Classic lick great for building all kinds of cool blues from.
Well done, Robert!
Blues rhythm and lead together - fun, fun!
The Law of Gravity is nonsense. No such law exists. If I think I float, and you think I float, then it happens.
Master Guitar Academy - I also teach via SKYPE.
Classic lick great for building all kinds of cool blues from.
Well done, Robert!
Thanks, I decided to try a neutral backdrop instead of the usual black one.
Is this better? Or do you guys prefer the black background?
The Law of Gravity is nonsense. No such law exists. If I think I float, and you think I float, then it happens.
Master Guitar Academy - I also teach via SKYPE.
I like the neutral better - great lesson too, hardest part I have is coming up with licks that fit into a specific duration of time. This video shows the effective use of those licks once you get the timing right. Great lesson.
Dave
Guitars: Ibanez AF-75, Schecter Solo-6 Custom, Douglas SG
Amps: Fender Princeton 65, Marshall AVT50
Pedals: Metal Muff, MXR Smart Gate, EHX Cathedral Reverb, Digitech RP-255
Love this lesson! I have been trying to get the combination of lead and rhythm going with little success. This seems a good way to get into it. Then maybe I can find some of your licks on your cool CD I have to fit in there too! I might actually build a vocabulary even!
I like both the neutral and black backdrops. I think the black is more dramatic, and sets your lessons apart visually from the others out there. But it is nice to mix it up a bit too. It think you should alternate them at times.
Steve Thompson
Sun Valley, Idaho
Guitars: Fender 60th Anniversary Std. Strat, Squier CVC Tele Hagstrom Viking Semi-hollow, Joshua beach guitar, Martin SPD-16TR Dreadnought
Amphs: Peavey Classic 30, '61 Fender Concert
Effects and such: Boss: DS-1, CE-5, NS-2 and RC20XL looper, Digitech Bad Monkey, Korg AX1G Multi-effects, Berhinger: TU100 tuner, PB100 Clean Boost, Line 6 Toneport UX2, Electro Harmonix Little Big Muff Pi, DuhVoodooMan's Rabid Rodent Rat Clone, Zonkin Yellow Screamer Mk. II, MXR Carbon Copy Delay
love is the answer, at least for most of the questions in my heart. . .
- j. johnson
This might be your BEST lesson yet. Damn, I love this kinda stuff. I like the little embellishment you gave on the rhythm part too. Fabulous!! A great lick that isn't overly complicated.
What really struck me on the video too was........your forearm veins. Holy smokes!! lol Your forearm (like a tennis player's) doesn't go with the rest of your body (very lean from all that runnin').
The Law of Gravity is nonsense. No such law exists. If I think I float, and you think I float, then it happens.
Master Guitar Academy - I also teach via SKYPE.
I've got veins like that too.....from years of tennis and racquetball. Of course, you can't see my veins with all the carb loading that I do.
Excellent lick and great close-up Well done Robert
Guitars:
1978 Fender Telecaster Thinline Custom USA, New Nash TL-72 Thinline Telecaster, 1965 Harmony Meteor, H71, 1986 Fender Telecaster Esquire MIJ, New Martin J-41 Special, 1933 National Duolian, 1941, New Eastwood Mandocaster 12 strings
Amps:
Tweed Vibrolux Custom Denis Manlay, 1976 Fender Deluxe Reverb Silverface
Thanks everyone!
By the way, the upcoming Friday's video will be strictly guitar rhythm...
The Law of Gravity is nonsense. No such law exists. If I think I float, and you think I float, then it happens.
Master Guitar Academy - I also teach via SKYPE.
"No thanks, I'm rhythm guitar and mouth organ." ~ John Lennon in Help!
This one is cool as well
Sent from my SPH-L720 using Tapatalk
Glad you likey
The Law of Gravity is nonsense. No such law exists. If I think I float, and you think I float, then it happens.
Master Guitar Academy - I also teach via SKYPE.
Yeah, yeah, bring back the veins!
It's the root of the bues, man. No veins, no blues?
Gotta revisit this on the new-to-me Viking Deluxe (where is the wag-wag emot.?!) ....but only after I finish mowing, transplant the ferns, make sure the fish are OK, call spouse to detail my progress...arf.
Less golf, more saxophone