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Rock And Roll Bends No. 2
Here’s a variation of Rock And Roll Bends No. 1.
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Rock And Roll Bends No. 1
This lick (or a variation of) could very well be the most widely used rock guitar lick of all time.
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Palm Mute
The palm mute (known as pizzicato in Classical guitar terminology) is performed with the picking hand. While picking, the side of the palm is lightly pressed against the strings to mute the notes. You’ll see it labeled in tablature with “P.M.”. You can vary the sound of a palm mute by adjusting the applied pressure.…
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Ascending Hammer-On Lick
This is a chromatic run using nothing but hammer-ons. You can run it all the way up the fretboard if you’d like.
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Bending Strings To Different Pitches
A string can be bent to deliver many types of pitches. The more you bend the higher the pitch. A 1/4 step bend is bending the note’s pitch up half a fret. A 1/2 step bend is bending the note’s pitch up one fret. A 3/4 step bend is bending the note’s pitch up one and…
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Alternate Picking
Here’s the music and tab from the video: Alternate-Picking What Is Alternate Picking? Alternate picking is a guitar-playing technique, used only by pick users, that employs strictly alternating downward and upward picking strokes in a continuous run, and is the most common method of plectrum playing. If this technique is performed on a single note…
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Pre-Bend Hold and Release
In this lesson, we’ll pre-bend a note, hold, and then release it. This is a good example of one of the benefits of using pre-bends. You’ll also get a good visual of what it looks like in tablature notation.
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Half-Step Bend
Here’s one of the most common bends.
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Full Step Bend And Release
Here’s a commonly used bend variation. We’ll bend the note up a full step and then release the bend.
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Bluesy Two-String Half-Step Bends
Here’s a bluesy lick that uses half-step bends on two strings.