Rock
Difficulty 3 of 10
By
Pablo Vazquez
This is a great opportunity to explore how much feeling we have in our playing. Suitable for intermediate guitar players, this lesson shows that we can combine slow and fast melodies to express different emotions and cover different aspects of the playing.
Difficulty 3 of 10
By
David Wallimann
In this lesson, we'll study some of David Gilmour's characteristics. He uses mostly minor pentatonics. The following licks should give you some simple ideas to develop your own leads.
Difficulty 3 of 10
By
Muris Varajic
Arpeggios, picking, sweeping, lots of it! The scale stays the same, Bb minor. A good thing about guitar is that we have the same fingering for all scales in the same group. All we have to do is to move one or few frets up or down.
Difficulty 7 of 10
By
Jerry Arcidiacono
Let's ecplore soloing over a major chord progression, using vibrato, alternate picking, legato, string skipping, slide, bending. Also - I used a hair elastic over the neck to avoid unwanted noise.
Difficulty 4 of 10
By
Muris Varajic
EVH trademarks - from his tapping licks, legato, use of whammy bar, and his unique tremolo picking.I also added a few natural and tapped harmonics, just to get the whole picture. :)
Difficulty 3 of 10
By
Gabriel Leopardi
Steve uses "non guitaristic" ways of avoiding common passages in his lines and that makes him sound original. I tried to play this melody in a way that was not natural for me. I paid attention in how I played every note (which finger, the amount, vibrato, etc.).
Difficulty 3 of 10
By
Juan M Valero
A simple exercise using touch technique, consisting of a bass line played with left hand and a simple melody played by the right hand tapping directly on the frets. Use a clean sound with sustain and compression.
Difficulty 6 of 10
By
Muris Varajic
The intermediate version of this series delivers tons of tasty solo tricks. Enter to learn Alternate picking, Legato, Bends and Prebends, 2 Handed Tapping, Sliding etc
Difficulty 3 of 10
By
Pavel Denisjuk
A challenge to all those who like slow, tasty bending solos! You may find some similarity with the style of Satriani, Timmons and players who play instrumental rock compositions mostly based on blues.
Difficulty 2 of 10
By
Gabriel Leopardi
A new lesson inspired by guitar player and composer John Frusciante. Let's analyse his nice clean soloing style that you can find in RHCP's albums like "Californication", "By the way" and "Stadium Arcadium".
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