Channel: Ross Campbell
Category: Music
Tags: one lick soloblues guitar lessonsles paul blues soloplay a solo with one lickblues guitar licksintermediate blues guitar lessonthis cliche blues lick is amazing... here's whyguitar improvisation lessonhow to write a guitar soloross campbell blueshow to play blues guitar solosblues guitar improvisationhow to improvise a guitar soloneural dsp tone king imperial mkiiguitar improvisationintermediate guitar improvisation lessonblues guitar solo
Description: Try my tone for FREE 🎸 Neural DSP Tone King Imperial MKII trial ➡️ ndsp.co/rosscampbell My 'Les Paul Blues' preset ➡️ bit.ly/LesPaulBlues Get the backing track and TAB files for this solo - bit.ly/BluesClichéTAB Courses 🎸 Bulletproof Guitar Player Part 1: Master the Fretboard bit.ly/BGPPart1 Bulletproof Guitar Player Part 2: Advanced Concepts bit.ly/BGPPart2 - TIMESTAMPS ⏱️ 0:00 Intro solo 0:31 The lick 1:11 Why it sounds good over the I chord 2:36 Relating to the minor pentatonic scale 3:45 Learn more about guitar playing 4:07 How I built my solo using this one lick 5:13 Moving to the IV chord 7:20 What I play over the IV chord 8:20 Get my tone for free 10:07 How to navigate the turnaround - Blues is a genre that is riddled with clichés but is that a bad thing? For guitar improvisation I'd say no, it's actually great and for guitar players especially. Many guitar players struggle with the problem of feeling like they've run out of licks when playing solos and the solution isn't always to just learn more licks... What you can also do is look at what's currently in your improvisational vocabulary and see how much mileage you can get out of the licks that are already there. In this blues guitar lesson I show you a prime example of how you can take just one cliché blues guitar lick and literally build an entire guitar solo around it.