Okay we are back to our section that is in the key of D. I am going to play through it then break it down for you. Watch this. Here is the breakdown of the lead of that section. I have the D chord, which is kind of really and truly just going up a major scale with a little kind of little twist in the end. This is the major scale starting on the 12th fret of the D going up to the 14th fret of the D then to the 11th fret of the G 12 and 14, 12 on the B, 14 on the B and then that is whole note, your D note on the 15.
So in the case of kind of phrasing it, the fast picking is quite tricky but I am stopping on the 14. Nice sound, it got a soufflé thing but it has some real difference. There is like almost a bending entry. I am not actually fretting the 15th note. It kind of holds the note. It bends in to the note and then holds it and beeps it. Let me go over the B flat. Just a simple lick, which moves up two frets to go out of the G. It is the same little lick over the B flat and the G. Just there so that is the 17th fret on the B bending out to the 18. Now to the 15 and then to the 17 and the 18 again and also a little rake is always good as well across the strings. I am going to kind of get my palm across the strings and break it.
If you move that lick exactly up two frets, it was great over the G as well. We come to our 3rd lick kind of does this which is kind of template among the 17th fret if the D string coming down 15, 14 with the low of lick coming down 17, 15, 14 on the B string. Coming down 17, 15, 14 where there is a little lick on and then that is the kind of – you can add that as to go with our homely guitar.
Then we kind of go into just a series of major scales D-Bb-G. The first one starts from the D. Now, I am going to go just one fret below the root note. This is the same thing again. We are going up – this is like the same as what we have done before but it just got a little key note there coming in to the root note. From the 11th fret going to 12th and there is that little extra slope from of 14 to the 15. So then we are going to move to Bb. I am playing Bb scale just here. What we are going to do to one fret below sort of the Major 7th below which is on the 12th fret.
So just in case you are not sure where it is, you can hear it but just to get your fingers playing it is the 13th fret on the A then the 15th fret. I am using my second finger and my little finger. 12th fret on the D. 13th fret on the D, 15th fret on the D and 14th fret on the G and then here is the home, 15th fret, which we are going to bend into. Put the licks together and you get this. I do not know if you can pick it up but I am not. I am picking the first note. Those are the first two notes and then I am hammering this note. It just adds a little touch to actual form of it. We have that pre-bend at the end of the line. So from the D, you get this and then obviously, out of the G. Again, we are going one fret below. Go up to G major scale. 15th fret just there on the G string, 14th fret, first fret on the B, 13th fret on the B, 15th fret on the B and 12th fret on the E and 14th fret on the E and there is the high root note. So again, one below the root note, 11 strokes. I am doing a little trick where kind of play the 14th fret and bend to the 15th fret. Just because it sounds cool, I am going to play it slowly so you can see the full of it.
Three, four and then we are going to end the whole sequence much as we did before. It is again those notes. We can do the same lick as we did before because it sounds like this. So again, screen down 17, 15, 14. There is a little kind of lick going on 15th to 14th. Pull down 17 on the B. 15, 14 on the B string. I am going to try that whole section without the backing track just so you can see in context and I might play it a little bit slow just for my ease of playing using a sequence. Here we go. Three Four
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