HOME  FAQ  |  CONTACT

 

 

    If you have reached this point, it is time to make a decision. It is time to decide whether you really want to learn to be a lead guitarist. The other vital instructions included in the Dennis Wolfe's Instant Lead Guitar Method are just as easy to learn as it was to learn to play slow blues.

    To discover the remaining secrets of learning to play lead guitar quickly, click on the link at the bottom of this page.

Dennis Wolfe's Instant Lead Guitar Offers the Following

Instructional MIDIs in 6 Styles of Music

Slow Blues, Fast Blues, Fast Rock, Slow Rock Ballads, Country/Rock, and Country

6 Jamming Tracks for each style of music, in the keys of C, D,  E, F, G and A, for hours of real-time jamming.

 

 

Dennis Wolfe's Instant Lead Guitar

Covers the Following Subjects

 

    The 5-Note Scale and How to Use It

    The first form of this scale is the only one that many guitarists ever learn. They learn to use it for blues or rock music and never learn to play any other style. You can learn how to use it in 15 minutes or less.

 

    Using the Scale for Blues

    The first position of the Minor Blues Scale. What it looks like; how it sounds.

 

    Using the Scale for Slow Blues

    You've heard the licks you are playing from guitarists like Stevie Ray Vaughn and Buddy Guy. Now you know where they came from.

 

Your Fifteen Minutes Are Up!

    See! I told you this is not hard to do. You just played lead guitar on a blues song. It is a lead improvisation that you made up on your own; not one that you learned from tablature or reading notes. Furthermore, it sounds good!

 

    Slow Blues Improvisation

    Did you ever wonder how guitarists simply put their fingers on the fret board and play a lead break without seeming to think about it? This is how they do it.

 

Sharpen Your Skills

    How to spice up the lead line. Samples to show you how to make a simple lead guitar break sound more sophisticated.

    Playing In Other Keys

    Learning to move the scale in order to play in different keys.

 

    How Do I Know Where to Play the Scale Pattern?

    A diagram of the neck of the guitar showing where to play the scale for all keys.

 

    Fast Blues

    Fast blues; slow blues. What's the difference? This shows you. Listen to the difference in the music samples. Play along with them.

 

    Fast Blues Improvisation

    What do blues, rock-a-billy, country swing and early rock and roll music have in common? This section teaches you how to improvise lead lines for these styles of music.

 

The Big Secret of Playing All Styles of Guitar

    This is your first step away from being just a guitar hacker. It is the first step toward becoming a complete guitar player.

 

How Do I Make It Sound Country?

    Major and Minor scales are played exactly the same way. What makes a song sound so different simply by changing where the scale is played?

 

    The Five-Note Major Scale

    The first position of the Major 5-note (pentatonic) scale. What it looks like; how it sounds.

 

    How to Use the Major Scale

    Illustrations showing what happens when you apply the Minor scale to a song and then play it using the Major scale.

 

    The Five-Note Major Scale in Popular Music

    Any good country guitarist can play rock and roll competently, yet, many rockers struggle if they have to play country or country/rock. Why?

 

Location Of The Major Scale

    Teaches you where to play the scale to make it Major instead of Minor.

 

Steps of the Musical Scale

    A map of the guitar neck to show you where to play the Major scale in all keys.

 

Using the Music Samples to Practice Lead Guitar

    This section gives information on how to use both forms of the scale as you work with the practice MIDIs.

 

Other Ways to Play the Five-Note Scale

    There are four other forms of the 5-Note scale. Illustrations are included for each of the patterns.

 

Little Boxes- Scale Patterns

    Shows how the scale patterns link to each other until all of the notes of the guitar are covered.

 

The Mother of All Minor Scale Patterns

    This is an illustrated explanation of the big Minor scale pattern from which all the five sub-patterns are taken.

 

The Mother of All Major Scale Patterns

    This is an illustrated explanation of the big Major scale pattern from which all the five sub-patterns are taken.

 

Something Else You Need To Know About Lead Guitar (but don't know to ask)

    Right now you should know as much about scales as the average lead guitarist in a garage band or a bar band. If you will take the time to learn two additional notes you can become a more complete lead guitar player.

 

The Diatonic Scale

    This section is for the guitarist that wants to stand head and shoulders above the average. These two extra notes could lead to greatness.

 

The Difference Between The Pentatonic Scale And The Diatonic Scale.

    Do, re, mi, fa, so, la, ti, do versus do, re, mi, so, la, do.

 

Origins of Dennis Wolfe's Instant Lead Guitar and Some Lead Guitar Philosophy

    These are my thoughts on the place of the lead guitarist in popular music and my perception of a good guitarist. Further explanation of what makes the Instant Lead Guitar Method different from other ways to learn.

 

Get It Now!

 

    For the low price of (USD) $29 the rest of the course can be yours. For working musicians, it will pay for itself quickly. For beginning musicians, this is the cost of a single guitar lesson at a music store. Unlike an investment in equipment, this knowledge is yours for life.

Click the Button below to purchase  "Instant Lead Guitar".

 

Buy
 


Top Of Page

copyright © Dennis Wolfe 2008

 

HOME  |  FAQ  |  CONTACT

Web site Created and Maintained by Saturn Web Designs