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50 rock licks you need to know: Part 1 of 5

Increase your rock soloing potential


John WheatcroftJanuary 31, 2011, 14:30 GMT
Jimmy Page in 1979: he helped to write the book on rock licks and soloing Neal
Preston/Corbis
The main focus here in terms of vocabulary is classic rock, which we're going to define for
the purposes of this study as pre-Van Halen, so you'll find no eight-finger tapping, no
three-octave sweep picked arpeggios and no 32nd-note legato monster licks. What you will
find, however, is a choice selection of medium-tempo classic rock phrases that are
stylistically diverse, melodically flexible, and display a wide range of articulation and
dynamic devices.
They are all also completely useable to guitarists of many levels and in a variety of settings. It's
arguable that it's this mid-tempo range phrasing that really establishes the character of a rock
guitarist. When the tempo gets cranked up there are generally less workable options.
You'll often find the same fingerings and melodic pathways being adopted by a large number of
players, but it's the melodic phrasing and note selection that really allows their personality to
shine through.
This study divides the fretboard into five areas, or positions. As the pentatonic scale forms the
basis for a huge amount of rock soloing, each area relates directly to the scale's associated
CAGED minor form (see below).
Scale diagrams

For each area of activity we have presented ten different ideas - a lick, a melodic fragment, or
some form of sequential permutation of the notes. Whilst the pentatonic scale is generally at the
core of each idea, we are by no means restricted to it exclusively.
Follow the associated text for each idea and all will become clear. You have two strategic
choices when approaching this study. The first is to work through each idea in sequence with a
single isolated fretboard position. While we're at it, ensure that you can move each idea through
a selection of keys.
It's fair to say that rock styles tend to favour the keys of E, A, D and G, so start with these before
eventually aiming for fluency in every key. The second option is to read through the pages, and
therefore move along the fretboard horizontally. Moving each associated idea (bends, for
example) in sequence through each of the CAGED minor pentatonic shapes.
We've purposefully designed each example to be distinctly different from the next, to achieve a
spread and balance of musical ideas that forces you to exploit the full range of the fretboard and,
most importantly, exploit the individual fingering potential inherent within each form. The
beauty of the five-position system is that it gives you some very bold and instantly identifiable
visual, aural and physical landmarks when learning new ideas.
Why not purchase an A4 folder with five pockets, one for each position. When you learn a new
phrase, or create one of your own, simply pop it into the appropriate pocket. Every couple of
months you can then review your research, making note of which positions you favour, and
crucially which ones are a touch on the light side.
You get nowhere by brushing stuff under the carpet, so once you spot a weak area, or fretboard
'blind-spot' you can then take remedial action. Another way to expand your knowledge is to
imagine you have to write all of the examples for this lesson, and you can't use any of the ones
we've already presented. Go on, we dare you! You'll learn a huge amount in a very short and
focused time, I promise you.
Next: playing tips and example tab for phrasing, bends, repetition, intervallic/slide and
sequential (descending)
Playing tips: area one

Listen: licks 1-10

Example 1.1: Phrasing
Let's begin with a Brian May-style lick. It's got an interesting melodic shape, a great rhythmic
structure, a marvellous sense of flow and perfect grace and composure. What more does a great
rock lick need?

Example 1.2: Bends
We could have filled this entire article with bending licks from this area! We'll just give you this
Hendrix-inspired chord-tone beauty and leave you to find the other 49 for yourselves. Intonation
and control are the issues here so use your ears and watch your tuning.

Example 1.3: Repetition
Before there was Paul Gilbert, there was Steve Morse. Without divulging the picking secrets of
the 'Rock Guitar Magic Circle Society, examine how the hammer-ons in bar 2 facilitate greater
speed and stamina.

Example 1.4: Intervallic/Slide
Nothing earth-shattering from a note perspective here; it's the articulation that counts. Consider
your fingering options as this is a massive influence on your effectiveness in executing the idea
cleanly and efficiently.

Example 1.5: Sequential (Descending)
Where would Thin Lizzy (or indeed Jimmy Page) be without this lick? We're looking at a
descending sequence of three notes, transposed to each potential starting note from the minor
pentatonic.

Next: playing tips and example tab for sequential (ascending), triadic/arpeggio, double-
stop, scalar and horizontal
Example 1.6: Sequential (Ascending)
Here's the reverse ascending version. Notice that this is not an exact mirror image of the
descending version, but when you attempt to connect the two up at any point within the sequence
everything should make perfect sense.

Example 1.7: Triadic/Arpeggio
We shall ease you into our triadic based section with a simple three-against-four idea. Again,
intonation (tuning between the notes) is a huge issue, so make sure you're perfectly in tune.

Example 1.8: Double-Stop
Down in Louisiana, a boy named Johnny (okay, only my mother calls me Johnny and it was
really Liverpool) came up with this double-stop lick. The thickening effect of playing two notes
at once is remarkably effective when projection is an issue.

Example 1.9: Scalar
Before there was Yngwie we had Randy! This three-notes-per-string finger-twister neatly boxes
in our first area pentatonic shape, and fills in the scale tones courtesy of the Aeolian-endorsed
and metal-approved flattened 6th (F) and natural 2nd (B)!

Example 1.10: Horizontal
Unison bends sound great. Fact! None more so than when Jimi Hendrix employed them. Here
we're spelling out the harmonically sophisticated Am11th arpeggio (A, C, E, G, D). Who said
rockers couldn't mix it with the intellectuals?

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