Re: Your Lessons to the Community: GUITAR Related
here's one you'll never hear
if you play hard rock or anything else heavy, learn some rockabilly
lots of reasons, um, 1- it'll teach you tons of chords you never use or have used, but after awhile, putting them in different licks & positions on the neck, you'll find out that they're an amazing tool. Certain bar/open chords sound meaner than most would think, seriously
2- hybrid picking/harmonizing. The reason it was so popular is that players, in a 3 piece, could do their own rythm AND lead lines. You'll learn to harmonize yourself, strike a chord & play an amazing fill under it. And for all you metal guys, well, you can chug & shred at the same time. I guess i first discovered this with an E minor open chord & a scale run while it's ringing out
3- soloing technique. This is mainly a brian setzer thing, and you have to listen to a lot of him to really get it. I guess 'hell bent' and 'rumble in brighton' are good places to start
4- working within chords. Listen to Johnny B Goode, almost the whole song can be seen as a couple bar chords broken up into all those parts. Bands like reverend horton heat & johnny burnette's rock & roll trio will also teach you how to solo within a chord, and teach you that repeated phrasing CAN be good, no matter how technical you wanna be
5- familiarity with high strings. I know it sounds dumb, but the general consensus in hard genres is that the low strings are for rockin, and the high ones are for solos & fills. A lot of rockabilly songs, back to Johnny B Goode for example, work pretty much exclusively on the high strings, used for rythm AND lead. No it won't revolutionize the way you play, but it WILL give you an extra edge over other people
/end rant