0:57 - 10 Years Gone (Led Zeppelin) - Novo Serus (Tele bridge, P90 neck) - second half (descending thirds) is kind of a 'hand twister'. I like to play both guitar parts from 'Take Me Out' (Franz Ferdinand) at the same time for the same reason. 3:07 - Message in a Bottle (The Police) - Novo Serus (Tele bridge, P90 neck) - great for stretching the left hand fingers (dexterity) 4:33 - Cissy Strut (The Meters) - Novo Serus (dual P90) - a 'must' for funk players, timing (laid-back 'in the pocket') is essential for the riff 6:20 - Money (Pink Floyd) - Strat - odd meter (7/4) + the arpeggiated chords (doubled bass line) have some bounce & swing 8:19 - Just Got Paid (ZZ Top) - Les Paul - alternate picking and string skipping, can be done in the open position or 5th position (or open E) 9:58 - I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For (U2) - Strat - using effects as part of the sound (dotted 8th delay), has some voice leading too 12:49 - Money for Nothing (Dire Straits) - Les Paul - fingerstyle technique incl. walking bassline using the thumb, timing & feel are crucial 14:40 - Killing in the Name (Rage Against the Machine) - Strat - percussive picking in between the notes to give a funky feel, pocket playing (just behind the beat) with thoe 16:23 - Barracuda (Heart) - Strat - upbeat, galloping shuffle riff while palm muting 18:02 - Third Stone from the Sun (original by Jimi Hendrix, Gary Clark Jr. version) - Strat - playing a melody up the neck where the notes have a different timbre, major third interval made huge thanks to the fuzz Damn those Novo Serus make me want something with P90's again... Very nice list, Rhett. I love the focus on different techniques and subtleties we should spend more time being aware of. This really fits in my current journey of abandoning high-gain riffing and going back to the guitar as the nuanced, multi-layered and exceedingly versatile instrument that it is.
I find it interesting that he used a Strat for Killing In the Name considering that Morello exclusively uses a tele for drop d riffs lol (yeah I know you switched to the novo with that tele pickup but just something I wanted to point out)
Layla was first nice riff that I ever got correct, I got better after that, then Hey Hey, then nothing else matters and little wing. Hot Rod Lincoln is a good one too but I still can’t really play it TBH. Lol.
That cherry sunburst Les Paul is gorgeous. Money for Nothing is classic, but not my favorite Dire Straits song. You can do an entire "riff lesson" using Sultans of Swing alone. I think that song is a compendium of every riff technique ever played.
Message in the bottle for smaller hands: for the first three phrases of the four "finger stretchers" you can just play the 5th, 4th and 2nd string! I still struggle the the 4 note 4th phrase though.
John Mayer trio's Good Love Is On The Way. Super fun to learn, and it really challenged me to start playing guitar as a rhythm and lead instrument at the same time.
I am so glad he said Money for Nothing is the most difficult. It looks so easy to play and I have tried a few times and gotten close, but that song is not easy.
It's the reason brothers in arms sold millions imo, the other songs on that album are boring by comparison. Graceland is a far more interesting album of that time, Making Movies also has great riffs.
As a worship guitarist…. Yes. You have to be very skilled in the use of effects of all kinds. I use delay of all sorts in every set, always reverbs blended together at different levels, POG, chorus at different levels, ya know ha everything. And the dynamics. I love it.
I feel u brother,,,,,been playing in worship services for 3 yrs and feel like I'm barely scratching the surface with these affects,,, worship on my brother!!!
The Jimi/Clark riff is the BOMB!! First riff I picked up just watching you play it, no tab or nothin'!!! Thanks for being an awesome human being and helping me be a better guitar player!!!
When I saw the video title and started the video, my first thought was “I hope he does Ten Years Gone.” I smiled when I discovered it was your first riff. Thanks for the video.
Seriously I've spent 2 days just playing Zepplin and The Meters cause they sound killer and are fun to play. I hope these turn into a series of videos!
A riff that really helped me was the Spirit of Radio, by Rush. The main lick (repeated in the chorus) is a real finger killer. Also, 10 Years Gone is another one that really helped me.
Bit of a list, but these songs helped me with my growth on guitar. Crossroads-Cream/John Mayer/Robert Johnson Houses of The Holy and Oceans- Led Zeppelin Rhiannon- Fleetwood Mac Street Spirit-Radiohead Just Like Heaven-The Cure Fast and Loose- Motorhead Fire- Jimi Hendrix Vertigo-U2 I Wanna Be Your Lover- Prince Misery- Maroon 5 Blackbird- The Beatles
I'm loving this video so much, but, as a fan of U2, I think you missed one important selling feature of that riff (or any Edge riff): Timing!!!!! When you set that dotted 8th delay, you are locked in. As soon as you start speeding up or slowing down, the delay breaks. The whole riff sounds wrong. And, when I'm talking to people about learning guitar, I recommend learning U2 riffs because they are basically enjoyable metronome practice. Timing is so essential to playing any instrument - arguably even more than technique or theory.
And another thing: I find it actually quite hard not to play too many notes, because you hear notes that you haven't actually played. I always end up playing the notes that the delay is already taking care of, thus screwing up the rhythm....
A riff I love is the opening part to A Forest by the Cure. Super sparse, but a great lesson in playing in time with a band. I think it's a great intro to moving around the neck on one string mostly while playing another open the entire time as a pedal point within the context of a solo.
'Electric Funeral' is actually a great song to learn for beginners. Its parts are easily distinguishable from each other and they're all almost doable from the get go with a bit of practice. The opening riffs of 'New Orleans Is Sinking' by The Tragically Hip, as well as the opening riff to early Fleetwood Macs 'Oh Well' taught me a ton.
For me, Yellow Ledbetter by Pearl Jam was a breakthrough song when I was a teenager. It really stretched me and took a long time to learn. It's now part of my guitar shop setlist. 🙉
Yeah, Barracuda really gets your hands moving and focused. Totally agree. Jumping back and forth between the signature rhythm and then the lead lines up the fretboard is really cool too!
Rhett… the proof of how AMAZING your tone is came in when you palm muted the U2 riff. The crispy yet super-round and clear sound that came from that made my jaw drop.
When you started with Ten Years Gone, I knew this list was going to be something special. Then Cissy Strut, most excellent. I liked how each song addressed a different skill. I might add Jessica or Mary Had a Little Lamb. Thanks from Colorado.
yeah--easily the best zep tune no one ever talks about! I spent a month learning and recording all the parts note for note--well, I think I did!--using a mix of ears, tabs and notation. That tune really reveals page's producing genius the way even the smallest part can take a song to the next level...stuff you would NEVER notice without deep listening, slowing down and getting access to the stems.
I never really learned how to play lead because at the time I learned guitar we really just needed a rhythm guitar. Now I'm trying to learn lead and hopefully this video will help with that
I was surprised with some of your choices. Some of these songs don't get the credit they're due. I agree that this is a great list. There is a lot of subtle stuff in many of these songs that slips by most people. I should use this list as my workout for the next year and go through them all, top to bottom, even the ones I've played and really dissect them. Thanks for this!
Great topic, how about extending it to 10 classic guitar riffs by decade? You could start in the 1950s and each video would be a different decade. Also a 10 classic guitar riffs in alternate tunings would be cool as well.
THANK YOU RHETT for showcasing 10 Years Gone.. .it's indeed one of Jimmy's proudest moments and his personal favorite. Mine too! And yet... most casual Zep listeners have never even heard this masterpiece before. Great list Rhett!
so funny--I was literally working on the hendrix rhythm fills on little wing and all along the watchtower--learned all the solos to those and 4 or 5 other must-know Jimi tunes and there are tricky things to be learned from everything he recorded, of course--but his delicate R&B-infused rhythm fills set against the explosive power of his lead breaks for example, really are a huge part of what made jimi such a master of the instrument regardless of genre. Not to mention his insane songwriting. duh. Great list Rhett...It seems like the best way to learn any technique is to learn it cuz you need to learn it to play the tune it lives in.
I’ve learned so many, but recently it’s been Drifting and Power of Soul I’ve made an effort to learn and make my own take on. I’ve used the Hey Baby intro, as a warmup for many many years. The Wind Cries Mary is actually one of the first multiple string solo I learned. The hammer ons have been with me ever since.
@@CorbCorbin yeah wcm is awesome- im more of a jazz blues guy but i have a couple nice strats and i go down very long jimi rabbit holes with them-jimi tunes almost feel like classicsl music to me like u gotta play them note for note…at least before u fuck with them…
A few riffs when I first started and got them down that made me feel good were For Whom the Bell Tolls by Metallica, Anarchy in the UK, Doctor Doctor by UFO, Black Magic Woman Santana, Cocaine by Clapton. Agree with Money by Floyd and Money for Nothing by Dire Straights.
This is an awesome list - there is soooo much depth! It's refreshing to see a "riffs" video that isn't the same 20 riffs we see at the top of every "best guitar songs" list. Thanks Rhett!!!
I’d actually say learn almost ANY Tommy Emmanuel song on the acoustic guitar and translate those techniques over to playing on an electric, and holy moly will you have a different sound than most folks.
A few classic riffs that have improved my playing(and are just some of the best riffs ever): Same of Song and Dance - Aerosmith Jailbreak - Thin Lizzy All Right Now - Free China Grove - Doobie Brothers
In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth 3 by Coheed and Cambria. One of the first songs I learned, and I always come back to it. It’s lengthy, ethereal, and just rocks.
When i discovered the cocked wah and fuzz thing of Money For Nothing combined with the fingerstyle technique it made me want to play it forever. Beside the fact i was a kid when the song came out and it was probably the first to make me think how cool it is be to play a guitar .
For me, ‘Is It For Me?’ by Toad the Wet Sprocket is an important practice song for me that lets me practice skipping strings and muting at the same time. The song ‘Inside’ also by TTWS is a song I use to practice singing and playing lead guitar at the same time. Cheers Rhett!
Call Of Ktulu intro is a great one for learning just how vital it is to planning exact finger placement for setting up the next few notes, considering it has to ring out. Also, in teaching beginners how to arch your fingers so you don't mute the neighboring strings
For something a little simpler but super rewarding is “the rain song” by zeppelin. Also fun to play, and gets you thinking outside the common boxes and shapes.
Great Crosspicking, What a workout, it's remarkable to watch one player jump around like your doing. Honestly, what you do with your right hand is off the scale .Good luck to all.
UFO Rock Bottom is a good one for learning groove, 1/4 note bends, palm muted staccato pedal tones against more breathable notes with a vocal quality, hammer ons, pull offs, passing blues notes...
Great to hear Ten Years Gone leading the list! I play by ear and have always done 3rd Stone From The Sun as octaves - the first song I ever learned to use them on back as a kid in the '70s. I don't know what's technically/officially correct, but another good one of Jimi's for that is Villanova Junction Blues - it gets you switching octave positions quickly across the fretboard.
Ten Years Gone is the song/riff I teach to younger players when I've only got time to help them learn one riff and I know that I won't ever see this person again. There is so much in that one song.
Heart is an underrated band. Nancy and Roger's guitar parts are absolutely mind bending and Ann's voice is one of rock's most powerful ever. Even the 80's ballad era Heart without the original cast is a lot of fun. Great live albums too.
Don’t Fear the Reaper was the riff that taught me how to get your right hand picking and left hand transitions to be in sync in order to have the riff sound clean when you play it. As well as get open strings to ring as you played different notes and you hand changed positions.
Great video, going to work on the ZZ Top. One riff I like is from Def Leppard and the song Let it Go. Has some simple hammer-on’s and bends. Plus it’s a great riff.
Another great Zeppelin song for technique is "The Rover." A fantastic exercise in string bending and arpeggios, not to mention you get to bust out your phaser pedal to boot!
One I use to warm up the fingers, in confined space, is Roy Buchanan's "Cajun". Warms up the fingering and picking hands, and there are even a few squeals to coordinate both. To start moving around a bit more, "Yackety Axe" by Chet Atkins (or "Sax" is how I heard it first), again stretching the right hand, and limbering the left. For double-stops, I use Floyd Kramer's "Last Date", another Country tune, but I'm not so much a C&W player. Another is "Take Five" by Dave Brubeck (Paul Desmond's sax is what I try to emulate). Both "Yackety Axe" and "Take Five" were used as commercial intros and outtros on Chicago Saturday afternoon movies, and I just started playing along...between those 4, a lot of the neck is traversed, as well as picking techniques.
Hendrix taught me pentatonics and Metallica how to move them up and down the neck going in and out of major. Made a whole lot of theory jive at the right times!
Samba pa ti By Carlos Santana, is something that I played a lot and I just love the feel of it. Still got the blues By Gary Moore, is another one that comes to mind. I kinda wish I knew of some of these riffs while having lessons and they would have made me a better player for sure. I still struggle with staying in time, because I just lose myself when I am really into the song.
Great choice on The Police. I was in high school when the Police broke on the scene; but it took me until just a few years ago to realize what a fantastic guitarist Andy Summers is. His playing is super-tasty; and always plays "to the song" which, the longer I play, I realize is much more difficult than a million-notes-per-minute double-tap solo! Oh, and Andy must love those add-9 chord extensions, because he does the same thing in Every Breath You Take! And funk stuff is really fun because (I'm guessing it's easier for horns/horn players) they are often enough in flat key signatures, so it really helps guitarists think and feel their way around the flat side of the Circle.
Yep Rhettman , You nailed it!! 'Ten Years Gone' & 'Message in a Bottle' are perfect examples of great songs as (left hand) exercises . When I learned those riffs (in my twenties), it started to feel like I had crossed over from beginner / novice player to a little more advanced of a musician. Great advice!! I wish I had some of the suggestions , that You are putting out there , when I got more serious about playing etc. Then to include the right hand : ZZ Top ('Just got Paid' in D Standard tuning) and the U2 track --The Edge & like Johnny Marr are finally getting properly noticed , as players to learn from. You & Rick Beato are really a great service to the musical community!! The young people of today , may not know how lucky they are ; and that's o.k. , 'cause I didn't know either (for example , not everyone has a Berklee School of Music graduate , as their neighbor growing up --like I did). Antlers dude..... Good on Ya mate & keep doing what You're doing...
0:57 - 10 Years Gone (Led Zeppelin) - Novo Serus (Tele bridge, P90 neck) - second half (descending thirds) is kind of a 'hand twister'. I like to play both guitar parts from 'Take Me Out' (Franz Ferdinand) at the same time for the same reason.
3:07 - Message in a Bottle (The Police) - Novo Serus (Tele bridge, P90 neck) - great for stretching the left hand fingers (dexterity)
4:33 - Cissy Strut (The Meters) - Novo Serus (dual P90) - a 'must' for funk players, timing (laid-back 'in the pocket') is essential for the riff
6:20 - Money (Pink Floyd) - Strat - odd meter (7/4) + the arpeggiated chords (doubled bass line) have some bounce & swing
8:19 - Just Got Paid (ZZ Top) - Les Paul - alternate picking and string skipping, can be done in the open position or 5th position (or open E)
9:58 - I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For (U2) - Strat - using effects as part of the sound (dotted 8th delay), has some voice leading too
12:49 - Money for Nothing (Dire Straits) - Les Paul - fingerstyle technique incl. walking bassline using the thumb, timing & feel are crucial
14:40 - Killing in the Name (Rage Against the Machine) - Strat - percussive picking in between the notes to give a funky feel, pocket playing (just behind the beat) with thoe
16:23 - Barracuda (Heart) - Strat - upbeat, galloping shuffle riff while palm muting
18:02 - Third Stone from the Sun (original by Jimi Hendrix, Gary Clark Jr. version) - Strat - playing a melody up the neck where the notes have a different timbre, major third interval made huge thanks to the fuzz
Damn those Novo Serus make me want something with P90's again...
Very nice list, Rhett. I love the focus on different techniques and subtleties we should spend more time being aware of. This really fits in my current journey of abandoning high-gain riffing and going back to the guitar as the nuanced, multi-layered and exceedingly versatile instrument that it is.
I had just commented and asked what guitar that was so cheers for that man.
It sounds awesome huh
Thank you!
Thanks for the timestamps and try out Yamaha RS502. It has really nice P90s. I'm thinking of buying one :)
Comment of the year right here.
I find it interesting that he used a Strat for Killing In the Name considering that Morello exclusively uses a tele for drop d riffs lol (yeah I know you switched to the novo with that tele pickup but just something I wanted to point out)
Two riffs that really helped me were the original Layla riff, and Life in the Fast lane. Great riffs and great feeling when you get them close.
Look up “play that riff” on apple music or spotify and a Hendrix song comes up. Early Life in the Fast Lane right there
@@kylemckay94 that sounds familiar
When I first heard Life in the fast lane I thought the riff must be Angus or Malcolm ....boy was I wrong haha!
Just started learning electric and been working on layla the past couple days. Just starting to get it now!
Layla was first nice riff that I ever got correct, I got better after that, then Hey Hey, then nothing else matters and little wing. Hot Rod Lincoln is a good one too but I still can’t really play it TBH. Lol.
Glad to see Ten Years Gone get some love. The riffs in that song are just great
That cherry sunburst Les Paul is gorgeous. Money for Nothing is classic, but not my favorite Dire Straits song. You can do an entire "riff lesson" using Sultans of Swing alone. I think that song is a compendium of every riff technique ever played.
No debate in my mind dire straits takes the top spot forever. Hands down.
Same, bro
The solos from sultans?
Great guitarist, but the songs are generally a bit too boring and way to light to my ears. And I'm not into metal or into heavier music, really.
@@nedim_guitar
Then you need to hear his solo works.
@@xfire301 You're definitely right. I haven't listened to his solo work at all. It might be a little overdue, but nevermind.
Run Like Hell - great use of dotted 8ths and triads.
4:58 "And if you're not hip to The Meters at all, I think you should be". Just checked them out and they're really good.
Leo Nocentelli. What else can I say.
Little wing is what helped me really start putting it together
Message in the bottle for smaller hands: for the first three phrases of the four "finger stretchers" you can just play the 5th, 4th and 2nd string! I still struggle the the 4 note 4th phrase though.
John Mayer trio's Good Love Is On The Way.
Super fun to learn, and it really challenged me to start playing guitar as a rhythm and lead instrument at the same time.
"It's Up To You" by The Moody Blues. Bending one line over top of a drone on the adjacent string, ending with some cool arpeggios. Nice list!
I am so glad he said Money for Nothing is the most difficult. It looks so easy to play and I have tried a few times and gotten close, but that song is not easy.
And then try singing at the same time. :)
@@mdu2112 I know, you really realize the genius.
It's the reason brothers in arms sold millions imo, the other songs on that album are boring by comparison.
Graceland is a far more interesting album of that time, Making Movies also has great riffs.
As a worship guitarist…. Yes. You have to be very skilled in the use of effects of all kinds. I use delay of all sorts in every set, always reverbs blended together at different levels, POG, chorus at different levels, ya know ha everything. And the dynamics. I love it.
I feel u brother,,,,,been playing in worship services for 3 yrs and feel like I'm barely scratching the surface with these affects,,, worship on my brother!!!
@@silasanguiano3796 You too man! I have learned a ton from the highlands worship guys, and from David Hislop at Bethel.
The Jimi/Clark riff is the BOMB!! First riff I picked up just watching you play it, no tab or nothin'!!! Thanks for being an awesome human being and helping me be a better guitar player!!!
When I saw the video title and started the video, my first thought was “I hope he does Ten Years Gone.” I smiled when I discovered it was your first riff. Thanks for the video.
Seriously I've spent 2 days just playing Zepplin and The Meters cause they sound killer and are fun to play. I hope these turn into a series of videos!
A riff that really helped me was the Spirit of Radio, by Rush. The main lick (repeated in the chorus) is a real finger killer. Also, 10 Years Gone is another one that really helped me.
For me the formative song riffs came from Funk 49. Timing and bends and confidence
Thanks Rhett. This was a ton of fun
Riff one fires off.
Me: Yup, this is why I keep tuning in to Rhett.
+1 for the shirt
Bit of a list, but these songs helped me with my growth on guitar.
Crossroads-Cream/John Mayer/Robert Johnson
Houses of The Holy and Oceans- Led Zeppelin
Rhiannon- Fleetwood Mac
Street Spirit-Radiohead
Just Like Heaven-The Cure
Fast and Loose- Motorhead
Fire- Jimi Hendrix
Vertigo-U2
I Wanna Be Your Lover- Prince
Misery- Maroon 5
Blackbird- The Beatles
Limelight would be a good riff to practice I think. The pauses.
One of the best lists I have seen. Mine would be different. But this isn't my list. Great job.
I'm loving this video so much, but, as a fan of U2, I think you missed one important selling feature of that riff (or any Edge riff): Timing!!!!! When you set that dotted 8th delay, you are locked in. As soon as you start speeding up or slowing down, the delay breaks. The whole riff sounds wrong. And, when I'm talking to people about learning guitar, I recommend learning U2 riffs because they are basically enjoyable metronome practice. Timing is so essential to playing any instrument - arguably even more than technique or theory.
Its the kind of guitar music you could easily simulate with a sequencer and probably couldnt tell them apart.
And another thing: I find it actually quite hard not to play too many notes, because you hear notes that you haven't actually played. I always end up playing the notes that the delay is already taking care of, thus screwing up the rhythm....
A riff I love is the opening part to A Forest by the Cure. Super sparse, but a great lesson in playing in time with a band. I think it's a great intro to moving around the neck on one string mostly while playing another open the entire time as a pedal point within the context of a solo.
All great songs to learn. The more I learn to play Jimmy Paiges songs. The more I appreciate him as a song writer. The best
'Electric Funeral' is actually a great song to learn for beginners. Its parts are easily distinguishable from each other and they're all almost doable from the get go with a bit of practice. The opening riffs of 'New Orleans Is Sinking' by The Tragically Hip, as well as the opening riff to early Fleetwood Macs 'Oh Well' taught me a ton.
THE METERS! Thanks, man. How did these guys sneak past me all this time?
Loving all the reactivity of the fuzz on the last riff (including the increased noise floor during the dialogue)! Sonic alchemy at it finest!
You had me at "10 Years Gone".😎🤘
Walk This Way. Not the obvious part, but the funky comp under the vocals in the verse.
For me, Yellow Ledbetter by Pearl Jam was a breakthrough song when I was a teenager. It really stretched me and took a long time to learn. It's now part of my guitar shop setlist. 🙉
One of the greatest songs of all time, my first guitar was a sunburst strat because of mike. Perfect song and never the same live.
Yeah, Barracuda really gets your hands moving and focused. Totally agree. Jumping back and forth between the signature rhythm and then the lead lines up the fretboard is really cool too!
Lenny Kravitz and Slash - Always on the Run.
Rhett… the proof of how AMAZING your tone is came in when you palm muted the U2 riff. The crispy yet super-round and clear sound that came from that made my jaw drop.
When you started with Ten Years Gone, I knew this list was going to be something special. Then Cissy Strut, most excellent. I liked how each song addressed a different skill. I might add Jessica or Mary Had a Little Lamb. Thanks from Colorado.
I always get blown away by how close you get to the original guitar tone of each song. Amazing dude
Riff Raff by AC/DC. This is a breakthru riff for me and one I practice every week or so. The timing is everything
I had their “if you want blood" live lp back in the days and that was one my favorite songs to play along. Whole lotta Rosie was another favorite too!
Ten Years Gone is AMAZING
There sounds like 4 guitars in parts
yeah--easily the best zep tune no one ever talks about! I spent a month learning and recording all the parts note for note--well, I think I did!--using a mix of ears, tabs and notation. That tune really reveals page's producing genius the way even the smallest part can take a song to the next level...stuff you would NEVER notice without deep listening, slowing down and getting access to the stems.
Learn the solo too! It's actually not that hard either. Phaser effect is so cool
@@taylorfarr6 yup-learned the
solo too
There's actually 7 parts (doubletracked for a total of 14...) later on in the song, after the solo.
I never really learned how to play lead because at the time I learned guitar we really just needed a rhythm guitar. Now I'm trying to learn lead and hopefully this video will help with that
I was surprised with some of your choices. Some of these songs don't get the credit they're due. I agree that this is a great list. There is a lot of subtle stuff in many of these songs that slips by most people. I should use this list as my workout for the next year and go through them all, top to bottom, even the ones I've played and really dissect them. Thanks for this!
That Novo guitar sounds fantastic!
Great topic, how about extending it to 10 classic guitar riffs by decade? You could start in the 1950s and each video would be a different decade. Also a 10 classic guitar riffs in alternate tunings would be cool as well.
THANK YOU RHETT for showcasing 10 Years Gone.. .it's indeed one of Jimmy's proudest moments and his personal favorite. Mine too! And yet... most casual Zep listeners have never even heard this masterpiece before. Great list Rhett!
The tone on Third Stone was phenomenal.
so funny--I was literally working on the hendrix rhythm fills on little wing and all along the watchtower--learned all the solos to those and 4 or 5 other must-know Jimi tunes and there are tricky things to be learned from everything he recorded, of course--but his delicate R&B-infused rhythm fills set against the explosive power of his lead breaks for example, really are a huge part of what made jimi such a master of the instrument regardless of genre. Not to mention his insane songwriting. duh. Great list Rhett...It seems like the best way to learn any technique is to learn it cuz you need to learn it to play the tune it lives in.
I’ve learned so many, but recently it’s been Drifting and Power of Soul I’ve made an effort to learn and make my own take on.
I’ve used the Hey Baby intro, as a warmup for many many years.
The Wind Cries Mary is actually one of the first multiple string solo I learned. The hammer ons have been with me ever since.
@@CorbCorbin yeah wcm is awesome-
im more of a jazz blues guy but i have a couple nice strats and i go down very long jimi rabbit holes with them-jimi tunes almost feel like classicsl music to me like u gotta play them note for note…at least before u fuck with them…
A few riffs when I first started and got them down that made me feel good were For Whom the Bell Tolls by Metallica, Anarchy in the UK, Doctor Doctor by UFO, Black Magic Woman Santana, Cocaine by Clapton.
Agree with Money by Floyd and Money for Nothing by Dire Straights.
this is killer, thanks Rhett. Got some homework this weekend.
This is an awesome list - there is soooo much depth! It's refreshing to see a "riffs" video that isn't the same 20 riffs we see at the top of every "best guitar songs" list. Thanks Rhett!!!
I’d actually say learn almost ANY Tommy Emmanuel song on the acoustic guitar and translate those techniques over to playing on an electric, and holy moly will you have a different sound than most folks.
Easy as that😂
He's a monster pkayer
A few classic riffs that have improved my playing(and are just some of the best riffs ever):
Same of Song and Dance - Aerosmith
Jailbreak - Thin Lizzy
All Right Now - Free
China Grove - Doobie Brothers
OMG! I love that you started with 10 years gone! I haven't seen the rest of this video yet!
In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth 3 by Coheed and Cambria. One of the first songs I learned, and I always come back to it. It’s lengthy, ethereal, and just rocks.
When i discovered the cocked wah and fuzz thing of Money For Nothing combined with the fingerstyle technique it made me want to play it forever. Beside the fact i was a kid when the song came out and it was probably the first to make me think how cool it is be to play a guitar .
Loved that list. Do another one called honorable mention licks…I’m off to learn some of these. Thanks for the lessons.
Another great riff for learning string skipping is UFO's Rock Bottom. Drives me crazy sometimes but it feels so cool when you get it right
Mark Knopfler rules.....such a unique, sweet, melodic, somewhat unorthodox guitar player!!
For me, ‘Is It For Me?’ by Toad the Wet Sprocket is an important practice song for me that lets me practice skipping strings and muting at the same time. The song ‘Inside’ also by TTWS is a song I use to practice singing and playing lead guitar at the same time. Cheers Rhett!
Call Of Ktulu intro is a great one for learning just how vital it is to planning exact finger placement for setting up the next few notes, considering it has to ring out. Also, in teaching beginners how to arch your fingers so you don't mute the neighboring strings
That tone is insane!!!!! That looks like a hell of a guitar!
For something a little simpler but super rewarding is “the rain song” by zeppelin. Also fun to play, and gets you thinking outside the common boxes and shapes.
Mississippi Queen by mountain including the intro solo, helped me with my expression in my playing.
Great video!! Had me running for my guitar to learn 10 Years Gone. Reminder of how creative Page was.
Jimmy playing 10 years gone live with the B bender is awesome
Great Crosspicking, What a workout, it's remarkable to watch one player jump around like your doing. Honestly, what you do with your right hand is off the scale .Good luck to all.
UFO Rock Bottom is a good one for learning groove, 1/4 note bends, palm muted staccato pedal tones against more breathable notes with a vocal quality, hammer ons, pull offs, passing blues notes...
Refreshing combining Rhetts unique «guitar-friend» way of contentcreation, with my all time favourite player Knopfler.
I had pretty much forgotten about Ten Years Gone. I'm gonna go learn it now.
Stranglehold riff is great for practicing that tight right hand syncopation. Also, it is awesome
This inspired me to learn Cissy Strut. My Funk-o-meter went off the charts!
A guitar playing friend recommended learning Chuck Berry tunes.
Acdc back in black took me years to master...so simple but nuanced
Ten years gone, didn’t see that coming but been playing it for ten years gone
Great to hear Ten Years Gone leading the list! I play by ear and have always done 3rd Stone From The Sun as octaves - the first song I ever learned to use them on back as a kid in the '70s. I don't know what's technically/officially correct, but another good one of Jimi's for that is Villanova Junction Blues - it gets you switching octave positions quickly across the fretboard.
Ten Years Gone is the song/riff I teach to younger players when I've only got time to help them learn one riff and I know that I won't ever see this person again. There is so much in that one song.
the way Hendrix does it is with octaves so you were right!
Heart is an underrated band. Nancy and Roger's guitar parts are absolutely mind bending and Ann's voice is one of rock's most powerful ever. Even the 80's ballad era Heart without the original cast is a lot of fun. Great live albums too.
Don’t Fear the Reaper was the riff that taught me how to get your right hand picking and left hand transitions to be in sync in order to have the riff sound clean when you play it. As well as get open strings to ring as you played different notes and you hand changed positions.
Great video, going to work on the ZZ Top. One riff I like is from Def Leppard and the song Let it Go. Has some simple hammer-on’s and bends. Plus it’s a great riff.
Love the final cut shirt. Everybody hates on it but honestly one of my favorite Floyd records.
Another great Zeppelin song for technique is "The Rover." A fantastic exercise in string bending and arpeggios, not to mention you get to bust out your phaser pedal to boot!
This is my favorite video of yours in a long long time.
I've never heard anyone recreating Money for Nothing feel properly. I remember my frustrations with this seemingly easy riff :D
One I use to warm up the fingers, in confined space, is Roy Buchanan's "Cajun". Warms up the fingering and picking hands, and there are even a few squeals to coordinate both. To start moving around a bit more, "Yackety Axe" by Chet Atkins (or "Sax" is how I heard it first), again stretching the right hand, and limbering the left. For double-stops, I use Floyd Kramer's "Last Date", another Country tune, but I'm not so much a C&W player. Another is "Take Five" by Dave Brubeck (Paul Desmond's sax is what I try to emulate). Both "Yackety Axe" and "Take Five" were used as commercial intros and outtros on Chicago Saturday afternoon movies, and I just started playing along...between those 4, a lot of the neck is traversed, as well as picking techniques.
Hendrix taught me pentatonics and Metallica how to move them up and down the neck going in and out of major.
Made a whole lot of theory jive at the right times!
Samba pa ti By Carlos Santana, is something that I played a lot and I just love the feel of it. Still got the blues By Gary Moore, is another one that comes to mind. I kinda wish I knew of some of these riffs while having lessons and they would have made me a better player for sure. I still struggle with staying in time, because I just lose myself when I am really into the song.
Great choice of riffs - something to learn from all of them, whether it is your style of music or not.
It is impossible for me to watch one of your videos without picking up my guitar. So thank you for that!
Great video, you're exactly right, if you can play all these songs your gona learn a ton of skills, if you REALLY get it right.
Love the finger twisters, Rhett! Thanks man!
I would love to see this again but with parts of songs for intermediate and advanced guitarists!
Great choice on The Police. I was in high school when the Police broke on the scene; but it took me until just a few years ago to realize what a fantastic guitarist Andy Summers is. His playing is super-tasty; and always plays "to the song" which, the longer I play, I realize is much more difficult than a million-notes-per-minute double-tap solo! Oh, and Andy must love those add-9 chord extensions, because he does the same thing in Every Breath You Take! And funk stuff is really fun because (I'm guessing it's easier for horns/horn players) they are often enough in flat key signatures, so it really helps guitarists think and feel their way around the flat side of the Circle.
This is the best list of riffs that I have ever seen.
Life in the Fast Lane by the Eagles. Those guys do so many 1/4 and 1/2 bends…so groovy and so tasty.
Yep Rhettman , You nailed it!! 'Ten Years Gone' & 'Message in a Bottle' are perfect examples of great songs as (left hand) exercises . When I learned those riffs (in my twenties), it started to feel like I had crossed over from beginner / novice player to a little more advanced of a musician. Great advice!! I wish I had some of the suggestions , that You are putting out there , when I got more serious about playing etc. Then to include the right hand : ZZ Top ('Just got Paid' in D Standard tuning) and the U2 track --The Edge & like Johnny Marr are finally getting properly noticed , as players to learn from. You & Rick Beato are really a great service to the musical community!! The young people of today , may not know how lucky they are ; and that's o.k. , 'cause I didn't know either (for example , not everyone has a Berklee School of Music graduate , as their neighbor growing up --like I did). Antlers dude..... Good on Ya mate & keep doing what You're doing...
Billy Corgan did a lot with that huge fuzz sounding interval in Siamese Dream! Although I’m glad he did!!!!
Your Tone is ridiculous. So amazing
Congratulations to this lesson, I enjoyed every second of it!
Great list! Love it. No matter how many years you play, there's always something more to learn. Thanks.
Mr. Brownstone, Good Times Bad Times and This Charming Man.
Great video! Queen - ”Tie your mother down” is also a great riff/song to learn for a beginner. For feel and timing.
I like to play Just Got Paid in that open position, and also using a hybrid picking technique on that G string.
The bridge riff of back in black is also very good for warming up