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GT USER GUIDE You can get more from GT by understanding our easy-to-follow musical terms and signs... READMUSIC Each transcription is broken down into two parts... & 1 E 2 B 3 G 4 D 5 A 6 E œ 2nd string 3rd fret 3 œ 2nd string 1st fret 1 œ 3rd string 2nd fret 2 Openœ 4th string 0 MUSICAL STAVE The five horizontal lines for music notation show note pitches and rhythms and are divided by bar lines. TAB Under the musical stave, Tab is an aid to show you where to put your fingers on the fretboard. The six horizontal lines represent the six strings on a guitar – the numbers on the strings are fret numbers. GUITARTECHNIQUES: HOWTHEYAPPEARINWRITTENMUSIC... PICKING Upanddownpicking & œ œ E B G D A E 7 ≥≤ 5 n The first note is to be down-picked and the last note is to be up-picked. Tremolopicking & E B G D A E œ@ @ œ@ @ œ@ @ 5 4 7 8 œ b@ @ n Each of the four notes are to be alternate picked (down& up-picked) very rapidly and continuously. Palmmuting & E B G D A E œœœœ n# œ œ œ œœœœ n œ œ PM PM 8 7 6 7 8 7 6 7 0 0 0 0 0 n Palm mute by resting the edge of picking-hand’s palm on the strings near the bridge. Pick rake & ¿¿¿ rake w E B G D A E X X X 5 n Drag the pick across the strings shown with a single sweep. Often used to augment a rake’s last note. Appeggiatechord & E B G D A E ˙˙˙˙¿˙ # gggggggggggggggg 0 0 2 2 X2 ˙˙˙˙˙˙ ## # gggggggggggggggg 4 5 4 4 4 5 n Play the notes of the chord by strumming across the relevant strings in the direction of the arrow head. FRETTINGHAND Hammer-on&Pull-off & œ œ œ œ E B G D A E 5 7 7 5 n Pick 1st note and hammer on with fretting hand for 2nd note. Then pick 3rd note and pull off for 4th note. NoteTrills & E B G D A E tr tr ˙() ~~~~~ ~~~~~ œ œ ˙ b ( ) 5 7 5 8 n Rapidly alternate between the two notes indicated in brackets with hammer-ons and pull-offs. Slides(Glissando) & œ œ œ œ œ E B G D A E 5 5 7 5 7 n Pick 1st note and slide to the 2nd note. The last two notes show a slide with the last note being re-picked. E B G D A E LeftHandTapping & œ ≠ ≠ œ œ≠ 6 œ œ œ≠ ≠ 7 7 5 0 5 0 ≠ n Sound the notes marked with a square by hammering on/tapping with the frettinghand fingers. Fret-HandMuting & œœœœ n# ¿¿¿¿ ¿¿¿¿ ¿¿¿¿ œœœœ ¿¿¿¿ ¿¿¿¿ E B G D A E 8 7 6 7 X X X X X X X X X X X X 8 7 6 7 X X X X X X X X n X markings represent notes muted by the fretting hand when struck by the picking hand. BENDINGANDVIBRATO Bend up/down Re-pickbend Prebend Quarter-tonebend CAPO CapoNotation n Fret the start note (here, the 5th fret) and bend up to the pitch of the bracketed note, before releasing. n Bend up to the pitch shown in the brackets, then re-pick the note while holding the bent note at the new pitch. n Bend up from the 5th fret to the pitch of the 7th fret note, then pick it and release to 5th fret note. n Pick the note and then bend up a quarter tone (a very small amount). Sometimes referred to as blues curl. n A capo creates a new nut, so the above example has the guitar’s ‘literal’5th fret now as the 3rd fret. HARMONICS Natural harmonics E B G D A E & ‚ NH · ‚ ‚ · · 12 7 12 7 12 7 ‚‚‚ # ··· ‚ n Pick the note while lightly touching the string directly over the fret indicated. A harmonic results. Artificialharmonics E B G D A E & ‚ ‚ ‚ · 4 AH16 AH17 AH19 · 7 5 · n Fret the note as shown, then lightly place the index finger over ‘x’fret (AH ‘x’) and pick (with a pick, p or a). Pinchedharmonics E B G D A E & — PH ± 7 — — ± 5 ± 7 n Fret the note as shown, but dig into the string with the side of the thumb as you sound it with the pick. Tappedharmonics E B G D A E & ‚ ‚ ‚ TH17 TH19 TH17 · 5 7 · · 4 ‚ n Fret the note as shown, but sound it with a quick righthand tap at the fret shown (TH17) for a harmonic. R/HTAPPING Right-handtapping n Tap (hammer-on) with a finger of the picking hand onto the fret marked with a circle. Usually with ‘i’or ‘m’. 4 January 2024
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• ISSUE 355 • JANUARY 2024 • CONTENTS COVER STORY Enjoy six brilliant Christmas classics with us! MerryChristmas! Learn 6 Christmas carols to liven up the season! Blues, rock, jazz, acoustic, classical & more! SCAN TO GET OURWEEKLY NEWSLETTER FEATURES I M A G E S I V E S / G E T T Y I C H A E L O C H S A R C H L A R R Y H U L S T / M 6 CHRISTMAS CLASSICS! JOY TO THE WORLD Jamie Humphries Rock, Brian May and Joe Satriani-style! 14 SILENT NIGHT John Wheatcroft 24 A jazzy take on a much-loved Christmas classic. DECK THE HALLS Declan Zapala 30 A gorgeous classical rendition for you to learn. IN THE BLEAK MIDWINTER Andy G Jones 38 Tasty jazz-blues licks in a cool arrangement. THE HOLLY AND THE IVY Stuart Ryan 44 This easy-to-master piece will still impress! THE FIRST NOEL Martin Cooper 48 An approachable rock version for you to play. REGULARS WELCOME 3 Jasongetsfestiveonhisintroductorypage! JOHNNY RZEZNIK 6 Goo Goo Dolls’ guitarist and founder member answers our Q&A in brilliantly witty style. INTRO 8 AllyourregularsincludingJustin,Mitch,Quist, Phil,andRichardBarrett’sSubstitute. MICHAEL THOMPSON 12 This superb US session player and renowned rockguitaristtalksallthingsinstrumental. SUBSCRIPTIONS 36 Superoffersatwww.magazinesdirect.com. BACK ISSUES 62 Missed a print or digital edition? Find it here! ALBUM REVIEWS 81 Six of the latest guitar albums reviewed and rated by Jason Sidwell and David Mead. NEXT MONTH 82 Spice Up Your Chords! Taking inspiration from players past and present we show how to add style to your chord playing. Plus much more! CONTENTS THE LEARNING ZONE 30-MINUTE LICKBAG 64 Jamie Hunt has six great licks to help you build a better repertoire, with: Kevin Parker (Tame Impala), John Squire (The Stone Roses), Buck Dharma (Blue Öyster Cult), Tom Scholz (Boston), Vito Bratta (White Lion), and Emily Remler(Americanjazzguitarist). BLUES 66 David Gerrish brings you two stylishly accurate soloshighlightingtheharmonicapproach, bending and vibrato style of perhaps the most important blues guitarist of them all, the man from Indianola, Mississippi, the great BB King. SHRED 70 Charlie Griffiths has another set of six shred licks to challenge and tantalise your digits. This month he tackles the style of Finnish guitarist Mika Tyyskä, and his animated alter-ego the amazingMrFastfinger! MODERN BLUES SOLOING 73 The wonderful Josh Smith wraps up his fourpartseriesuncoveringthesecretsofhisstyle, with a look at jump blues. Using hybrid picking he shows you a range of examples that you can incorporate into your own playing. SLIDE PLAYING 78 SimonBarnardbringsyouanotherlessonin his series designed to improve all aspects of your guitar technique. This month he tackles an approach that can be moving, exciting and evocative: the wonderful world of slide guitar! VIDEOSMASTERCLASS TIM LERCH 14 Blues Turnarounds 52 Turnarounds are among the most important features in any blues. They can be modified and used as intros and outros too, and in a great lesson this superb US guitarist brings you 14 of his tastiest turnarounds, guaranteed to spice up any guitarist’s bluesy repertoire. AUDIO &VIDEO PLEASENOTE… All audio and video lessons are available online via a bit.ly link (see below) where animated tab versions of every lesson can be found. This includes this month’s six Christmas carols, our Tim Lerch videomasterclass,allthestylestudies featured, and more. Even better, you can view these on any type of computer, makingforamuchmorerewarding experience. All the audio and video is also available to download to your computer (hi or lo res). Simply look for the red links on the landing page. Type the bit.ly link below into your browser to get to the GT page: https://bit.ly/3LMzFZk January 2024 5

GT USER GUIDE

You can get more from GT by understanding our easy-to-follow musical terms and signs...

READMUSIC Each transcription is broken down into two parts...

&

1 E 2 B 3 G 4 D 5 A 6 E

œ

2nd string 3rd fret

3

œ

2nd string 1st fret

1

œ

3rd string 2nd fret

2

Openœ

4th string

0

MUSICAL STAVE The five horizontal lines for music notation show note pitches and rhythms and are divided by bar lines.

TAB Under the musical stave, Tab is an aid to show you where to put your fingers on the fretboard. The six horizontal lines represent the six strings on a guitar – the numbers on the strings are fret numbers.

GUITARTECHNIQUES: HOWTHEYAPPEARINWRITTENMUSIC...

PICKING Upanddownpicking

&

œ œ

E B G D A E

7

≥≤

5

n The first note is to be down-picked and the last note is to be up-picked.

Tremolopicking

&

E B G D A E

œ@ @ œ@ @

œ@ @

5 4 7 8

œ b@ @

n Each of the four notes are to be alternate picked (down& up-picked) very rapidly and continuously.

Palmmuting

&

E B G D A E

œœœœ n# œ œ œ œœœœ n œ œ PM PM

8

7

6

7

8

7

6

7 0 0 0 0 0

n Palm mute by resting the edge of picking-hand’s palm on the strings near the bridge.

Pick rake

&

¿¿¿

rake w

E B G D A E

X X X

5

n Drag the pick across the strings shown with a single sweep. Often used to augment a rake’s last note.

Appeggiatechord

&

E B G D A E

˙˙˙˙¿˙ # gggggggggggggggg

0

0

2

2

X2

˙˙˙˙˙˙ ## # gggggggggggggggg

4

5

4

4 4

5

n Play the notes of the chord by strumming across the relevant strings in the direction of the arrow head.

FRETTINGHAND Hammer-on&Pull-off

&

œ œ œ œ

E B G D A E

5 7 7 5

n Pick 1st note and hammer on with fretting hand for 2nd note. Then pick 3rd note and pull off for 4th note.

NoteTrills

&

E B G D A E

tr tr

˙()

~~~~~ ~~~~~

œ œ ˙ b

( )

5 7 5

8

n Rapidly alternate between the two notes indicated in brackets with hammer-ons and pull-offs.

Slides(Glissando)

&

œ œ œ œ œ

E B G D A E

5 5 7 5

7

n Pick 1st note and slide to the 2nd note. The last two notes show a slide with the last note being re-picked.

E B G D A E

LeftHandTapping

&

œ ≠ ≠

œ œ≠

6

œ œ œ≠

7 7 5 0 5 0

n Sound the notes marked with a square by hammering on/tapping with the frettinghand fingers.

Fret-HandMuting

&

œœœœ n#

¿¿¿¿

¿¿¿¿

¿¿¿¿ œœœœ

¿¿¿¿

¿¿¿¿

E B G D A E

8

7

6

7

X X X X

X X X X

X X X X

8

7

6

7

X X X X

X X X X

n X markings represent notes muted by the fretting hand when struck by the picking hand.

BENDINGANDVIBRATO Bend up/down

Re-pickbend

Prebend

Quarter-tonebend

CAPO

CapoNotation n Fret the start note (here, the 5th fret) and bend up to the pitch of the bracketed note, before releasing.

n Bend up to the pitch shown in the brackets, then re-pick the note while holding the bent note at the new pitch.

n Bend up from the 5th fret to the pitch of the 7th fret note, then pick it and release to 5th fret note.

n Pick the note and then bend up a quarter tone (a very small amount). Sometimes referred to as blues curl.

n A capo creates a new nut, so the above example has the guitar’s ‘literal’5th fret now as the 3rd fret.

HARMONICS Natural harmonics

E B G D A E

&

NH

·

·

·

12 7 12 7 12 7

‚‚‚ #

···

n Pick the note while lightly touching the string directly over the fret indicated. A harmonic results.

Artificialharmonics

E B G D A E

&

·

4

AH16 AH17 AH19

·

7 5

·

n Fret the note as shown, then lightly place the index finger over ‘x’fret (AH ‘x’) and pick (with a pick, p or a).

Pinchedharmonics

E B G D A E

&

PH

±

7

±

5

±

7

n Fret the note as shown, but dig into the string with the side of the thumb as you sound it with the pick.

Tappedharmonics

E B G D A E

&

TH17 TH19 TH17

·

5 7

·

·

4

n Fret the note as shown, but sound it with a quick righthand tap at the fret shown (TH17) for a harmonic.

R/HTAPPING Right-handtapping n Tap (hammer-on) with a finger of the picking hand onto the fret marked with a circle. Usually with ‘i’or ‘m’.

4

January 2024

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