
Learn to Comp Like Jazz Legend Freddie Green
Green’s rhythm style—quarter-note strums in 4/4 time (aka “four to the floor”)—seems simple enough. But it’s rarely mastered.

Green’s rhythm style—quarter-note strums in 4/4 time (aka “four to the floor”)—seems simple enough. But it’s rarely mastered.

Chord tones provide not only a solid foundation for expanding your slide playing but a template for soloing in general, with or without slide.
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Like a magic trick on your guitar, partial capos hold down some strings while leaving others untouched, changing the intervals between open strings.

In this lesson, we’ll dive into some chordal innovations you can use to get a Django Reinhardt sound or to simply explore new ways of approaching chords.

Lowering your first and sixth strings from E to D opens up enticing new possibilities on both the low and high ends of the guitar.
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Using a triadic approach to mapping the fretboard can help you break out of ruts and develop a deeper understanding of the guitar and music in general.

Here are some of the evocative sounds you can create using chord voicings with notes that are close to each other—just a half step or whole step apart.

The rest stroke—similar to the fingerstyle approach used by classical guitarists—is a plectrum technique in which each downstroke lands on an adjacent string rather than passing over it.
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Learn to use three-note, three-string triads — you probably already know a lot of these chords, and in this lesson, you’ll find ways to repurpose them.

In this advanced guitar lesson, meet the melodic and harmonic minor scales and then explore the harmonies that can be generated from them.

Let’s take a close look at a common extended chord—containing a note beyond the seventh, the venerable ninth.
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This Weekly Workout will help you develop your frame of mind and confidence in solo fingerstyle improvisation on guitar via Tárrega's “Etude in E minor.”

Slash chords are a small change to a chord voicing that can have a big impact on the sound of a progression, as we’ll explore in this guitar lesson.

Here are three ways to play a 12-bar blues in C major on guitar, seen through the lens of the old blues masters.

In this guitar lesson you'll learn economy picking, which includes alternate and sweep picking styles, as well as legato techniques for your fretting fingers.
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Contrapuntal lines are not necessarily intuitive for most guitarists, but the approach is certainly worth the investment and yields dividends equivalent to sonic gold.

Lisa Liu teaches fretboard exercises you can use to play beautiful, dreamlike augmented arpeggios for soloing and composing in any style.

If you look to the masters for inspiration—without copying them note for note—you can produce blues verses and solos that sound fresh and exciting on guitar.
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Learn how to play walking bass lines with chords—a cool approach to have up your sleeve, no matter what style you play.

These arrangements of two songs by Mother Maybelle Carter will help develop your technique and understanding of the flatpicking idiom.

In this guitar lesson you will focus on tightening up your timing on rhythm guitar using a variety of different strumming rhythms.
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Even if you’re accompanying a song with one guitar, you can create the same kind of journey on your instrument that a full band arrangement would.

Take a deep dive into building independence among the fingers of both hands.

Grammy Award-winning roots musician Cathy Fink teaches licks drawn from folk, country, and bluegrass, perfect for warming up or songwriting on guitar.
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Learn how each type of harmonic—natural, harp, percussive, and pinch—is produced and how it can be used to add textural interest to your guitar playing.