00:00 [music]
00:07 Hey, I'm Andy Oludar in this edition of Indeed. We're going to continue looking at ways to
00:19 improvise on the Muddy Waters Blues Classic, "Rolling Stone." Last time we were looking
00:24 at different ways to use thirds, combinations of two notes. This time we're going to expand
00:29 that to the use of sixths. Another thing you do on that, I'd have all you pretty young
00:35 women. So let's say we're going to play the melody.
00:42 [music]
00:54 That's nice. But then instead of this, you could go...
01:00 Kind of like "Voodoo Child."
01:01 [music]
01:08 So that's nice too.
01:11 [music]
01:19 So, these double stops...
01:26 Very useful. Hendrix did that stuff all the time. If you wanted to play that whole sequence,
01:41 you'd have... It's all on the A and the G string. Second fret first, fourth second,
01:48 fifth fourth, seventh sixth, ninth seventh, eleventh ninth, twelve eleven, fourteen thirteen,
01:55 sixteen fourteen, seventeen sixteen, nineteen eighteen, twenty one nineteen.
02:09 And I like doing those where you go like...
02:12 So what I did there was if I play this one...
02:21 I'll do a hammer pull on the G string.
02:25 [music]
02:41 And when I get to that one, it's fun to make it minor.
02:45 It's like A minor.
02:51 [music]
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