Page has been my favorite from the beginning, some 35 years ago. And you hit upon a point that so many miss, intensity. Page was never about being Mr. Technically perfect. He didn't care. He was always going for that next sonic something to knock you off your seat or blow you out of your drawers. And as a Page aficionado, you've done an excellent job here. Can't count the number of hours I put into learning most of Zep's songs, so I know the time you've put into this is extensive, Great job.
ertlk24 don't think so, don't get me wrong, page is my favorite guitarist, but for exemple, listen to the heartbreaker solo isolated track, it's kinda sloppy and sooo good
Jimmy Lage is a really beautiful soul that always reflects in his music.He enriches people's lives in so many ways.I would like to think that he has another Led Zepp album to record and release.Just a thought
I'm almost 63 and started learning guitar a year ago. Led Zeppelin (and some Pink Floyd) have formed the basis of all my learning so far. Wish I could do those techniques as well as you. Although they're probably a bit advanced for me I really enjoy your lessons. Your teaching style is excellent.
On here you may find that the techniques themselves, practiced for ......till perfected, is truly the best way to get ahead. Not taking away from your personal level no matter what it represents. Pick a couple of the techniques out that you have no doubt about the way its accomplished at first. Practiced, for regular use........and along with the finger strength and the motor skill, muscle memory you develop. It actually brings you forward on more than just one single element. When you gain both finger memory/strength. It makes you much much better and makes playing easier in general. Immediately you get an idea that while your knowledge is what it is and I do not know. But, I venture to you that learn led s songs that you want to learn......specifically and it will benefit you in more than personal satisfaction. There are individual chord structures that are the end all do all finger positionings for getting the strength most needed for guitar playing period. Bar chords, short bar and 5th chords all go a very long way for allowing your functionality to peak to the level of beginning to play any where on the guitar fret board. The sooner you open up your fret board, / hand finger strength you become comfortable with the guitar in general. and then you will begin to consider serious lead as the level to add to your playing. Now I say this in glittering generalities. Its not so simple in real time, it sounds soo soo so easy in words. But then again. I take what you expressed and I offer you the opportunity to jump into zep and those you prefer because their specific efforts will allow you to jump leap and bounds forward. Its more than worth a try. Its a way for you to really build a better play. from scratch.
58 here been plying since 10 yrs old. Self taught. The first pieces that got me and I learned was the intro to Secret Agent Man, the theme from Mission Impossible, Smoke on the Water....lol Led Zep blew me away, because they could burn a electric song, like Communication Breakdown and then the very next song a sweet Acoustic Over the Hills and Far Away, to a hard core Bluesy I Can't Quit You Babe....lol
all of those you mention plus louie louie and wipe out and tamborine man American woman and so on 60s had many great acoustic shrines and late 60s thru 73 had most of the giant killers
Thanda Lion ; you're not alone! I am 63 and almost always had a guitar of some kind throughout most of my life but never had the time to learn to play. I'm retired now and have a couple nice guitars so I guess I have no excuse for not learning to play!
This "Greatest guitar techniques" series is one of the best and most interesting guitar related series on RU-vid. You articulate each artist's style so well. Great work.
I studied Jimmy Page back in the early and middle '70s, as he was my favorite guitarist back then and still is one of my all-time favorites. It's my assessment that you accurately articulate many of Jimmy's techniques, so my compliments to the chef! Also, your vibrato is particularly good!
Jimmy page is the greatest guitar shredder of all time! He is a guitar virtuoso and guitar master! He gave us so many of the greatest guitar solos of all time!
Hasn't been done yet, so I'm gonna take one for the team. 2 step bend 00:12 Unison bend (zeppelin bend) 2:15 3 note pull-off sequence 3:54 3 string modified unison bend (arpeggiated) 6:25 Major 3rd substitutions 7:45 Ascending pentatonic pattern 9:32 Double pull offs 11:06 Pre bend (ghost bend) 11:02 Modified unison bend (arpeggiated) w/ pull off 13:00 Circular pattern w/ bend 13:58 Finger flutter pattern 15:02 The blues scale 16:22 Finger flutters (shorter pattern) w/ chromatic bend 17:25 Staccato picking with bends 18:41 Half-step (from below) bends 19:30 Stutter bends 21:32 Slide guitar w/ open tuning 22:36
A unison bend was around long before Zeppelin. I wish you childish Jimmy Page wannabes would stop attributing every guitar lick or riff to Page. Page stole shit from people and pawned it off as his own. He never gave the credit to who actually wrote the lick or developed a technique.
Best Page techniques vid I've seen to date, great job! I'm glad it's not a 'teach a song solo' kind of vid. You hit most of his usual tricks perfectly, thanks!
this guy!!!! i just found your videos, and they're the type that help people with less skills rather than just simply showing off and you really get the research down like a pro, learning some of each guitarists techniques to demonstrate, this is excellent stuff
Love these lessons, you are a great teacher. Not only the techniques themselves are very helpful but also the way that you teach is great. Fun and very worthwhile. Thanks a lot!
Hey young Art of Guitar Man...great video...I'm a big Zep fan since 1979....I almost got to see them live on their 1980 tour but then Bonham dies I was 13 it was such a bummer you can't imagine I was so looking forward to seeing my favourite band I had gotten heavily into Hendrix, Floyd, The Doors and Zeppelin just about a year or two before when I was about 10 or 11 and just when I thought I would get my parent's permission to go see my first concert ever of my fav band which was Zep BOOM Bonham goes and dies so I went to see AC/DC Back in Black tour instead in December of 1980...O well tough luck I guess.
I never post comments on anything but this time I have to. I sincerely thank you for making these videos. They have made me a much, much better player. As someone who is frequently broke from bills I do not have the dough to buy instruction books or pay for lessons. This has been a true blessing.
Kill Everyone ive always wondered how that was even possible. The radius of the fretboard on strats causes the strings to choke out on wild bends like that. Idk how he got that to sustain the whole way through.
@Ryan Knispel I suspect Gilmour used heavier gauge strings (maybe 11's) to get that much pitch change without running out of real estate...though they're brutal on the fingers.
Very Nice work my freind! there's sooo much labourish love to expell on these licks. you have a very good teaching style . We used to have to sit by an old record player maybe casset. over and over till licks magically started to apear; Hee.Hee
You know why your number of views is almost exactly identical to your number of subscribers? Because anyone who watches any of your video JUST HAS TO BE a subscriber. Just HAS to be!!!!! Man, you are a compellingly brilliant and inspiring teacher. Fantastic work. Absolutely awe-inspiring. Simply amazing.
I find it fascinating that I learned most of this stuff just by listening to the Led Zep records, and not having one guitar lesson in my whole life. Just goes to show the importance of using your ears to learn
Scott, some people don't have good ears and RU-vid allows them to play things they probably otherwise wouldn't. I'm mean all this intense free training... However, you're right, your ears are the most important component. People will ask me sometimes how I played a certain riff...and I say I hummed it or whistled it or sing it...if you can do any of those things, then you can play it.
I have always thought that is so interesting that when Jimmy Page is a little sloppy or adds "slurry" to his solos, it is almost always written off as intensity in his playing. When the rest of us do it, it is just seen as sloppy technique. I guess there is a very fine line between sloppy and intense. I love Jimmy Page's playing so everyone calm down. This is a great lesson. Subscribed.
My take on his 'sloppy' playing is how low he slung his guitar when playing live,I find it difficult to play accurately with the guitar in that position personally so maybe thats one reason,he can be very precise when he needs to be as on the Page/Plant live 'Rainsong' vid where he's playing an acoustic sitting down,it was note perfect.
I really dig how this guy teaches these techniques of guitar and not necessarily just teaches how to copy a song. I grew up playing that way and while I feel my playing by ear has helped my technique somewhat, not having the correct version of the more advanced techniques certainly is essential as well. I've been watching this particular video for a while now and I can hear Jimmy's playing. He really breaks it down and articulates the content well. The Song Remains the same movie has been on AXS channel lately so, I hear a lot of Dazed and Confused a lot on here. Good stuff man!!!!!! Thank you for posting this.
You are a great teacher with an awesome attitude young fella. Really enjoyed just sitting here watching you explain and demonstrate. I actually stumbled here by mistake. Keep it up man, Very cool attitude and Technique!
Good you mentioned Albert King, particularly for the wide bends. Page and Gilmour are awesome, and added to the lexicon, but like Clapton and Beck, they learned from the black American greats like the three Kings and Buddy Guy. Great vid throughout, I appreciated it. And damn, you get some fine tone from that SG. :-)
Awesome video, man!!! Thank you so much... IMHO, your Greatest Guitar Techniques series is your best stuff and so valuable and much of help... any of them are really brilliant... Speaking for myself, I really like the one on Megadeth which is one of my all-time favorite bands... Please do keep up the good work!! Greetings from Berlin, Germany and big thumbs up!!!
Mike, I love these vids, they give real insight into how our heroes made the sounds we all love and try to emulate. My only comment is that you say some of them are"cliches". It's important, I think, that we recognise when Page was doing this NOBODY had done it before. He was completely original and led to all the other guitarists doing it - so it BECAME a cliche.
excellent teaching technique,you should be making money with this talent and insight you are by far one of the best i have seen,between you and privatetricker i have enough to learn and practice for a lifetime thank you so very much for your time and effort to do this, valuable cheers derek
What your playing and how it makes people feel is what maters more then the technicality aspect. Page was a master at improv, I will take some slop with that, over any technical proficient heartless droning racket any day...Thx for the vid brother, great job.
Man, such a wonderful and awesome video, i really love the way you teach, and the things you teach. I'm gonna try and put this stuff in my playing. Thanks you sir, you are awesome! Hugs from México :)
Youre a great guitar teacher through RU-vid. I'm sure your students you teach in person are outstanding musicians. Thank you for all of the content. Jimmy Page is my main influence.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 Seriously you obviously have never listened to much guitar. Go listen to Allan Holdsworth playing. Page was a sloppy plagiarizer who painted himself as the “dark” mystical guitar guru - he wasn’t.
Thanks so much for the lessons/techniques. I can see now I've been doing it the hard way as I've never had a lesson in my life. Been playing and learning by ear since I was 10. I'm 65 now. Started by trying to play The Ventures by ear . I was also in the school band, played trumpet for 9 years. Again, very few lessons, mostly from trying to imitate Miles Davis, Dizzy, Al Hirt etc. Wish there had been someone to teach the technique. . Now I have to un-learn a bunch of bad habits.
before seeing this, I saw vid on Page explaining his B-Bender Tele. Gene Parsons made a guit with a lever attached to the upper strap lock with a spring and when you pull down on the neck, it bends the 'B string up two whole steps or steps in between. I think the Lemon Song from Zep II has a spot where he does a ham/pull and bends at the same time. nice work- I subbed after this one.