Sabyasachi Chatterjee same problem here, my friend. I can do this lesson with the fingers but the muting is still extremely difficult. I don’t get how some people can do an apreggio so cleanly by just finger tapping it without string noise
Interesting observation, I love fast guitar shred but after listening to it again I would have to agree it does sound better slow. I think the reason the lick sounds better slow has more to do with the speed the chord changes go by than the speed the notes are played. I love the sound of supper speed shredding but this lick has 3 different chords in it so when you play it supper fast it can sound like you are playing 3 different chords at once. Of corse you could fix this problem by playing each arpeggio several times, this would slow down the chord progression without slowing down the speed of the notes being played accomplishing the distinction between chord changes that you get with the lick played slow without reducing the speed of the notes.
Its hard to keep the strings muted.....But I will practice it hard !!
Sabyasachi Chatterjee same problem here, my friend. I can do this lesson with the fingers but the muting is still extremely difficult. I don’t get how some people can do an apreggio so cleanly by just finger tapping it without string noise
❤
Perfect example of overkill, the lick sounds beautiful played slowly but when he speeds it up it sounds god awful
Interesting observation, I love fast guitar shred but after listening to it again I would have to agree it does sound better slow. I think the reason the lick sounds better slow has more to do with the speed the chord changes go by than the speed the notes are played. I love the sound of supper speed shredding but this lick has 3 different chords in it so when you play it supper fast it can sound like you are playing 3 different chords at once. Of corse you could fix this problem by playing each arpeggio several times, this would slow down the chord progression without slowing down the speed of the notes being played accomplishing the distinction between chord changes that you get with the lick played slow without reducing the speed of the notes.
What a sloppy mess