Great lesson! I love your teaching methods, those old rock and roll solos laid the foundations of much that was to follow. Many of the big rock guitar players of the 60s and 70s cut their teeth learning them note for note from recordings. Their playing in turn influenced yet another generation and so it continues.
I saw a live version from 2017 and when he played solo I saw him move into the 5th fret to finish the solo and he played close to the original it might have been Lovelace who played with him a lot I hope this helps I enjoy your videos
Great as always, thank you! Could you do the solo of Blue Suede Shoes the way Carl Perkins played it in the late 60s with Johnny Cash? For example the version live at Madison square garden 1969? I'd love to see that because it's very special and unique in my opinion. :)
Hi Luca, You can join me on Patreon for the tabs: www.patreon.com/ducktailcat or try my course Rockabilly Guitar For Beginners where the songs is also included: www.udemy.com/course/rockabilly-guitar-for-beginners/?couponCode=RR-BEGINNERS-04
Great as always, thank you! Could you do the solo of Blue Suede Shoes the way Carl Perkins played it in the late 60s with Johnny Cash? For example the version live at Madison square garden 1969? I'd love to see that because it's very special and unique in my opinion. :)
Hi Alex, thank you very much for your comment and request. I'm concentrating on the 1950s though as this is the music that really love and the only music I play at home and live. I hope you understand. Best Wishes
This is a quintessential rockabilly solo. You could use it for practically anything and sound authentic.
Who dislike this?
Randy youre the best!
Great lesson! I love your teaching methods, those old rock and roll solos laid the foundations of much that was to follow. Many of the big rock guitar players of the 60s and 70s cut their teeth learning them note for note from recordings. Their playing in turn influenced yet another generation and so it continues.
💪
Nice , Dave Yorko from Johnny & The Hurricanes was another who made the most of these short & sweet type solos
This is a great song, a Jerry Lee Lewis classic! It would also be very interesting to get a lesson on James Burtons solo in Elvis´ cover version.
Thanks for message Randy (like the lesson too)
I saw a live version from 2017 and when he played solo I saw him move into the 5th fret to finish the solo and he played close to the original it might have been Lovelace who played with him a lot I hope this helps I enjoy your videos
yes, the guitarist was Kenny Lovelace!
Wow, very good.
Excellent! Thank you Randy for doing this lesson for us. We really appreciate it!! Steve from California.
You're welcome, Steve
Great as always, thank you! Could you do the solo of Blue Suede Shoes the way Carl Perkins played it in the late 60s with Johnny Cash? For example the version live at Madison square garden 1969? I'd love to see that because it's very special and unique in my opinion. :)
This is gonna be a fun one to learn! Just joined you on Patreon a few days ago, and am glad I did.
What kind of strings brand, diameter?
Hi Willie, I use 11th flatwounds by thomastik
the tab mwould be very useful... I have one, but it's not exact...
Hi Luca, You can join me on Patreon for the tabs: www.patreon.com/ducktailcat
or try my course Rockabilly Guitar For Beginners where the songs is also included:
www.udemy.com/course/rockabilly-guitar-for-beginners/?couponCode=RR-BEGINNERS-04
@@ducktailcat thanks mr. Richter, I go to see the Patreon website!
Perfect!
Great as always, thank you! Could you do the solo of Blue Suede Shoes the way Carl Perkins played it in the late 60s with Johnny Cash? For example the version live at Madison square garden 1969? I'd love to see that because it's very special and unique in my opinion. :)
Hi Alex, thank you very much for your comment and request. I'm concentrating on the 1950s though as this is the music that really love and the only music I play at home and live. I hope you understand. Best Wishes