August 29, 2010

BL-015 • Blues Lead Guitar #5 Using Licks (justinguitar.com)


PART 5 of SERIES – this one teaches you how to work your blues licks into your playing, how to twist them into new licks and how to make the most of what you got! :) Taught by Justin Sandercoe. Full support at the web site where you will find hundreds of lessons on a wide range of subjects, and all the scales and chords that you will ever need! There is a great forum too to get help, no matter what the problem. And it is all totally free, no bull. No sample lessons, no memberships. Just tons of great lessons :) To get help with your lesson or song look up the number at the start of the video title (like ST-123 or whatever) on the Lesson Index page. www.justinguitar.com Good luck and take care, J
Video Rating: 4 / 5

audiosway.com – Guitar Lesson – For anyone to learn guitar the guitar lessons must start with the guitar chords first. Guitar Chords included in this lesson – A Major Chord, B Major Chord, C Major Chord, D Major Chord, E Major Chord, F Major Chord, G Major Chord, A Minor Chord, B Minor Chord, D Minor Chord, E Minor Chord, F Minor Chord. These guitar chords hold the key to playing a lot of songs on electric guitar or acoustic. Once you get these down you can start to build on that foundation by going through more of the guitar lessons I offer online for beginners or more advanced. Check out my site www.audiosway.com to get more information about my guitar lessons for beginners and more.
Video Rating: 0 / 5

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25 Comments »

August 29, 2010

MrWedersonBernardo :

Hi, see my channel for guitar videos!

Svm777 :

Just love the maniac face staring at the camera before he starts talking.

Nice lessons bro’ !

IGothmogOfficial :

Nice licks man!

sa3ed :

Your lessons make me want to be a better person

sa3ed :

@12yod12 lol

61SGman :

I love running up and down blues scales doing angus young licks

SuperARandall :

@JustinSandercoe Hi Justin, great show. Now come on Justin at 2.10 i saw that devlish smile of yours. You knew it was the wrong track. I know you by now J. These lessons are amazing and so easy to understand. J, even after i have done my 45 minutes of daily practice which involves having a virtual lesson from yourself, i still here you saying practice in my ears. Even having discussions with my friends, i am always mentioning J. If you do reply to me can you refer to me as A. This seems RocNRoll

TrippleLee :

can you believe it my phone g…

apocatie34 :

Thanks so much for everything Justin

alanmaxx :

what a great teacher, but I’m guessing he already knows that.

BlikeNave :

@12yod12 Dude if Justin isn’t clear enough for you then just give up now.

roddyz56 :

Justin.. awesome job with these lessons!!

One question with respect to these licks. I am a complete novice blues lead player. I’m wondering, you mentioned somewhere in here that we should be relatively proficient with our pentatonic scale with our pentatonic scales before starting to use these licks. How proficient should we be? I’m up to 2 notes per tick with 130 ticks per minute on the metronome.. do you have a benchmark for this?? Thanks in advance!!

12yod12 :

You’ve definitely got a pattern in all your videos – you jump around too much. We’re following a lick, scale, etc. and then you decide to randomly go off track, talk about other things and it’s too hard to follow.

DANKandBLUES :

@PainlessTragedy easy to play, hard to feel.

jimmorrison1212 :

muy bueno

questm34 :

Justin, thanks so much for these lessons. You’re an awesome teacher man!

Jurbo33 :

@ex0ja I wouldn’t really invest in a straight-up overdrive pedal until you get yourself a real nice amp, because until that point it really wont make enough of a difference to warrant buying another pedal.

ex0ja :

I have one of the cheaper marshall amps, it has overdrive and some effects on it. Would it benefit me to invest in an overdrive pedal? Would I notice much difference? (sorry to get off topic, but I am talking in reference to blues lead with distortion)

August 30, 2010

Jurbo33 :

I’m pretty partial to an overdriven tube amp, but if you aren’t in a position where you can crank ‘er to 11, then an overdrive pedal always gets the job done.

PhatElvis7 :

Great lesson.

kotbatzen1029 :

@ex0ja

i guess a lttle overdrive to mak it crunchy…or more gain..

PainlessTragedy :

killer video I just need to slow it down, I know the progressions amazing tip. I’m more focused on changing scales I forget about how easy the blues is to play. It’s not always about shreding, Leave that to the Metal Players.

KasHCubeD :

WOW. You make things so simple! I feel as if I’m cheating…

CharlieLayton :

hey guys if anyone with small hands like me is having trouble starting out on this scale (like i did) try just moving it up to the e minor pentatonic, same position, just everything scooted up seven frets. i think its easier to play with because the frets are closer together and the strings are easier to bend. then move back down to A when you’re ready :)

dimionix :

bro, why don’t you talk some more

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