Sunday, October 29, 2017

Queen - Don’t Try Suicide - Guitar Lesson (Guitar Tab)





Queen - Don’t Try Suicide - Guitar Lesson (Guitar Tab)
In this Guitar Lesson video we look at Dont Try Suicide from the Queen album The Game
Lesson includes bass line played on guitar as well as chords and guitar solo guitar tab




Friday, October 27, 2017

Queen - Dog With A Bone - Guitar Lesson





Queen - Dog With A Bone - Guitar Lesson

Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Queen - Coming Soon - Guitar Lesson (Guitar Tab)



Queen - Coming Soon - Guitar Lesson (Guitar Tab)




Queen Presets - Tonebridge Guitar App



https://itunes.apple.com/gb/app/tonebridge-guitar-effects/id1117291846?mt=8

The Tonebridge app offers some great presets for Queen guitar sounds. Check the above video to hear them

Tonebridge Features:
• 1000+ presets for popular songs of different genres
• 500+ demo samples for effect preview
• Collections of presets handpicked by Ultimate Guitar editors
• Intelligent feedback and noise reduction system for a clear sound
• Low latency for real-time playing
• Information about pickup settings

Compatible Devices:
• Ampkit Link
• Apogee JAM, Line 6 Mobile In, Line 6 SonicPort, iRiffPort, Alesis IO Dock
• iRig, iRig HD


Monday, October 2, 2017

How To Play See What A Fool I've Been Queen Guitar Lesson





How To Play See What A Fool I've Been Queen Guitar Lesson (Guitar Tab)



In this guitar lesson video we look at the Queen B Side See What A Fool I've Been a blues driven song based on E - B - A chord progression. We look at guitar intro as well as verse chorus and the licks used. As for the solo we look at the chord progression and may some time in the future looked at the guitar solo's "See What A Fool I've Been" was the B-side to Queen's 1974 single "Seven Seas of Rhye". It was inspired by "That's How I Feel", a blues song by Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee. Originally released in 1974,[citation needed] it was re-released in 1991 as one of the bonus tracks on the re-release of Queen II. It was described as "a slow crawl that's the closest Queen ever came to blues" The "Seven Seas of Rhye" single featured the first of several non-album B-sides released during Queen's recording career. This song dated from the pre-Queen band Smile. Brian May heard the song "The Way I Feel" by Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee on a TV program, but at the time he never caught the name of the song or band. He remembered the riff and some lyrics and brought them to the band, then proceeded to write "See What A Fool I've Been" around it. It was not recorded until the Queen II sessions, though it was a live staple since Queen's formation. The B-side version features a vocal delivery from Freddie Mercury that could be best described as burlesque in nature, rather than the more straightforward delivery of the live and BBC versions which were officially released in 2011. Also, there are lyric changes between the B-side, BBC and live versions (with references to a "train to Georgia" and a "Greyhound bus at dawn" not heard in B-side version, whereas the live versions have no "sailor boy" or "barking dog" lyrics). The reason for these differences has never been explained. In 2004, May was contacted by a fan who had discovered which song "See What A Fool I've Been" had been based on, as it had long been a mystery. May officially confirmed "The Way I Feel" as the inspiration after the fan sent him the recently released CD containing the song (along with a note explaining how it was tracked down by looking up song lyrics rather than listening to every recording by Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee). The explanation of the song's history appears on the February 2004 Soapbox entry of May's official website. May said he planned to contact their estates to work out the long-overdue royalty issues. Video by James Rundle of Rock Licks Guitar Tuition in South Shields https://www.rock-licks.com