Warm up Tips: PART II

TwilightOdyssey

Darkness on the edge of Tone
Well, here's the second installment of the warm up exercises.
This part is divided into 3 sections: Finger Gymnastic #2, Major Scale Pos. 2, Alternate Picking Exercise #1

Finger Gymnastic #2
The fingering on the first gymnastic was 1-2-3-4 ascending, and 4-3-2-1 descending. The fingering for this one is 1-3-2-4 ascending and 4-2-3-1 descending.

Please remember: observe the picking strokes, accent the first note in each sequence, and start slow -- accuracy then speed!

Major Scale Pos.2
This is the second position of the major scale. Yes, the left hand notes are fretted in the same place! Hower, the fingering is different. Why is this? This is because you should be able to play any scale from any chord you are holding. When you memorize all 8 scale postions, you can rip into scales not matter what chord you are playing.

And if you only play power chords? It's still a good thing to learn, so stop being lazy! :)

You can only have 5 attachments, so the lesson is continued below ...
 
Re: Warm up Tips: PART II

The last part of this installment is one of my favourite alternate picking exercises. What I do is play this through twice, then slide down one fret, and play the same pattern, working my way down to the 1st fret and then back up again. MAKE SURE TO OBSERVE THE PICKING DIRECTION NOTED!!

PLEASE NOTE: As I said in Part 1, there will be a total of 12 parts to this series. When you have all 12 parts, you will have the warm up routine that I use every day!

Enjoy!!!!
 
Re: Warm up Tips: PART II

Got em, thanks Benny. Hopefully, this may compensate a bit for the fact I had a guitar teacher for 2 months in my entire life :D
 
Re: Warm up Tips: PART II

Thanks, buddy. I agree, those are great for warming up the ol' fingers. I've used some similar exercises (well, some are exactly the same so perhaps your guitar teacher went to the same school as mine). The nice thing about them, is that if you're short on time like I normally am, and can't get around to serious practicing for a few days, and just want to at least touch the guitar once a day it's good to go through about 5-10 minutes of those warmups just to keep you loose from day to day.

I've always taken those patterns straight vertically up from string to string, and never considered moving longitudally left to right, so I'll have to give that a try.

Off topic here. I'm Mr. Mom today as wifey is in a class. So, I don't like TV and rarely get to listen to music properly since my wife's not so much into the metal. So, I throw in an old Dokken video to time warp back to 87. I found the bestest greatest bestest 80's tone of all time. It happens right after the In my Dreams solo, it's the main riff, but for some reason right after the solo, the riff just sounds to die for. It kills even on a mono-speaker TV. It's heavy, but mellow, thick and swirly. That's the tone that's in my head.

Dood, thats million dollar tone, and I want it.
 
Re: Warm up Tips: PART II

On Under Lock And Key, the rhythm tone is really not that gainy; nice and thick, tho. It's definitely due, in part, to some serious outboard EQs and the recording console, as I've recently learned mixing my own stuff.

Dude, you will never get that tone from a Line 6 product. You know what you need: a tube head!!
 
Re: Warm up Tips: PART II

TwilightOdyssey said:
Dude, you will never get that tone from a Line 6 product. You know what you need: a tube head!!

I couldn't agree more. The L6 is too buzzy. The Marshall with a Fulltone is gonna happen someday, I swear.
 
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