Metal
Difficulty 5 of 10
By
Jerry Arcidiacono
Palm muting technique and triplets played with alternate picking! I used my Zoom G2.1u with Mesa Dual Rectifier simulation and the flanger effect. I chose to play riffs on the lower strings because the palm muting technique is most used with these strings.
Difficulty 3 of 10
By
Muris Varajic
Knowing that the pinky is weakest of all fingers - we'll be using it a lot here, to give it more strength and power. I tried to combine every possible fingering combination so I hope you'll achieve a lot from this lesson.
Difficulty 4 of 10
By
Gabriel Leopardi
A modern progressive lesson great for beginners who need to practice 7/8 riffs and rhythms. I have been inspired by bands like Tool and Incubus to compose this tune.
Difficulty 3 of 10
By
Pablo Vazquez
Do you know Cacophony? It was a great band where the incredible Marty Friedman and the fantastic Jason Becker played the guitar. They used to work with harmonisations, fast solos and melodies can make your head explode.
Difficulty 7 of 10
By
Gabriel Leopardi
Inspired by bands like Slayer, Exodus, Pantera and old Metallica albums, we will work at very fast tempo with riffs that combine "only down-strokes" right hand technique with some fast alternate picking.
Difficulty 7 of 10
By
Juan M Valero
Progresive concepts - inspired by bands like Dream Theater, Tool, Spastik Inc etc. Odd-time signature alternate picking in used in the last bars.
Difficulty 3 of 10
By
Pablo Vazquez
Inspired by bands like Story Of The Year, Funeral for a friend and more extreme bands like Bullet For My Valentine. These bands have a new and powerfull sound, and interesting guitar work.
Difficulty 3 of 10
By
Pavel Denisjuk
Let's work on different riffing patterns, metal strumming and mixing rhythmic patterns - a very useful tool to make riffs more interesting. Also - let's have a look at an interesting chord progression!
Difficulty 7 of 10
By
Hisham Al-Sanea
In this "exotic" sounding lesson we will explore the harmonic minor scale, by using palm muteing, bends, trills, arpegios, harmony notes. Enjoy!
Difficulty 5 of 10
By
Jerry Arcidiacono
Odd time signatures are used in various musical styles. Many guitarists meet these signatures for the first time listening progressive rock songs or progressive metal songs.
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