Day 14 - Rock & Roll Weaving In Standard Tuning

In this video

This final lesson brings together everything you've learned about guitar weaving, demonstrating how to apply these concepts in standard tuning using It's Only Rock 'n' Roll as the vehicle.

What You Will Learn:

  • How to weave between rhythm and lead without strict roles

  • The signature opening lick (frets 10-12 and 11-13)

  • Blues shuffle riff in the key of E

  • How to avoid making it sound like AC/DC (hint: hold back!)

  • The G-A-D-E chord changes with subtle voicings

  • Major and minor pentatonic switching for solos

Not Strictly Rhythm, Not Strictly Lead

The Rolling Stones approach means neither guitarist plays a strict part. You move between rhythm playing (the blues shuffle, the chord stabs) and lead lines instinctively, building and receding throughout the song.

The Opening Lick

The signature intro uses slides: 10 to 12 on one string, 11 to 13 on the next – essentially D chord tones sliding up to E chord tones. This sets up the weaving approach from the first bar.

Holding Back

The key instruction: don't play big power chords like AC/DC. The Rolling Stones sound comes from restraint and subtlety. Really hold back on the chord hits and give it more vibe through dynamics rather than volume.

Live Variation

The Stones often perform this in B rather than E (better for Keith's voice). The lesson demonstrates how everything translates – the same approaches work regardless of key, which is the whole point of the guitar weaving toolkit you've built throughout this course.

Course Completed!

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