John Petrucci is performing some riffs and solos from his and his band songs. This video is comming from ‘Young Guitar DVD’. enjoy. Part 02 is here: youtube.com
John Petrucci is performing some riffs and solos from his and his band songs. This video is comming from ‘Young Guitar DVD’. enjoy. Part 02 is here: youtube.com
Get your FREE drums like in this vid at www.givemedrums.com click now! Free song & technique video lessons at http A quick and easy visual guide How to play Brain Stew on electric guitar – visual lesson By Green Day from the album Insomniac
www.nextlevelguitar.com Click thelink above to receive free exclusive videos, newsletters, and lots more free guitar and music goodies from Next Level Guitar. In this video guitar lesson we teach how to come up with cool new rhythm and lick ideas using pentatonic scales in the styles of 80s metal ala Judas Priest and Metallica – check it out Many more full on video lessons as well as a FREE 3-day all access site pass at the full on video instructional website at: www.nextlevelguitar.com
www.guitar5day.com Guitar Lesson: Quick and Easy Blues Riff Learn How
FULL COURSE: truefire.com More free guitar lessons: truefire.com How many times have you been blown away by one of your favorite players’ solos and then find yourself wondering why you don’t have those ‘notes’ on your own fretboard? Well, of course we have those notes on our guitars — we just need to learn how to play the right notes, at the right time. Sweet Notes to the rescue! Robbie’s developed his Sweet Notes approach over many years of study and application on the stage and in the studio. “The essence of the Sweet Notes approach is the chord/scale relationship and knowing which notes to target as resolution points when we are soloing. For example; playing a G major scale (G, A, B, C, D, E and F#) over a G chord is really solid advice but then why do the A, C, E and F# notes sound weak when we end a run on them? Because they are not as strong as the notes that make up the G chord itself (G – B — D), which are the ideal resolution points for lines within an improvisation.” Robbie’s definition of a ’sweet note’ is a note that is found both in the scale being played, and also in the chord that the scale is being played over (AKA chord tones or arpeggios). Just learning how to identify and target those sweet notes as resolution points, will singularly take your improvisations from B&W to color. But there’s so much more to dig in to. The Sweet Notes approach can be applied to all genres of music and is designed to guide, inspire and push your capabilities as a guitarist …
FULL COURSE: truefire.com More free guitar lessons: truefire.com How many times have you been blown away by one of your favorite players’ solos and then find yourself wondering why you don’t have those ‘notes’ on your own fretboard? Well, of course we have those notes on our guitars — we just need to learn how to play the right notes, at the right time. Sweet Notes to the rescue! Robbie’s developed his Sweet Notes approach over many years of study and application on the stage and in the studio. “The essence of the Sweet Notes approach is the chord/scale relationship and knowing which notes to target as resolution points when we are soloing. For example; playing a G major scale (G, A, B, C, D, E and F#) over a G chord is really solid advice but then why do the A, C, E and F# notes sound weak when we end a run on them? Because they are not as strong as the notes that make up the G chord itself (G – B — D), which are the ideal resolution points for lines within an improvisation.” Robbie’s definition of a ’sweet note’ is a note that is found both in the scale being played, and also in the chord that the scale is being played over (AKA chord tones or arpeggios). Just learning how to identify and target those sweet notes as resolution points, will singularly take your improvisations from B&W to color. But there’s so much more to dig in to. The Sweet Notes approach can be applied to all genres of music and is designed to guide, inspire and push your capabilities as a guitarist …
www.RockGuitar.com – Your source for free online video guitar lessons. DVD guitar instructor, Doug Marks explains the importance of following a step-by-step program.
BBC interview about the story oof the guitar an one of (my personal) its heroes
www.dolphinstreet.com Here’s a lesson for 2 short blues guitar licks. These work great over a slow blues. This example is played in the key of E. Full TAB in PDF and Guitar Pro files are available from my website. I used a Hagstrom Viking through a Marshall Class5 for this demo. Reverb was a blueSky Reverbator from www.strymon.net
www.nextlevelguitar.com www.nextlevelguitar.com Click the above links to watch a video preview and check out our BLUES JAM TRACKS PLUS package and ROCK JAM TRACKS PLUS PACKAGE – each comes complete with ten killer audio tracks and a coinciding 57 page lead guitar manual plus free worldwide shipping – check it out. In this video lesson we teach a cool sounding 7sus4 arpeggio and some licks to go with it. Learn some right hand tapping licks and also what to solo and improvise with using the progression in this video. www.nextlevelguitar.com Click the link above to receive free exclusive videos, newsletters, and lots more free guitar and music goodies from Next Level Guitar.
