blues guitar lesson solo - 3/3
Uploader Comments (johnhguitar)
Top Comments
-
Great lesson. I'm learning really fast with your videos. Thxs.
-
blues are really cool
All Comments (15)
-
Very useful, this could be used as a good warm-up exercise...thanks
-
I love how there's a 335 just sitting right there.. Hop on that thing and put it to good use! I know you know that thing has such a sweet, thick tone!
-
John, I'm amazed at the amount of free info on your website. Your site has really truly helped me. Thank you.
-
Pretty good blue guitar lesson, keep em' coming pleez!
-
I think the Gibson has more of a classic jazz tone and the Gretsch more for country and rock. But George Van Eps used a Gretsch 7 string for his brand of jazz.
-
i'm impressed... how is it revered when compared to a Gretsch 6120? - just interested.....
-
An ES-175. Maple laminate full-hollow body, mahogany neck, rosewood fretboard, two classic '57 humbucking pickups. It debuted in 1949, and--if I recall correctly--it's the oldest electric guitar still in production. Generally speaking, the ES-175 is to jazz music what the Les Paul is to rock music.
-
what gibson guitar is that?
Hello John
SOoooo...Love your music.
But I wanna know what is the difference between fingerstye guitar (no singing? Im I right?) and the solo that harmonize the vocal?
Thank you.
valentineDD1 4 months ago
Fingerstyle really to me just means playing the guitar with your fingers and not using a flat pick. If you hold a pick with your thumb and your index finger you limit yourself to certain styles and possibilities. Country, jazz, classical, etc. These styles can be played with a fingerstyle approach. The flat pick is like a violin bow to the guitarist enabling the musician to play fast single note phrases. Thanks for your interest.
johnhguitar 4 months ago