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Guest Column: Greasy Fingers g9 Line
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pix Greasy Fingers pix
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pix pix by Shelby Williford  

Page added in June, 2002

 
pix About the Author    
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Shelby Williford is a shredder from Tampa, Florida who has recently started teaching guitar lessons. His intention is to make the transition from web designer to guitar teacher upon accumulating enough students.

Shelby currently write columns on a regular basis for chopsfromhell.com, theshredzone.com, as well as Rivot Rag (a local magazine dedicated to the metal community in Central Florida). He also has a band called Xtinct, which is pure metal with lots of shred.

Be sure to visit his web site.

Send comments or questions to Shelby Williford.



© Shelby Williford
Hello everybody. Welcome to my first column here at Guitar Nine Records. It's an honor to do this lesson here and hopefully, there will be more to come. What I would like to concentrate on this time around is 4 note per string legato licks and sequences. I first got the inspiration for this stuff from Rusty Cooley. The first six examples are little sequences that I like to practice to get my hands warmed up for this kind of playing.

Let me stress that these have some pretty big stretches in them so be careful. If you need to, use other 4-note finger shapes in order to get the sequence/s of the notes of each example. The shapes I picked for this are random. What are important are the sequences behind the shapes because as you'll see, we'll apply them to actual licks as the last part of the lesson. The way I like to approach these is as fallows:

  1. Practice each sequence to a metronome for 1-minute non-stop at about 40-60 bpms.
  2. After you get comfortable doing that, move the sequences up and down the string, across the neck, chromatically, diatonically, etc. This too is done to a metronome.
  3. Start to come up with your own sequences and scale fingerings for yourself and try to come up with at least one lick a week.
  4. These are in groups of 8 notes (octuplets). If you need to, feel free to break them down into groups of 4 notes.

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Example 1


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Example 2


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Example 3


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Example 4


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Example 5


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Example 6


Now that we have some sequences under our belt, lets do some actual licks. These are just little licks that I came up with in accordance to the scale I'm in and the sequences that we practiced. Once again, use a metronome. Like the sequences, feel free to break these licks down into groups of 4 notes if you need to. The way I approach licks like this is I take each one, play it 10 to 15 times to a metronome, and increase the tempo in increments of 5 bpms.

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Example 7 - A minor


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Example 8 - C Phrygian


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Example 9 - E Mixolydian


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Example 10 - G Dorian


Well that's it for now. Take care.

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