Classic Rock Techniques Lesson

Rock Essentials #2: Classic Rock Techniques

Post your take
  • Lesson
  • My notes

  • Welcome to the Rock Essentials #2 lesson!


    Here's a second portion of tools for rock playing. Most techniques are common for rock and metal, but some of them are being used in a specific way - for example 1/4 step bends ornament. Rock guitar playing usually means less gain from the amp and more from the hand. Well known Plexi(1959, British crunch, Super Lead etc) amp/amp sim is one of best allies when it comes to creation of a tasty, chunky and sparkling rock tone. Before going any further, get familiar with a few tips below.


    How to make palm muting? Simply touch low strings with your soft part of the right palm. Spend some time to find a sweet spot moving your palm left and right across the strings. Proper palm muting should have very short sustain, a lot of percussive sound and that specific low boom for a very short moment, right after the hit. From the other side if You move your hand too far to the left, your sound will stay percussive, but will loose an information of what notes are being played, and will loose some of the low boost as well. You also need to find a sweet spot of palm pressure to the strings.

    Make sure to use bridge pickup position. It's recommended to have humbucker pickup - it handles more distortion with less noise and it's much more tight/focused in the midrange.

    Proper amount of gain (only as much as necessary) will be critical to keep things clear and tight. Too much gain will destroy good separation between notes, and will make the whole riffing sound blurry. Too much gain can cause less effort from player himself, and will affect the overall profit, that could have been taken from the lesson.


    Gear used (in order of connection chain placement):

    1. Jeff Beck Strat with Seymour Duncan JB.Junior pickup
    2. Presonus Inspire 1394 firewire audio interface (input gain 40%)
    3. Poulin LeXtac vst plug-in:
    - Channel - blue
    - Input 50%
    - Gain 70%
    - Pre EQ - brighter
    - Bass 50%
    - Middle 40%
    - Treble 60%
    - Contour 100%
    4. Kefir impulse loader (mix 100%)
    5. Impulse response- Ownhammer / 412 FMAN M25B 57-00
    This impulse is not freeware, but you can use other | greenback/sm57/straight "between"| impulse/cab simulation instead.

    Tuning - Standard E

    Backing track progression :

    4/4
    E5 | E5 A5 G5 | E5 | E5 D5 G5 |
    E5 | E5 A5 | A5 | G5 |
    E5 A5 | E5 A5 | E5 A5 | A5 D5 |
    E5 A5 | E5 A5 | E5 A5 | A5 D5 |
    ||: B5 D5 A5 | A5 | B5 A5 E5 | E5 |
    B5 D5 A5 | A5 | B5 A5 E5 | E5 :||




    Tempo: Main song tempo is 100 bpm. There are also backing tracks available at 40, 50, 60, 80 and 100 bpm.

    Time signature: 4/4

    Scales used in this lesson:

    E minor scale




    E-dorian scale





    E-blues scale



    From this course:

  • Login to use my notes. No GMC account? Register here.
Scrubbing / forward / rewind: arrow right, arrow left keys
Jump to start: Home or `s` , you can also click/tap the lesson part again (the numbers above player)
Go to next part: PageUP or End.
Volume: ArrowUp / ArrowDown keys
Go to any part: Number keys (combinations also possible)
Pause or play: `k` or space key
Fullscreen: `f`, esc to close
Increase / decrease speed : `+` or `-`