping, Chromatic scale, Chromatic exercises, Training, Routines, Finger routine, Picking, Picking exercise, Workout
Hi, Danilo here. Welcome to the second lesson about "Hands Synchronization". I hope you found the first lesson useful, if so, come in and practice this one!
The concept of this lesson is the same as the previous one, but this time we'll find one note more to play on every string. This is a good exercise to prepare us for playing the scales! Look to this exercise if you are having problems with playing the scales, this exercise will help you.
Come in and start to practice, in this lesson three fingers per time are required to play the exercise, practice this lesson in alternative periods with lesson one. Don't demand too much from yourself, just practice 15 minutes each days.
See you next time, and look forward to the third lesson of "Hands Synchronization".
Thanks.
From this course:
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Scrubbing / forward / rewind: arrow right, arrow left keys
Jump to start: Home or `s` , you can also click/tap the lesson part again (the numbers above player)
Go to next part: PageUP or End.
Volume: ArrowUp / ArrowDown keys
Go to any part: Number keys (combinations also possible)
Pause or play: `k` or space key
Fullscreen: `f`, esc to close
Increase / decrease speed : `+` or `-`