people always say the master of puppets solo is easy, but I could never do it fast enough. makes me never want to pick up my guitar again, but i do, and still try, 24 years later. just wasn't meant to be a solo player i guess.
1986...trying to learn guitar using a Sony boom box. Rewind, play. Rewind, play. Rewind, play. Kids today have no idea how lucky they are to have the phenomenal resource of UA-cam! This channel is worth a subscription!
I used to play Bark at 3-5 (3rd and 4th strings, the 5th power chord) 3-4 (flatted 5th) 3-7 (minor 7) back to 3-4 (flatted fifth)... Not correct but easy position wise but at speed is nearly imperceptible as it's still a minor 7 just up an octave! Life made easy axeslinger style!
I learned Bark at the Moon when it first came out. I spent many, many hours hunched over a turn table trying to figure out what he was doing. It was crystal clear Jake was not your typical power chord player. There was A LOT going on in his playing. It was very, very difficult to figure him out because he was using a lot of chord inversions and weird sequences. In many ways, Jake's musical knowledge was just as advanced as Randy's.
Bark at the Moon has some of the best riffs and interesting song structure. I wish you would continue and break down the entire song, solo, and outro solo!! Subscribed and liked...thanks Ben!
When you’re just starting to play Jakes stuff as a guitar novice, there’s ALOT of unfamiliar chord shapes. A lot of uncomfortable stretches and a lot of difficult transitions. But Jake has inspired me to pick the guitar back up for the first time in over a decade. The man is a legend and a guitar genius
5:23 I just wanted to mention, instead of having to do that unneeded stretch between the 10 - 5th fret, you can substitute that 5th fret on the 4th string with 10th fret on the 5th string, it really doesn’t sound any different. It is actually a classic blues chord. Jake always likes to show off with long stretches but I’ve seen him play it live with the Red Dragon Cartel and he even stumbles on it sometimes. I always say work smarter, not harder. I don’t have a very long pinky either, so the way I play it sounds exactly the same but easier to play. Cheers
@@stevejohnston8543 same but you can almost always find another way to play it. Thats why i hate playing hot for teacher, my left hand is totally fried after the intro riff
@@sebastiancamillusnielsen228 Ya we have to make do but it would be nice, like when playing the intro to diary of a madman. Some of those chord shapes make me strain.
you're the only guitarist teaching that has ever showed how to play something slow enough to comprehend. perfect camera set up. you're awesome brother. thank you. I've always loved this riff.
This lesson certainly breaks it down better than any other here on YT. Jake is definitely one of the most underrated guitar player out there. It's interesting to me how things look complicated when he plays them but, it actually simplifies things and keeps you in the right position. Or where you would want to be relative to what you're playing. I think it was this same thinking that lead him to the "Jake E Lee" tuning. Great lesson! Thank you!
I saw Jake explaining his way a while back, never bothered to re-learn until now. Thanks Ben! I found that descending chord sequence easier to play for me by barring the D, G and B strings at the 10th fret with my index, then shifting down to the 9th and adding my pinky back to the 10th fret on the G and B. The position shift felt easier than using either my pinky for the 10th or adding my third like you do at 6.41. Great lesson!
Fairly midblowing revelation. I've been listening to those riffs since they came out and to figure out and hear such a powerful detail after all this time...pretty cool, thanks Ben.
There was a video awhile back with Gus G where he shows the way Jake played it (that opening riff part everyone gets wrong), and Gus shows the way he preferred it. Looks identical to what you've shown here. Accurate from what I can tell.
ruling, BEN! I love when players can recognize the subtleties and nuances when transcribing music. I am by no means a very skilled player, but I have an ear for tone and key. I'm very into playing something exact, down to the happy accidents and color that finger switching can do over the frets. Awesome work- I look forward to watching many more of your videos!!!
True confessions time: as a kid I used to just play two-string fifths for the stab chords. Wow there’s so much more sophistication to Jake’s playing than I ever knew back in the 80s.
Ben - Ive learned so much from you videos - its ridiculous. Not only are you are phenominal teacher but a stupendous guitar player. I have so much respect and admiration. Thank you so much Dr Paul Mulvany RPh PharmD
You can really see why Stephen Pearcy was so destroyed when Jake quit RATT to join Dio. Pearcy thought his band was finished...Then Warren DeMartini walked in, and his worries were over.
True. Jake mentions that before he quitted RATT he personally recommended Warren Demartini as a replacement. Thought one of his main reasons for quitting the band was Percy's drunk antics on stage, like forgetting lyrics and stuff. And after Robbin Crosby joined them, Jake mentions that it wasn't his thing being in a band with two guitar players.
Ben, you are unbelievable! Showed me how off I was when I thought I was close. You are bad ass!! Wish I could slow down some parts or maybe with tabs. Keep it going brother!
Well holy hell, now I need to brush up on my Bark At The Moon riffs. I absolutely LOVE all of the little changes Jake puts into this song. Like that riff at 12:41, where he doesn't play it the same way each time around. It's crazy. Probably why it's such an interesting song all around, alongside just sounding so damn good.
You're awesome. As a miserable bassist trying to learn a propper instrument, I enjoy your videos. No nonsense, no over the top screaming and forced comedy nonsense like others. Well done.
Today I thought "I think I'll learn the guitar part for Ozzy's Bark at the Moon". Five minutes into the video...realised I was so out of my league..and this is the easy part! :-D Nice work though, brother. I appreciate that you're making it as easy as it gets (and authentic too...checked your finger work against Jake's own demo of it...I guess you did too!)
Ben - I've been playing for 30+ years and, thanks to some nerve damage, developed a slightly different way to play that huge stretch chord. I barre the 2nd and 3rd strings like you showed (with my ring finger) but use my middle finger to play the 4th string, sliding from 10th to 9th fret, then lifting it off and playing the 5th string tenth fret while using it to mute the 4th string. It sounds more complicated than it is. After a minute or two of practice I could play it as cleanly as that five fret stretch. It might come in handy for any of your students with nerve damage (like myself) or smaller hands. Thanks for the inspiration.
Thnx Ben! I saw Jake explaining some of this in a video. I’m so happy that I found you because There are no teachers where I live that explain this so well as you do! Super👍👍👍🎸🎸😉
Thank you! Learning guitar still, amateur at best and I can't thank you enough for this. It's so difficult to learn a song the proper way it's played, and give it that genuine sound.
I just subscribed to your channel..I started playing 3 years ago and I am finally ready to start this lesson ..it's a great way to stretch fingers and learn chord progression..a holy grail of songs ..I saw that Jake e Lee video on how to play it ..I must learn his way ..this video is killer
You got that right! Perfect structure on the main solo! Tasty controlled licks building the drama up to the insane orgasmic crescendo! Should be a case study in any rock guitar class!
For once...I was actually doing something correctly but now I'm trying to recall how I learned it that way in the first place; it was before Jake's video on it so someone had it right. I was getting discouraged seeing people play it other ways and trying to emulate that too for a while. Thanks for the videos.
I thought for so many years that I was playing it right because I learned it from the guitar world magazine; the edition that covered Dimebag's death, but it was actually transcribed by Gus G. Which I didn't realize he was transcribing his version. I stumbled on Jake E Lee's video a few months ago and had to re-train myself immediately cause it made so much sense and sounds so much more accurate. Thank you for bring this out to attention cause even Jake was upset at the inaccuracies.
I saw this video earlier but at the time it didn't occur to me how life changing it is to know how to play that last bit. Thank you so much lol - you demonstrating this riff led me to pick up guitar for the first time in like 10 years. Finally I know why I could never really pin down the exact sound of this riff.
One of the best metal songs ever written... and one of my favorite solos of all time too! Ozzy at the top of his game, "Screams break the silence..." Thanks Ben, A+ for song choice! Now if I hit it hard maybe I can fake my way though 90% of it after a couple months... lol.
Jake has been a super underestimated guitarist, due in part to the tendency to compare him to his predecessor, Randy Rhoads. In my opinion, Jake, like Randy, is a genius of the guitar.
I learned it by ear... And have been playing that way. Cool. I never had a tuner or a lesson. I learned how to play it on a beat up acoustic I found in a ditch. I just kind of figured it out... I just use the main chords and sing it countryish. My neighbor jammed this tape in his truck all the time. I asked him...whats making the sound.. He said thats called a guitar. I found one in a ditch...and he didn't know crap about how to play one. Except just strumming some strings. I had to figure out the tuning. A few weeks later I was where your at. Then I converted it to chords so I could sing it while playing and added to it in a way that's more banjo I haven't played a guitar in years. But it was something to do for a few weeks.
I was researching this tab cuz when I saw that a lot of tabs had 5 10 10 and I thought it was a funny chord, then I came to this video and realized that the verse last chords are different from the intro chords. good job on this video
That's funny Ben, I was playing it similarly to the way you were playing and been playing that way since that album came out. Then I saw that video of Jake explaining it("the mystery chords"). Jake has to be one of the most clever guitar players around! He's always been one my favorite guitar players and then Badlands came around, whoa, blew my mind!
Thanks Ben. Please teach the outro soon. I was playing this riff so wrong it was actually a different and much worse song. I can't wait to see how I butchered the outro.
Superb guitar playing and a great lesson. I was confused before this. My son asked me if I could play the Bark at the Moon intro. This will solve the problem. Thank you.
A lot of cover bands love to do that one around here, and a couple of my buddies can really nail it. I"ve never attempted it, but I love to play I Don't Know and Crazy Babies. Well, if I attempt it, I'll return back to here, home schooled Uncle Ben You rip man, I like it. Have a great day :D
You gotta do shot in the dark too. Every tab and cover I've ever seen has you tune up the e and a strings. Its played in standard (well Eb) there's videos of him playing it with red dragon cartel to show the right way to play it.
@Bhaskar Yadav Yeah man, i noticed his fretting hand going all over the place during Shot In The Dark when he played it after coming back, check out one of his RDC's live performances from 2015 or 2014, he's playing it in standard tuning! Jake's such a freak, so much facility over the instrument, even now that he's old with messed up hands and wrists.
Strong work brother!! I remember when this came out. Thanks for making a classic iconic riff easy to understand and play for an older beginner. Ha Thanks for the lesson.
Jake E Lee is a very underrated guitarist. When he joined us he's band right after the Randy Rhodes tragedy, people were very upset and very close-minded about his abilities. He was and is every bit the guitarist that Randy Rhoads was, probably more so with his riffing as you can see in this demo!
Instead of the pinky barre, 3rd finger on second string f, 2nd finger on first string A, 1st finger shifts C-B-open G on 3rd string. Same voicing, more stable fingering with no stretch. You could also finger the first chord 2-4-3 from strings 3 to 1 and use the 4th finger as a guide to get into the G5 chord
Great job. Excellent teaching style. I saw the same video but never applied or memorized it. If I’m not mistaken in the same video he also talks about how the part before the chorus is often played wrong starting on the F sharp minor. Perhaps you could cover that. Cheers.
Thank you all so much for learning the real way to play Bark at the Moon! What other classic riffs/solos have stumped you?
Rock and roll rebel!!
А играете переменный штрих в гитару, или параллельно?
T Jensen Yom o'Mynchen ua-cam.com/video/EI9q0rh8RNM/v-deo.html
How about Dokkens In My Dreams Solo?
people always say the master of puppets solo is easy, but I could never do it fast enough. makes me never want to pick up my guitar again, but i do, and still try, 24 years later. just wasn't meant to be a solo player i guess.
1986...trying to learn guitar using a Sony boom box. Rewind, play. Rewind, play. Rewind, play. Kids today have no idea how lucky they are to have the phenomenal resource of UA-cam!
This channel is worth a subscription!
Couldn’t you have posted this 25 years ago
Furryz Pardon my disregard for your perfectly adequate joke, but UA-cam wasn’t a thing twenty-five years ago.
@@KHighton1 vhs bro
Years spent in torment.
@@KHighton1 That's no excuse!
I used to play Bark at 3-5 (3rd and 4th strings, the 5th power chord) 3-4 (flatted 5th) 3-7 (minor 7) back to 3-4 (flatted fifth)... Not correct but easy position wise but at speed is nearly imperceptible as it's still a minor 7 just up an octave! Life made easy axeslinger style!
...great job ...Jake E Lee has never gonna enough credit...
I fully agree. Jacke E Lee never got the credit he deserved he was a great guitarist and I saw him live with Ozzy at the bark of the Moon tour.
oh bullshit
I learned Bark at the Moon when it first came out. I spent many, many hours hunched over a turn table trying to figure out what he was doing. It was crystal clear Jake was not your typical power chord player. There was A LOT going on in his playing. It was very, very difficult to figure him out because he was using a lot of chord inversions and weird sequences. In many ways, Jake's musical knowledge was just as advanced as Randy's.
Some new vinyl enthusiast just bought your old Ozzy record and can’t figure out why it sounds so bad coming out of his stereo!
More sophisticated I'd say.
I respect ur opinion and i also respect jack was a good guitarist...but in no way shape or form jack is above or in level with randy...
Same here bro!
well Rhoads and Jake had similar knowledge I agree
this is one of the most fantastic songs ever recorded. Jake was and is a phenom!
Bark at the Moon has some of the best riffs and interesting song structure. I wish you would continue and break down the entire song, solo, and outro solo!! Subscribed and liked...thanks Ben!
When you’re just starting to play Jakes stuff as a guitar novice, there’s ALOT of unfamiliar chord shapes. A lot of uncomfortable stretches and a lot of difficult transitions. But Jake has inspired me to pick the guitar back up for the first time in over a decade. The man is a legend and a guitar genius
5:23 I just wanted to mention, instead of having to do that unneeded stretch between the 10 - 5th fret, you can substitute that 5th fret on the 4th string with 10th fret on the 5th string, it really doesn’t sound any different. It is actually a classic blues chord. Jake always likes to show off with long stretches but I’ve seen him play it live with the Red Dragon Cartel and he even stumbles on it sometimes. I always say work smarter, not harder. I don’t have a very long pinky either, so the way I play it sounds exactly the same but easier to play. Cheers
Great idea flashy, both G notes, should sound the same.
thats what i do, cant stretch that far at that speed
@@sebastiancamillusnielsen228 Ya really wish I had longer fingers
@@stevejohnston8543 same but you can almost always find another way to play it. Thats why i hate playing hot for teacher, my left hand is totally fried after the intro riff
@@sebastiancamillusnielsen228 Ya we have to make do but it would be nice, like when playing the intro to diary of a madman. Some of those chord shapes make me strain.
a tutorial with such level of details is hard to find, great work man !
You teach me so much Uncle Ben, your channel is one of the best here on YT
Thank you SOOOOO much. I always knew that most of the tabs out there were wrong. They never sounded right. This puts it to rest. Greatly appreciated!
you're the only guitarist teaching that has ever showed how to play something slow enough to comprehend. perfect camera set up. you're awesome brother. thank you. I've always loved this riff.
Jake is soooooo unusual in his chord phrasings & such a brutal attack in his picking hand! luv Jake!!!!!!!
5:59
The most metal of all chords 🤘
This lesson certainly breaks it down better than any other here on YT. Jake is definitely one of the most underrated guitar player out there. It's interesting to me how things look complicated when he plays them but, it actually simplifies things and keeps you in the right position. Or where you would want to be relative to what you're playing. I think it was this same thinking that lead him to the "Jake E Lee" tuning. Great lesson! Thank you!
I saw Jake explaining his way a while back, never bothered to re-learn until now. Thanks Ben! I found that descending chord sequence easier to play for me by barring the D, G and B strings at the 10th fret with my index, then shifting down to the 9th and adding my pinky back to the 10th fret on the G and B. The position shift felt easier than using either my pinky for the 10th or adding my third like you do at 6.41. Great lesson!
Well done! Not a bunch of babble. Straight to the point. Love that you are quick with explanations. 2,4,4..to explain cords. Awesome.
Fairly midblowing revelation. I've been listening to those riffs since they came out and to figure out and hear such a powerful detail after all this time...pretty cool, thanks Ben.
There was a video awhile back with Gus G where he shows the way Jake played it (that opening riff part everyone gets wrong), and Gus shows the way he preferred it. Looks identical to what you've shown here. Accurate from what I can tell.
ruling, BEN! I love when players can recognize the subtleties and nuances when transcribing music. I am by no means a very skilled player, but I have an ear for tone and key. I'm very into playing something exact, down to the happy accidents and color that finger switching can do over the frets. Awesome work- I look forward to watching many more of your videos!!!
Now that he's found what he's looking for.
Listen in awe as you hear him ... play Bark at the moon!
True confessions time: as a kid I used to just play two-string fifths for the stab chords. Wow there’s so much more sophistication to Jake’s playing than I ever knew back in the 80s.
Ben - Ive learned so much from you videos - its ridiculous. Not only are you are phenominal teacher but a stupendous guitar player. I have so much respect and admiration. Thank you so much
Dr Paul Mulvany RPh PharmD
Thanks for sharing the riffs, your teaching technique is easy to follow, very clear....you "nailed" it!!!!!!
You can really see why Stephen Pearcy was so destroyed when Jake quit RATT to join Dio. Pearcy thought his band was finished...Then Warren DeMartini walked in, and his worries were over.
True. Jake mentions that before he quitted RATT he personally recommended Warren Demartini as a replacement. Thought one of his main reasons for quitting the band was Percy's drunk antics on stage, like forgetting lyrics and stuff. And after Robbin Crosby joined them, Jake mentions that it wasn't his thing being in a band with two guitar players.
Uncle ben can you do a lesson on the solo for this song,that would be just plain killer 😁😁😁
Chris Laverne
Haha sup bro. Timmy here.
Chris Zoupa has one if you're interested
Dao Yang haha heyyyyy what up timmyy,hella funny you watch ben eller too haha
tommywho924 i didnt know he made one,ill go check it out
Chris Laverne
Haha!!! I've been watching Ben Eller since high school haha!!
Bark at the moon gave jake his seat at the round table of riff masters for sure. Definitely one of metals greatest riffs.
You know it’s a good riff when it still sounds rad at half speed!
Ben, you are unbelievable! Showed me how off I was when I thought I was close. You are bad ass!! Wish I could slow down some parts or maybe with tabs. Keep it going brother!
Well holy hell, now I need to brush up on my Bark At The Moon riffs.
I absolutely LOVE all of the little changes Jake puts into this song. Like that riff at 12:41, where he doesn't play it the same way each time around. It's crazy.
Probably why it's such an interesting song all around, alongside just sounding so damn good.
You're awesome. As a miserable bassist trying to learn a propper instrument, I enjoy your videos. No nonsense, no over the top screaming and forced comedy nonsense like others. Well done.
Excellent video, Ben. Explanations and demos are clear and concise (and witty as usual).
Uncle Ben, you kick ass! Thank you so much for this and all your other videos of course!
Today I thought "I think I'll learn the guitar part for Ozzy's Bark at the Moon". Five minutes into the video...realised I was so out of my league..and this is the easy part! :-D
Nice work though, brother. I appreciate that you're making it as easy as it gets (and authentic too...checked your finger work against Jake's own demo of it...I guess you did too!)
Ben - I've been playing for 30+ years and, thanks to some nerve damage, developed a slightly different way to play that huge stretch chord. I barre the 2nd and 3rd strings like you showed (with my ring finger) but use my middle finger to play the 4th string, sliding from 10th to 9th fret, then lifting it off and playing the 5th string tenth fret while using it to mute the 4th string. It sounds more complicated than it is. After a minute or two of practice I could play it as cleanly as that five fret stretch. It might come in handy for any of your students with nerve damage (like myself) or smaller hands. Thanks for the inspiration.
Thnx Ben! I saw Jake explaining some of this in a video. I’m so happy that I found you because There are no teachers where I live that explain this so well as you do! Super👍👍👍🎸🎸😉
That Jake E Lee playing this riff, is one of the best ever.... he is a genius.....thanks for clearing things up....
Thanks, Ben. I've been wanting to break down that Jake E clinic video, but you did all the heavy lifting. Awesome!
Thank you! Learning guitar still, amateur at best and I can't thank you enough for this. It's so difficult to learn a song the proper way it's played, and give it that genuine sound.
I just subscribed to your channel..I started playing 3 years ago and I am finally ready to start this lesson ..it's a great way to stretch fingers and learn chord progression..a holy grail of songs ..I saw that Jake e Lee video on how to play it ..I must learn his way ..this video is killer
I’m guessing you saw that UA-cam video of Jake showing how people are playing this riff incorrectly. One of the best riffs ever written.
Not only is the BATM riff one of the greatest ever written, the solos in BATM are beyond epic.
You got that right! Perfect structure on the main solo! Tasty controlled licks building the drama up to the insane orgasmic crescendo! Should be a case study in any rock guitar class!
I watched that a while ago just to see. Even after using the same fingerings, i don't sound anything like him. LOL
Agreed. This riff is amazing, and his picking is impeccable, almost beyond belief.
Seen that video..Jake went thru it to fast for me.
It's truely testament to Jake. E. Lee's creativity to incorporate "The Horns" into his composition.
Your channel is awesome! Thanks for clearing this up, I've been playing this wrong for 15 years.
For once...I was actually doing something correctly but now I'm trying to recall how I learned it that way in the first place; it was before Jake's video on it so someone had it right. I was getting discouraged seeing people play it other ways and trying to emulate that too for a while. Thanks for the videos.
Excellent video. Guess I will be re-learning this one.
Wow, there's more to that song than you'd think. I didn't notice them either until you pointed them out. Thanks.
Love me some Uncle Ben's..nailed it. Thanks again and again and again..
I thought for so many years that I was playing it right because I learned it from the guitar world magazine; the edition that covered Dimebag's death, but it was actually transcribed by Gus G. Which I didn't realize he was transcribing his version. I stumbled on Jake E Lee's video a few months ago and had to re-train myself immediately cause it made so much sense and sounds so much more accurate. Thank you for bring this out to attention cause even Jake was upset at the inaccuracies.
i really appreciate the lesson bro! kept looking at the tabs online and it never sounded right. keep up the great work and keep rockin’
truly excellent breakdown and expert analysis ... thanks so much for taking the time to do this
I saw this video earlier but at the time it didn't occur to me how life changing it is to know how to play that last bit. Thank you so much lol - you demonstrating this riff led me to pick up guitar for the first time in like 10 years. Finally I know why I could never really pin down the exact sound of this riff.
Honestly a beautiful and interestingly engaging chord progression, especially for 1983.
One of the best metal songs ever written... and one of my favorite solos of all time too! Ozzy at the top of his game, "Screams break the silence..." Thanks Ben, A+ for song choice! Now if I hit it hard maybe I can fake my way though 90% of it after a couple months... lol.
Some of the best guitar instruction I've seen! Thanks man.
I don't even play guitar, but I'm loving uncle Ben's lessons! :)
Great job! Jake very underrated...his Badlands stuff is also legendary
"under rated" LMFAO ok... where do you people come from?
Ben you are the coolest Uncle ever! Thanks for all the pissed vids sir!
Great video!! Love the Zappa pic in the back!
Jake has been a super underestimated guitarist, due in part to the tendency to compare him to his predecessor, Randy Rhoads. In my opinion, Jake, like Randy, is a genius of the guitar.
No because he was of an asian descent.
Believe it!
I learned it by ear...
And have been playing that way.
Cool.
I never had a tuner or a lesson.
I learned how to play it on a beat up acoustic I found in a ditch.
I just kind of figured it out...
I just use the main chords and sing it countryish.
My neighbor jammed this tape in his truck all the time.
I asked him...whats making the sound..
He said thats called a guitar.
I found one in a ditch...and he didn't know crap about how to play one.
Except just strumming some strings.
I had to figure out the tuning.
A few weeks later I was where your at.
Then I converted it to chords so I could sing it while playing and added to it in a way that's more banjo
I haven't played a guitar in years.
But it was something to do for a few weeks.
I was researching this tab cuz when I saw that a lot of tabs had 5 10 10 and I thought it was a funny chord, then I came to this video and realized that the verse last chords are different from the intro chords. good job on this video
I really appreciate the precision of your explanations. Those mystery chords were my nightmares... Until today. Tks
That's funny Ben, I was playing it similarly to the way you were playing and been playing that way since that album came out. Then I saw that video of Jake explaining it("the mystery chords"). Jake has to be one of the most clever guitar players around! He's always been one
my favorite guitar players and then Badlands came around, whoa, blew my mind!
How about "Never" off The Ultimate Sin, Jake E Less is a monster. Like this those licks are crazy.
Thanks Ben. Please teach the outro soon. I was playing this riff so wrong it was actually a different and much worse song. I can't wait to see how I butchered the outro.
I Love how MAD he was in that video when he talked about this. It was quite humorous lol.
hmm the clinic in 2014 ? didnt seem mad 2 me.
Really great tutorial! Really like the way you explain and demonstrate!
Smooth as always uncle ben ! good lesson, can't wait to learn this solo correctly, might be stuck on step dad speed for awhile
Bro! Your right hand is a freakin metronome! Thanks man!
I watch a lot of your stuff but .....man I have a new respect for Jake e lee
Superb guitar playing and a great lesson. I was confused before this. My son asked me if I could play the Bark at the Moon intro. This will solve the problem. Thank you.
Haha!! Diggin' the step dad speed. Thanks for the lesson. I saw an interview not long ago that he was explaining how everyone was playing it wrong.
A lot of cover bands love to do that one around here, and a couple of my buddies can really nail it. I"ve never attempted it, but I love to play I Don't Know and Crazy Babies. Well, if I attempt it, I'll return back to here, home schooled Uncle Ben You rip man, I like it. Have a great day :D
David Parry I don't know is REALLY fun to play.
Love the way you teach man!
Glad to hear it!
This channel is a freaking GEM! Glad I found it 👊
Thank you for this lesson. Alot of cool things happening in this song.
You gotta do shot in the dark too. Every tab and cover I've ever seen has you tune up the e and a strings. Its played in standard (well Eb) there's videos of him playing it with red dragon cartel to show the right way to play it.
Bhaskar Yadav wrong.
I saw that one too. Crazy.
Jake is so original, love it!
@Bhaskar Yadav He did back in Ozzy, but since his comeback with RDC i've seen Jake play that in standard tuning! Master.
@Bhaskar Yadav Yeah man, i noticed his fretting hand going all over the place during Shot In The Dark when he played it after coming back, check out one of his RDC's live performances from 2015 or 2014, he's playing it in standard tuning!
Jake's such a freak, so much facility over the instrument, even now that he's old with messed up hands and wrists.
Hell yeah I gotta learn it the right way now. Thanks brother
Strong work brother!! I remember when this came out. Thanks for making a classic iconic riff easy to understand
and play for an older beginner. Ha
Thanks for the lesson.
Thanks for this. Been working on BATM and this helps incredibly. You rock dude keep it up. Subbed you.
Do a lesson on Jake E Lee's guitar solo for the song Fool Like You off the Ozzy Ultimate Sin album. It's a proper monster.
You stopped at the chorus. Such a tease. :p
More More More! Show us all those killer chorus licks and non-tremolo dive bombs. :D
Jake E Lee really has a novel approach to guitar - it's awesome how you explained it.
As always, great stuff.
Wowzer great stuff Uncle Ben😎😎😎😎👍👍👍👍🎸🎸🎸🎸
Jake E Lee is a very underrated guitarist. When he joined us he's band right after the Randy Rhodes tragedy, people were very upset and very close-minded about his abilities. He was and is every bit the guitarist that Randy Rhoads was, probably more so with his riffing as you can see in this demo!
awesome. great video, great lesson, Ben. \m/
I can't "like" this enough. Great job, Ben!
Uncle ben can you please look at Dyer's Eve fast riff. every tab I looked for is different from each other
damn gotta learn this the right way, thanks Ben!
Perfect playing - wow!
Love how you cover all the shit that we all want to know how to play. Just saw your piece on Turn Up the Radio solo. Thanks dude!
Instead of the pinky barre, 3rd finger on second string f, 2nd finger on first string A, 1st finger shifts C-B-open G on 3rd string. Same voicing, more stable fingering with no stretch. You could also finger the first chord 2-4-3 from strings 3 to 1 and use the 4th finger as a guide to get into the G5 chord
Thank you for this humble service sir. I appreciate it thank you.
Wow...you nailed it. I have butchered this song ever since I saw this tour. Thanks a bunch.
Great lesson. Jake E. Lee is so underrated.
This is the best song to know how to really play correct. Step-Dads everywhere appreciate!! 👍🏼🎉🎶
Great job. Excellent teaching style. I saw the same video but never applied or memorized it. If I’m not mistaken in the same video he also talks about how the part before the chorus is often played wrong starting on the F sharp minor. Perhaps you could cover that. Cheers.
Shoutout to Ben. Jake in interview mentions Ben as one of the few who play it right