E: |-3-2-0---------3-2-0----------|
B: |---------3-2-0---------3-2-0--|
Heck, most of us have probably played that lick a few (hundred) times ourselves. (I'm guilty.) But many musicians would agree that the lick is much too bland for repeated use and hence one immediately wonders how the lick could be improved upon, or at least taken to a higher level of sophistication, or how the phrase might be turned into a finger exercise worthy of attention, all of which would hopefully yield substantially better results.
Well, there is good news. The lick can be improved. Simply by adding one or two notes here and there. There's nothing to it but to do it.
Yngwie Malmsteen, the awesome Swedish guitar virtuoso, (study his album Marching Out to improve your playing immensely), also got tired of that particular lick and updated it by adding one simple note to turn it into this phrase:
high E string: |-13-12-10-13-12-10-16-10-|-13-12-10-13-12-10-16-10--|
Notice how the basic triplets are still included at the beginning, yet an extra note has been added. The stretch up to the G# (16th fret) may be a little hairy, but is not impossible. I have heard Yngwie play this lick (although in a different key) so quickly that I could barely discern the notes. I recommend practicing it with a metronome and striving for a great degree of speed, but if it gets to sound like a whizzing blur of mush, slow it down just a tad and try to get all the notes to be highly audible, even to a lazy set of ear drums.
But let's not stop there. Let's go further and add two more notes and turn the lick into a rather difficult finger exercise.
High E: |-13-12-10-13-12-10-16-15-|-13-12-10-13-12-10-16-15--|
Grab the high note with your pinky as in the other stretch licks, but then slide it down one fret after the G# to quickly hit the G note below it. (The fingering should be: 3 - 2 - 1- 3 - 2 - 1 - 4 - 4; repeat.) This is a difficult lick (at least for me) to properly finger. But notice if we change the notes on the fretboard to the following pattern, which is exactly equivalent to the exercise above, it becomes much simpler to execute:
E: |---------------------------16-15-|---------------------------16-15--|
B: |-18-17-15-18-17-15---------|-18-17-15-18-17-15----------|
So the moral behind this lesson and article is that if you ever encounter a difficult fingering for a particular lick or exercise on the electric guitar, do not get discouraged that you can't play it properly and do something you will regret - don't become so frustrated that you take your frustration out on friends and coworkers and get fired and become a homeless individual living in the street, don't turn into a quivering ball of jelly and think your guitar is plotting against you, don't stare at a blank wall in your apartment until your skin becomes pale and dust particles cover your toes... (I'm getting carried away.)
Instead, simply try to lay out a different fingering for the lick in other positions on the fretboard until you find something equivalent that's much easier to play. There's usually another solution to any problem. Many times simply changing the fingering around will make a huge difference in the playability of certain phrases.
Published by Jason Earls
Jason Earls is a writer, guitarist, and computational number theorist currently living in Texas with his wife, Christine. He is the author of Cocoon of Terror, Heartless Bast*rd In Ecstasy, Red Zen, How to B... View profile
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