How To Solo On Guitar
 Learning how to solo on guitar is about the most rewarding
aspect of playing guitar that you can do. Once you have been playing guitar for awhile and
are pretty smooth on your chord changes, it's only
natural to want to be able to play some lead guitar. Soloing on guitar lets you express your feelings and
emotions.
What You Need To Know
Soloing on guitar is also known as improvisation, because that is exactly what you'll be doing,
improvising. In order to do this you will need to learn at least some basic scales. The pentatonic and the blues scale
are the most common scales used. If you are serious about learning how to solo on guitar you will need to
practice the scales you learn daily. Know them frontward and backwards. Learn how to play them in different
keys. This is going to be the basis of your solos. The best way to learn the scales you need is to find a good
lead guitar program and follow it. I have some reviews on some really good programs, check them out.
How To Practice Soloing
Learning how to solo on guitar is not a cut and dry thing. You need to learn and practice guitar scales
in order to train your fingers and your ears. However, guitar scale patterns don't make for a memorable solo.
A guitar solo needs to say something.
One approach is the question and answer. Try playing a short phrase, and then play a short phrase to
answer it.
Another approach is to come up with a musical phrase in your head and then try to pick it out one note
at a time.
Soloing by yourself can get pretty boring and it can be hard to put any feeling into it without some
rhythm to play along to. The best thing to have is some backing tracks to play along with. Any decent lead
guitar course will have backing tracks included. Another great way to practice is to record yourself playing
some rhythm and then you can jam with yourself.
Techniques for how to solo on guitar
There are a lot of different techniques used to create the feeling in a guitar solo. Some of
the more common ones you'll want to learn are vibrato, slide, bend, hammer-on, pull-off, trill, and tapping.
Make the different techniques you learn a part of your daily practice routine along with your scales and you'll
be well on your way to creating some awesome solos.
The Most Important tip for how to solo
on guitar
"We all have idols. Play
like anyone you care about but try to be yourself while doing so" ~B.B. King
Some of the most memorable solos have been done using only four or five different notes.
It's all about the feeling. A good solo needs to be expressed with your soul. Anybody can learn the notes to
one of Carlos Santanas' solos, but only Carlos can make it sound the way it does. Everybody is different. You
want your solos to be an expression of you. That doesn't mean you can't learn from the great players. Listen to
what they do with their notes. What kind of techniques they use, but apply your feel. So if you're ready to
learn how to solo on guitar, get a good program and practice, practice, practice. Check out some of these fine
programs. Rock on.

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