The Doors Roadhouse Blues Guitar Lesson with Solo

This “Roadhouse Blues“ by The Doors guitar lesson will show how to play the complete song, including the guitar solo. With guitar tabs, chord diagrams, and practice tracks for each section, we’ll cover it all with a step by step approach. @PaluzziGuitar The Doors Roadhouse Blues Guitar Lesson [with Solo] 00:00 Lesson Preview 00:15 Intro Riffs 03:18 Verse 1 08:58 Verse 1 Review 09:32 Verse 2 11:25 Verse 2 Review 12:08 First Chorus 14:11 First Chorus Review 14:34 Guitar Solo (Lines 1-2) 20:02 Guitar Solo (Lines 3-4) 24:02 Guitar Solo Review (Lines 1-4) 24:35 Guitar Solo (Lines 5-8) 27:55 Guitar Solo Review (Complete) 28:53 Verses 3-5 29:58 Verse 6 30:56 Second Chorus/Ending 33:41 Lesson Review San Diego Guitar Lessons Paluzzi Guitar Channel @PaluzziGuitar Paluzzi Guitar Instruction The Creative Guitarist Method Series was written and designed by Kevin J. Paluzzi of Paluzzi Guitar Instruction in San Diego, CA. How to Play “Roadhouse Blues“ by The Doors With this “Roadhouse Blues“ by The Doors guitar lesson, we’ll show you how to play the complete song. This lesson includes “Roadhouse Blues“ guitar tab, “Roadhouse Blues“ guitar chord diagrams, and various practice tracks to review each section. The Doors “Roadhouse Blues“ Guitar Tutorial This The Doors ’Roadhouse Blues’ guitar tutorial will show how to play “Roadhouse Blues“ with a step by step approach. How to Play Opening Riff to “Roadhouse Blues“ by The Doors The Intro Riff to Roadhouse Blues by the Doors is an ’E’ Blues Riff. There are several guitar riffs in Roadhouse Blues played in the Key of ’E’. How to Play the Guitar Solo to ’Roadhouse Blues“ by The Doors. This The Doors “Roadhouse Blues“ guitar lesson will show how to play the “Roadhouse Blues“ guitar solo with a step by step approach. The “Roadhouse Blues“ guitar solo played in ’E’ Blues, using both the ’E’ Pentatonic Minor and ’E’ Pentatonic Major scales. The Doors “Roadhouse Blues“ Guitar Solo Lesson with Guitar Tab This Doors “Roadhouse Blues“ guitar lesson will show how to play the guitar solo to “Roadhouse Blues“ with a step by step approach. Learn to play the “Roadhouse Blues“ guitar solo with a section by section approach that includes guitar tabs and review practice tracks played at a slower tempo. The Doors “Roadhouse Blues“ Guitar Tab This The Doors “Roadhouse Blues“ guitar lesson video includes ’Roadhouse Blues’ guitar tab, including “Roadhouse Blues“ guitar solo tab, and the “Roadhouse Blues“ guitar riffs in tab. The Doors “Roadhouse Blues“ Guitar Riff On the original recording of ‘Roadhouse Blues’ by The Doors, various lead guitar riffs are played, including the classic opening intro riff. This The Doors “Roadhouse Blues“ guitar lesson will show how to play the lead guitar riffs heard on the original recording of “Roadhouse Blues“ by the Doors. The Doors Roadhouse Blues Acoustic Guitar [Karaoke Songs with Lyrics] This “Roadhouse Blues“ by The Doors acoustic guitar backing track features both karaoke lyrics and guitar chords, so you can sing along with “Roadhouse Blues“ karaoke, play guitar with “Roadhouse Blues“ karaoke, or do both! The Doors “Roadhouse Blues“ Songfacts When Jim Morrison got drunk, he liked to sing blues numbers at The Doors jam sessions. ’Roadhouse Blues“ in one of the songs he came up with at one of those inebriated sessions. If there was an actual roadhouse that inspired this song, it was probably the Topanga Corral, a windowless nightclub in the counterculture enclave of the Topanga Canyon, where Jim Morrison lived. To get to the venue you had to take Topanga Canyon Boulevard, which is full of twists and turns - you really did need to “keep your eyes on the road, your hand upon the wheel.“ There was a cabin behind the Topanga Corral that many sources say Morrison bought for his girlfriend, Pamela Courson. This could be what provided the line, “In back of the Roadhouse they got some bungalows.“ John Sebastian from the Lovin’ Spoonful played harmonica. He is identified on the album as “G. Puglese“ because he was afraid to be identified with The Doors in light of Morrison’s arrest at a concert in Miami when he was accused of exposing himself to the crowd. Morrison was convicted of indecent exposure and sentenced to six months in jail, but he died while the case was being appealed. In 2010, Florida governor Charlie Crist granted Morrison a pardon. “Roadhouse Blues“ is the first song on album “Morrison Hotel“ by the Doors. “Morrison Hotel“ was a return The Doors’ earlier style. On The Doors previous album, “The Soft Parade“, they used a lot of strings and horns. Morrison didn’t do much on “The Soft Parade“ because he was drunk for most of it and had nothing to do while all the instrumentation was being w
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