The Rolling Stones Songs
This tune features 1 acoustic and 2 electric guitars. The acoustic strums the main riffs and chord progressions throughout. One clean electric guitar add single note lines, backbeat chord stabs, and a bluesy solo. The other electric guitar has a fuzz effect and adds some ornamental single notes to the arrangement. This song uses open and barre chords, steady acoustic strumming, single note riffing, and some bluesy lead approaches.
Published: 02/16/2024There are 2 electric guitars in this tune. Guitar 1 plays the main riff and solo in the song, while Guitar 2 adds some rhythm guitar with a few tasty lead fills. This song uses single note riffs, solid rhythm strumming, and tasty rock lead approaches.
Published: 02/29/2024There are 2 electric guitars in this song. Guitar 1 plays the rhythm riffs, while Guitar 2 digs into some slide fills using Open E tuning. You’ll need a capo and slide to play along with this tutorial. This song uses a capo, open chords and triads, suspended chord embellishments, and some basic slide guitar approaches.
Published: 02/22/2024This tune features 1 lightly overdriven electric guitar that plays boogie riffs and chord stabs throughout. This song uses boogie rhythms, triads, chord strums with muting, and dynamics.
Published: 01/25/2024There is no guitar on the original recording, but we’ll add an acoustic guitar into the mix and play the chord progressions with a consistent strum. Any guitar can be used to play along with this tutorial. This song uses open chords, and a steady strumming approach.
Published: 01/18/2024This tune features 1 acoustic and 1 clean electric guitar. The acoustic strums the chords throughout, while the electric adds strums and single note motifs to add texture to the arrangement. This song uses open chords and suspended chord embellishments, strumming with an 8th note triplet swing groove, and double stops and triads.
Published: 02/01/2024This tune features 1 acoustic and 1 clean electric guitar. The acoustic strums the chords throughout, while the electric adds simple slide licks to add some texture to the arrangement. Both guitars use an Open E tuning. This song uses open tuning chord shapes, solid acoustic strumming approaches, dynamics, and some simple slide licks.
Published: 02/09/2024The song features two acoustic guitars. Guitar 1 has a capo on the 2nd fret and plays a combination of chord strums, arpeggiation, and ornamental fills. Guitar 2 does not use a capo, and plays leads and fills throughout the song. This song uses a capo, open chords, strumming with a swung eighths groove and adding embellishments, as well as some textbook acoustic licks and fills.
Published: 03/15/2024This tune features 1 acoustic and 1 electric guitar. The acoustic strums the chord progressions and adds some slide ornamentations and riffing to provide a rich rhythm guitar bed. The electric guitar adds more slide fills to the arrangement. This song uses an open E tuning, a capo, strumming and riffing techniques, a swung eighth groove, dynamics, and some textbook slide lead approaches.
Published: 03/29/2024There are 2 clean electric guitars in this tune. Guitar 1 plays main rhythm parts, while Guitar 2 adds some lead fills in the chorus. The tune features a harpsichord that plays the main riff, and we’ll adapt it for guitar. This song uses triads, doubles stops, and barre chords, steady strum approaches, chord arpeggiation, and some early rock lead approaches.
Published: 04/04/2024This song features one acoustic guitar that strums the progressions and embellishments throughout. Any acoustic guitar can be used to play this song. You’ll need a capo placed on the 1st fret to play along with this tutorial. This song uses open chords, the use of a capo, and dynamics.
Published: 04/11/2024This tune features an acoustic guitar strumming the progressions and also adding plenty of lead embellishment and even a full guitar solo! There is also a pedal steel heard prominently in the mix, so we’ve adapted these ideas into clean electric guitar parts. This song uses open and barre chords, steady acoustic strumming, pedal steel influenced lead ideas, and some fiery acoustic lead approaches.
Published: 04/18/2024