Search results for "Blues Rock guitar"

Robben Ford Style Solo 2

Robben Ford Style Solo 2 by Jody Worrell is a follow up to our first video on learning a blues guitar solo in the style of Robben Ford. We’ll learn another 12 bar solo that has a strict adherence to the chord changes and also features Robben’s jazzy note selection. We’ll cover how to play […] To access this page, you must purchase a Premium Lesson Plan or log in to your account and return […]

Santana Style Solo in Am 2

Santana Style Solo in Am 2 by Jody Worrell is a follow up to our first Santana Style Solo lesson. We’ll learn another 12 bars of this Carlos Santana inspired solo in the key of Am. The solo incorporates bends, vibrato, and other techniques that gave Santana his unique guitar sound. After learning each part […] To access this page, you must purchase a Premium Lesson Plan or log in to your account and return […]

E Minor & Major Pentatonic Licks

E Minor & Major Pentatonic Licks is a free guitar lesson by Peter Vogl. We’ll start by reviewing the E Minor Pentatonic Scale at the 12th fret and then move on to the E Major Pentatonic Scale at the 9th fret. Next, you will learn four licks that come from these scales. Peter will first demonstrate the licks and then teach them to you with note by note instruction. We’re playing the licks over “Funk […]

E Funk Licks

E Funk Licks is a free electric guitar lesson by Peter Vogl that covers a couple of licks that can be played over a funky one chord vamp in the key of E. The licks come out of the Em Pentatonic scale and use a snapping and popping fingerstyle technique with the right hand. In the video, we will play against the backing track “Funk in E”, which is track 10 from the Let’s Jam! […]

Am Pentatonic Licks

Am Pentatonic Licks by Peter Vogl will teach you how to play over a standard minor blues progression. This free video lesson uses the blues backing track “Am blues”, from the Let’s Jam! Blues and Rock. We’ll start by learning the A Minor Pentatonic Scale in both the first position and the extended version. The most widely used position is called 1st position because the first note of the scale is an A, the tonic […]