Mikael Dez
Rock Star
- Messages
- 2,626
You gotta understand that with some genres you have to put in that grind though right?I never do any such things, either.
You gotta understand that with some genres you have to put in that grind though right?I never do any such things, either.
You gotta understand that with some genres you have to put in that grind though right?
Came across another solo of Petrucci's that I liked, so I looked it up, and sure enough, he has another nearly-impossible-to-play lick in it! And of course I had to try it!
From Barstool Warrior:
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You can't even play the damn thing unless you have your guitar up on your leg in standing position, like he does live, because of the way it contorts your hand getting those notes on the low strings! And of course it's fast- 156bpm!
But again, with all the licks that I've worked on of his, this one is different. He never ceases to amaze me at how he's always coming up with something new/different/interesting to put into his solos!
I have no illusions of ever being able to play most of his fast stuff at tempo. I use these kinds of licks as exercises to help me improve as a player.I am glad for my own sake that I don’t really like shredding - I love Petrucci more for his phrasing, incredibly clean playing (as in not messy, not clean tones), and his godly tone. If I loved the shred then I know I’d be on a constant crusade to get there![]()
Some very cool advice
That guy Emil is nuts, he primarily plays metal but he has an extremely diverseFinding repeatable shapes is indeed a great thing - and particularly easy once you look at things as 3 sets of a pair of strings (E6/A, D/G, B/E1). The only downside being the pesky major third between the G and B strings. With a guitar tuned in perfect fourths, that would result in yet some more shape reusing options (and obviously make the octave "jump" between pairs a lot easier). I was actually fooling around with a guitar tuned in perfect fourths ages ago (long before I even heard the name Tom Quayle for the first time), took very little adjustment time, just that all the chord shapes I constantly need for my gigs didn't work anymore, so I dropped the idea.
I love not playing “in the box” how this expands the scale across the fretboard, ever since watching this I’ve started figuring out the same kind of mentality with any scale “where is the most logical spot for me to continue this, not just in this one position”Finding repeatable shapes is indeed a great thing - and particularly easy once you look at things as 3 sets of a pair of strings (E6/A, D/G, B/E1). The only downside being the pesky major third between the G and B strings. With a guitar tuned in perfect fourths, that would result in yet some more shape reusing options (and obviously make the octave "jump" between pairs a lot easier). I was actually fooling around with a guitar tuned in perfect fourths ages ago (long before I even heard the name Tom Quayle for the first time), took very little adjustment time, just that all the chord shapes I constantly need for my gigs didn't work anymore, so I dropped the idea.
Been doing tabs for my2 shred students that wanna up their legato, economy and hybrid picking game.
Also work for alternate picking.