In this video
This lesson takes the two-finger combinations from Level 1 and pushes them further by removing the first finger from the equation. While Level 1 focused on all combinations with the first finger, this lesson adds the harder combinations to build balanced strength across your entire hand.
What You'll Learn:
Middle finger to pinky hammer-on combinations
Middle finger to ring finger hammer-ons
The essential ring finger to index flick-off technique
How to make hammer-ons sound as strong as picked notes
Proper muting with thumb and palm of picking hand
The "flick off" motion - always down toward your hand
The crucial finger placement pattern: pick, flick off, place next finger, press down first finger
How to practice with both clean tone and high gain overdrive
Proper control of string noise and unwanted ringing
Practice positions at frets 5-7 and frets 12-14
Building Strength Without the First Finger
The middle-to-pinky hammer-on combination is particularly important for building strength. Both fingers need to be positioned right up against the fret, and the hammer-on should sound just as strong as a picked note. Surrounding strings should stay silent, which requires muting with both the thumb and palm of the picking hand, plus touching adjacent strings with the middle finger to keep them quiet.
The Flick-Off Technique
The flick-off is the opposite motion of a hammer-on. It's always a downward motion toward your hand, and the key is preparing the next finger while executing the flick. The sequence goes: pick, flick off, place the next finger down, then press down with the first finger. This creates a smooth chain with no gaps between notes.
The Essential Ring-to-Index Movement
The ring finger to index flick-off is crucial because it appears constantly in solos. Practiced between frets 5 and 7 (a common minor pentatonic position), this movement requires having the index finger already in place before the flick happens. The trick is placing the ring finger down immediately after flicking off, then sneaking the first finger into position for the next flick.
Practice Strategies
Practicing with high gain overdrive helps these techniques ring out better, but it also exposes sloppy technique more easily. Control comes from the base and side of the thumb, along with light picking pressure. The guitar and amp should do most of the work. Going up the strings tends to be harder than coming down, requiring a slight twist in the hand. Switching to a clean setting reveals how cleanly you're executing each movement.
Key Practice Positions
The two main practice areas are frets 5-7 and frets 12-14. Even iconic riffs like "Paranoid" use these hammer-on patterns up at the 12th fret. Moving from clean to overdrive settings helps the guitar and amp support your technique development. This exercise is the technique priority for lead guitar development this week.
Intermediate Electric Level 2
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