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- Introduction: It's All in the Right Hand
- Advanced Strumming Tone
- A New Eighth Note Pattern
- Swinging the Eighth Notes
- A New Sixteenth Note Pattern
- Swinging the Sixteenth Notes
- Incorporate Karate Chop Muting
- Practice Tune 1: Straight Eighths
- Practice Tune 2: Swung Sixteenths
- Advanced Strumming: Easy Practice Exercises
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- Introduction: Move the Notes and Add a Few
- Rock Rhythm Voicing: Telly Tone
- Classic Major Chord Voicing
- Power Chord: Root on the D String
- Dominant Chords: Rhythm 7ths
- Drop D: One-Finger Power Chords
- Drop D: Power 9th Chords
- Chords and Voicings: Practice Tune
- Chords and Voicings: Easy Practice Exercises
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- Decorated Chords
- Embellishment Gear and Tone
- Embellish the Major Barre, 6th String Root
- Embellish the Major Barre, 5th String Root
- Embellish the Minor Barre, 6th String Root
- Embellish the Minor Barre, 5th String Root
- Decorate Your Substitutions
- Embellishment Practice Tune Intro & Outro
- Embellishment Practice Tune Verse
- Embellishment Practice Tune Chorus
- Embellishment Practice Tune Performance
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Easy Pinch Harmonic Practice Exercises
Just like any other technique that we use on guitar, pinch harmonics require a great deal of finesse and muscle memory - especially when it comes to the controlled kind. So in this lesson I'm going to show how you can use a metronome to work on all this.
I hope you've had fun with these examples. Pinch harmonics can be anything from that exotic sound you throw in once in a while, to being a consistent and signature element in your sound. That's just a matter of taste! But before you can make that decision for yourself you need to really get in there and work up the technique, otherwise you won't know what it can really do for you. So use the licks and the exercises from this tutorial and see where it all takes you. Have fun with it!