Hope you all had a wonderful new year! It's only January 2nd and I'm already back to work in the tone zone / lick library / shredgistry office, ready to deliver you spicy hot riffs.
This song has so many sections. I think this one is the 5th section but it all depends how you break the song up. I've settled on naming this 'One of the many middle parts'.
Pro Tips:
The distorted and palm muted feel is Van Halen inspired. Listen to the song Panama - skip ahead to 0:28 and you'll hear a similar sound.
The placement of your right wrist on the strings near the bridge is super important. I don't want to lay it on too heavy or I'll mute the strings too much. If I don't palm mute enough, the notes will bleed together and sound messy. Experiment with this until you find that cozy middle ground. Cozy like riding a yacht with a corona in your hand, absorbing those bright mid-summer rays.
Through most of this section (bars 1-10), I'm playing nothing but a D major chord. You learn this on week 1 of guitar playing, so that part is easy. Where it gets interesting is that I'm changing the highest note of the chord by lifting my second finger off the high E string, or adding in my pinky on the 3rd fret high E string. Combine this left hand technique, with picking the notes separately, and you'll have a pretty cool pastiche of 80's rock.
For the chord shots at the very end (bars 11-12), barre your 1st, 2nd, or 3rd finger across the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th strings for the 1st and 3rd chord shapes.
Alright, cool. Let's talk about theory now, why don't we?:
Like I mentioned above, I'm playing different variants of a D major chord. The bass is switching root notes every 2 bars, between D, G, and A. This changes the underlying root note my high sprinkly D major is juxtaposed against.
Each time the bass switches notes, the emotive content changes, and you might feel a little tingle in your chest. Feel those feels. Cry or scream if you feel like it. Experience the thrill of being alive, and behold the emotional power of music!
In bars 10-11, the chords are:
A/G - D/F# - D/F - E
TAB is attached as a PDF and Guitar Pro file. Please post any questions below!
Jaime
2020-01-03 10:02:19 +0000 UTCEmma
2020-01-02 22:25:51 +0000 UTCKrissy
2020-01-02 19:52:24 +0000 UTCShiro
2020-01-02 18:58:01 +0000 UTCShiro
2020-01-02 18:41:33 +0000 UTC