Гитара соло группа европа

Guitar Solo

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The Final Countdown Guitar Lesson – Europe

Released in 1986, «The Final Countdown» became an enormous international hit for the band Europe, reaching number one in 25 countries around the world.

In this The Final Countdown guitar lesson series, I will show you how to play all of guitarist John Norum’s guitar parts note-for-note, including that killer guitar solo.

Obviously, most of «The Final Countdown» is dominated by that infectious keyboard melody with the guitar relegated to a backing role. There are some cool little riffs going on there though so make sure you check them out. All of the chords and riffs will be taught in the first video lesson.

In the second video lesson I will take you through John Norum’s guitar solo note-for-note. There are some really great licks in this solo that can be turned into some nice technique exercises if you wish.

The fast arpeggios that open the solo requires smooth legato and sweep picking. Those two techniques combine to create a very fluid sound. I will show you exactly how to pick this section and the great thing is, once you get the first arpeggio down, the entire sequence is played the same way.

The rest of the solo includes fast alternate picking, whammy bar dips, unison and oblique bends and more. It really is a great 80’s era guitar solo in that it contains lots of flashy guitar licks, but the entire solo can still pretty much be hummed throughout. Creating musically yet technically demanding solos was the challenge of many great guitarists back in the 80’s shred era, the solo for «The Final Countdown» certainly doesn’t disappoint!

Hope you guys enjoy this one! It is really fun to play once you get it all together.

If these free lessons help you, please donate to keep new ones coming daily. Thanks!! 🙂

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John Norum Guitar Solo

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The Final Countdown Guitar Solo Lesson — Europe

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  • Опубликовано: 7 ноя 2015 veröffentlicht
  • Subscribe for new songs every week! goo.gl/L7cTLq
    Check out my theory and technique channel! goo.gl/L9eY76
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    Please help support my lessons on Patreon. www.patreon.com/guitarlessons365
    Click here for ALL parts to this song in my Europe playlist! clip-share.net/user/playlist?list.
    Released in 1986, «The Final Countdown» became an enormous international hit for the band Europe, reaching number one in 25 countries around the world.
    In this The Final Countdown guitar lesson series, I will show you how to play all of guitarist John Norum’s guitar parts note-for-note, including that killer guitar solo.
    Obviously, most of «The Final Countdown» is dominated by that infectious keyboard melody with the guitar relegated to a backing role. There are some cool little riffs going on there though so make sure you check them out. All of the chords and riffs will be taught in the first video lesson.
    In the second video lesson I will take you through John Norum’s guitar solo note-for-note. There are some really great licks in this solo that can be turned into some nice technique exercises if you wish.
    The fast arpeggios that open the solo requires smooth legato and sweep picking. Those two techniques combine to create a very fluid sound. I will show you exactly how to pick this section and the great thing is, once you get the first arpeggio down, the entire sequence is played the same way.
    The rest of the solo includes fast alternate picking, whammy bar dips, unison and oblique bends and more. It really is a great 80’s era guitar solo in that it contains lots of flashy guitar licks, but the entire solo can still pretty much be hummed throughout. Creating musically yet technically demanding solos was the challenge of many great guitarists back in the 80’s shred era, the solo for «The Final Countdown» certainly doesn’t disappoint!
    Hope you guys enjoy this one! It is really fun to play once you get it all together.
    Carl.

Комментарии • 0

Thank u so much Carl, greetings from Colombia!

May i know the key for scale

Petit conseil pour le riff principal c’est la main droite qui fait tout le boulot bon courage les amis 🎸

I’ll just stick to 7 nation army

Can I ask what key this is in?

You help me so much, im even learning english

Any chance you could do Motorcycle Driver by Satriani please?

Thank you so much!!

incredibly simple, so beautiful

Can you explain «open your heart» (Europe)?

So if you’re using a metronome it’s 4/4 16th notes:
12 10 14(10) 12
10 14(10) 12 10
14(10) 12 10 14(10)
12 10 14(10) 12
And so on

This solo is deceptively hard. Can never play it cleanly. Especially 4:46 which is almost impossible to do right at full speed. 🙁

Nice video brother. thanks. from Brazil. 🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷

Any ideas on how to get the B string to stop ringing after I’m done with it and moved on to the E string to do the two notes on that one?

These arpegios are completely insane. 5 times the same 3 notes pattern + 1 final note in a 4-beats measure. Playing the notes fast is only half of the way to mastering this solo.

the correct way is to play in 4/4 . this way its devided in 4 parts/ but every beat it starts with a different note. Find more correct lesson .

I think the 2 down picks are correct but what is essential imo is the ever so slight pause after the very 1st downward pluck which allows for that ‘gallop’. Secondly imo there should be a flick -action down on the 1st string which allows for a definite hammer on on the 1st string.

Congratulation, great performance and great teaching. Here you have a special version that we’ve made in Spain with 2 guitarist and a keyboard player playing that mythical solo at home. I hope you like it. @FE1U

EDIT: This is definitely a great tutorial, thank you for creating great content)
I was wondering that, instead of hammer on 14th fret, why not let the up stroke movement naturally hit the E string after the mini sweep pick? The motion feels natural to me. 2x 16th note sweep, then 2x 32th note with up pick motion + pull off.

You look like cole Sprouse

Which pickups do have on that strat?

blues part hard for me😝😝

My fingers hurt 🙁

Guys help every time i playing first part of this E making strange noises

from 5:10 it is the same trick as Eddie does in Jump …but with out the tapping

Muito bom, bem explicado

I downloaded this on rocksmith and I want to nail this solo

How do u get that sound?

Having trouble hammering on with my pinkie

Ik the is a bit late but if you take your finger off the b string to you pull off you get sound

Ben4TheWin I have small hands and weak pinkies so I have to use my ring finger and be rly swift to hammer on

I cant move my little finger so fast 😒

what does your girlfriend say.

Interestingly enough, the hardest part, as usual, is the less flashy-more bluesy part. The one at 4:48. That will fuck up your day

My guitar goes out of tune after using whammy

Feared Warrior Shrey keep on using the whammy and tune it and repeat Idk if that makes but it wears in the strings and it won’t do that so much

@viktor Hurst fender squier strat

What guitar do you have?

When I lift the middle finger from the second string it always plays the B note on the second string, like letting it ring and it doesn’t sound well. I hope you understand what I mean and I hope you can help me solve that problem. Thanks! Great lesson though!

@Shrey exactly. When playing, many times it is good to let your fingers be sloppy in order to mute surrounding strings. It’s counter intuitive, because when you first start playing the last thing you want is your fingers touching other strings. lol.

Mute the b string with your first finger by slightly touching it’s edge near the nail.But don’t put your first.finger on b.It will play 10th fret if you do that.

This is so hard

4:48 are the hard part hahaha

@Peter Dimitrov First thing to help you learn this solo *for real* , you should check out Ben Eller’s Final Countdown Solo lesson. Just search on Clip-Share. He plays the solo with all right notes, with the right technique and explains a lot better.
These 2-string arpeggios use a technique called «pedal-tone». Look up the technique and practise. It’s a trademark of metal soloing used in some of the most awesome solos. It’s one of those things that once you have it down, you won’t forget and muscle memory will kick in. Using a thicker and smaller pick like the Dunlop Jazz III usually helps to play faster.

@Erotomaniax exactly, I just expressed it like that so it can be understood generally

@Madden Not exactly alternate picking but John picks 3 notes then pulls off 1, picks 3 notes then pulls off 1. It’s fine to do a 2 string sweep for the first 2 notes because sweeping is actually picking. But it has to be followed with an up-pick because one of the coolest thing about these arpeggios and the overall solo is that staccato/percussive feel. In this video, he’s picking just 2 notes and then plays 2 legato notes which removes some of the coolness and uniqueness of the sound.
Also John ends each arpeggio on the B-string note, except for the last G-arpeggio. Here he’s not playing any of these last notes. Another way to put it is that each arpeggio shape, John plays the note on the B-string 6 times, here he’s playing this note only 5 times and omitting the last note each time.
The trickiest thing about this arpeggio lick is the timing. It’s polyrhythmic and has a 5/4 feel. So the placement of the notes are unintuitive. The B-string note never falls on the beat except for the very first note of each new arpeggio/chord.

@Peter Dimitrov its actually with alternate. John does it and did it that way.

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