Ed DeGenaro
Shredder
- Messages
- 2,133
Here you go.Link doesn't play for me, but I'm sure it's a challenge, and sounds awesome, knowing you.![]()
Fun starts at 1:54 if you don’t wanna sit through the hole thing
Here you go.Link doesn't play for me, but I'm sure it's a challenge, and sounds awesome, knowing you.![]()
Think back... When you first tried that, were you at like 80 bpm (or whatever), and you had to work at it to get it to 100? Or was somewhere close to 100 natural for you, and you just had to build the endurance and accuracy?Fucking trying to down pick 16th notes for 16 straight measures at 100 bpm on some middle strings. One thing about playing your own music exclusively for a really long time is atrophying at really simple shit that you just never do.
Up to about 94 (starting at 80) was cake. 95-97 were rough but doable. Everything over that still falls apart by ~ measure 8 or 9. If I was doing it on the bottom end, no problem. Not hitting lower strings is what is fucking me up. At the proper tempo I’m having an issue with speed versus wrist/elbow movement. There’s a switch from straight punk power chords on the E/A to metalcore riffing on the (lower) A/E and A strings and that is a catch as well.Think back... When you first tried that, were you at like 80 bpm (or whatever), and you had to work at it to get it to 100? Or was somewhere close to 100 natural for you, and you just had to build the endurance and accuracy?
My initial speed would've been about 70-80, and I could barely do 8 notes at 80. And now after years of practice, my fastest is still only 90, and I can't maintain it for any real length of time.Up to about 94 (starting at 80) was cake. 95-97 were rough but doable. Everything over that still falls apart by ~ measure 8 or 9. If I was doing it on the bottom end, no problem. Not hitting lower strings is what is fucking me up. At the proper tempo I’m having an issue with speed versus wrist/elbow movement. There’s a switch from straight punk power chords on the E/A to metalcore riffing on the (lower) A/E and A strings and that is a catch as well.
At this point it’s personal between me and myself, lol. If I can’t get this up to speed I’m quitting everything, selling all my shit, buying an overpriced Sunn stack and starting a blackened doom band or some shit, lol.My initial speed would've been about 70-80, and I could barely do 8 notes at 80. And now after years of practice, my fastest is still only 90, and I can't maintain it for any real length of time.
I'm pretty convinced that we can build speed past our initial "comfort levels", but not by much.
I have a couple 32nd-note Petrucci licks I've been at for years, and I still can't seem to get them past about 80 bpm. Idk if I've reached my own personal speed limit, or if there's still some type of break through that is yet to come. But it's starting to get boring trying to get them up to speed.
And those are mainly 3 nps licks. Move to a 2 nps lick, and it slows even further, to maybe 140 (16th notes.)
It's frustrating, because since JP is my favorite guitarist, I'd like to be able to nail a few of his solos, and since every one of them has some shredding in it, that's what I start with, to practice.
I've felt that way from time to time.At this point it’s personal between me and myself, lol. If I can’t get this up to speed I’m quitting everything, selling all my shit, buying an overpriced Sunn stack and starting a blackened doom band or some shit, lol.

I barely touch real lead guitar. Learning Trooch leads seems nuts to me.I've felt that way from time to time.![]()
Mine is also a personal quest, and I gotta say when I play one of those riffs at about 80 bpm, it does make me smile!
It is nuts on some levels, but it has really opened my eyes to the vastly different ways that one can put notes together to form melodic lead lines. And keeps maintaining his creativity, after all these years!I barely touch real lead guitar. Learning Trooch leads seems nuts to me.
String skips are a bitch!This riff involves changing pickslant directions, and very quickly so, when you hit that high A (e/17) on beat 3. If I break it into sections, whether it's beats 1 & 2 together, or 2 & 3, or 3 & 4, I can generally nail it at the 128 bpm tempo. But putting it all together was giving me trouble.Pulled out the Innocence Faded solo again, with the most focus on this section, because it's the hardest part for me. No, I still don't have it up to tempo.String skips are a bitch!
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I changed the E/15 to a slide into A/10, right after the sextuplet. Probably the right way to play it.
I guess it's normal to have to work it back up, when you haven't played it for a while, but at least it's taking less time to get it back to where I had it. Now to just push it closer to the recorded tempo. Better than it was, but still not quite there.

FWIW I learned something similar when transcribing for the George Benson Method.Another thing I'm doing, and would also recommend if you have a difficult picking pattern, is to simplify the notes, to allow you to focus on just the picking, like this:
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I'll run that several times, mixed in with playing the notated riff, as I increase the speed. That's also helping.
I'll find a simple note pattern that's similar in how the strings are in relation to each other during the actual riff, so that the pick is hitting the strings where they are in space, as close to how they truly are, if that makes sense.Same thing just all open strings.
I can see advantages. The open string thing is harder for me because the tension is less than on fretted strings.I'll find a simple note pattern that's similar in how the strings are in relation to each other during the actual riff, so that the pick is hitting the strings where they are in space, as close to how they truly are, if that makes sense.
Like if I have the high e pressed against the board, and I need to get the pick up and over the b string, the e isn't in the same place as it would be if it were an open string.
And I realize I'm talking about very small differences, but again, if it's a difficult lick, I just feel it's best for my practice if the string is in the same place as in the actual riff.
Oh yeah, the tension thing is huge. One JP riff that I have mastered uses open strings, and it was really tricky at first because of how a fretted note on, say the 17th fret feels so different than the open string.I can see advantages. The open string thing is harder for me because the tension is less than on fretted strings.
So my go to exercise used to be just left hand muting open strings.