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Lesson Topic
Pearl Jam Lesson Sample
Solo Section Looping Track
Teacher: Pearl Jam took classic blues-rock
influences like Hendrix, Zeppelin and the Rolling Stones and mixed in punk
tinged influences for their own take on 90's Hard Rock.
Teacher: Stone Gossard and Mike McCready are the
guitar players.
Teacher: All of the riffs tonight can be
navigated with your familar 5 open string chord shapes.
Song
Chords
Teacher: The opening riff is a C-G-D progression.
We'll see how to spice up these chords, grunge-style.
Riff A
Open Chords
Teacher:
The following riff lays on top, the same chord progression but voiced in triads
down the neck.
Riff A
Teacher:
After the each D chord voicing a Dsus2 voicing is alternated with the D major.
Sus voicings are often employed by Pearl Jam.
Teacher: Sus stands for
'suspended', meaning replace the '3rd' of the chord, major or minor, with the
named scale tone.
Teacher: Here is a
loop for practicing each riff. The next section uses a sus chord as
well.
Riff A Looping Track
Riff
B
Teacher:
This second section uses an extended time on the A chord, with D and E chords
voiced up higher on the neck
Teacher: The nice voicing for Asus4 adds interest
on the extended A vamp.
Teacher: On top of this is some classic Hendrix
influenced R&B style licks. McCready does this well.
Lick
1
Lick 1
Riff
B Looping Track
Teacher: To get the Pearl
Jam sound, remember they layer guitars expertly. McCready takes most solos
and Gossard is more rhythm work. Their tones are fairly dry, really classic rock
tones. McCready tends to favor Fender Strats and Gossard Gibsons.
Mostly Marshall amplifiers
Teacher: McCready will
employ effect pedals such as wah, or a Uni-Vibe, MXR effect pedals. I have heard
him use an E-Bow, which is a sustainer type device.
Teacher: Stone
Gossard uses open G tuning a lot to get textures and chord voicings you cant get
in standard tuning. I think he is a big Keith Richards guy to and that is one of
Richards' favorites
Lick 2
Lick
2
Teacher: The next riff uses a wah pedal as a
filter, slowly changing the effected frequency range as the riff goes on.
Lick3
Lick
3
Teacher: And the
last riff, our 'solo' section.
Riff C Riff C
Riff C
Riff C Looping
Track
Teacher: Here is the loop of that part
again.
Teacher: This next lick is the type of layered
rhythm guitar part Pearl Jam might incorporate. Part rhythm, part lead
lick.
Lick
4
Teacher: The lick uses the
Dorian Mode.
E Dorian Mode
Teacher: E dorian
has the same notes as D major, starting on a different note (2nd scale
degree)
Teacher: And finally some
McCready style solo licks
Lick 5
Teacher:
Most of the licks come out of the Minor Pentatonic scale.
E Minor Pentatonic
- Open Position
Teacher: The next lick
uses a nice extension pattern of the Minor Pentatonic. McCready knows 'em
all.
Lick 6
E Minor
Pentatonic - Extension Pattern
Teacher: The next lick
uses a unison bend. Note that as it moves up it also follows along notes of the
chord progression
Lick
7
Lick
7
Lick
8
Teacher:
This lick is out of that same extension pattern, one octave
higher.
Lick
8
Teacher: Just more blazing
pentatonic scale stuff.
Lick
9
Lick
9
Teacher: OK. Practice hard in the style of these
icons of '90's rock.
Teacher: If you
want to learn specific Pearl Jam songs, catch me for a private
lesson.
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