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Hope you all had a great start into the week today :) I had some extra time to record a lesson that I always wanted to tackle today - this one is a bonus video again, there will also be a more detailed lesson on the weekend as always.

In this video, I want to show you the difference between programmed, 'fake' MIDI guitar parts and real guitar parts as I'm trying to out-shred my computer! This was a lot of fun and I actually learned a lot from making this video. You can find all the insights in the video lesson!

I also made sure to transcribe all the shred licks, you can find the files below!

Files

Computer Guitarist VS Real Guitarist (Real Guitar VS MIDI Guitar)

Today we will have some fun - we will compare real guitar takes to fake MIDI guitar takes in the Computer Guitarist VS Real Guitarist challenge! There's actually a lot we can learn here, you can find all insights in the video. My goal was to emulate that super compressed, undynamic sound of the computer and we check out all the differences in detail. Credit for the original idea goes to Jared Dines! As always the tabs, guitar pro files, and practice backing tracks are online on my Patreon page: http://www.patreon.com/bernth Subscribe and stay updated for more videos: http://www.youtube.com/bernthguitar In-depth guitar lessons, workout sheets, guitar pro files and Skype lessons are available as a member of the Shred Guitar Community here: http://www.patreon.com/bernth My 10 week online guitar course '10 Steps to Modern Shredding' can be purchased here: http://www.bernth.at/10-steps-click Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/bernthofficial Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/bernthofficial Thanks to my Patrons: Akeel Austin Alex Kalik Alex Turbide Anas Azkoul Andreas Baumert Andreas Henke Andres Cerdas Andrew Gibson Andrew Ortega Arjan van den Berg Arvid Richter Attila Kecskes Audio Extraordinaire Axel Mora Bewick Blaine Brimhall Bradford L Romans Brandon brandon nathe Brian Fox Brice Louet Chris WC Christian Walker Christoph Witt Christopher Drews Cips Clark Christensen Craig Merriman dan sutherland Danijel Brkic Danny Batchelor darren hooker David Bailey David Brown David Rak David Wilson Debashish Mallick Dennis Wooten Deviilsmaycry Dino Giolitti Elvis Almenar erik schunk Flo Gaillard Frank Tank Franz Gabriel Ferreira Gerald Seiberling gimpster2426 . Giovanni Montiel Giulio Govoni Gordon Thorburn Gregory May Guerro Gustavo Olaiz Hector Jimenez Henry HongYu Wang Hoon-hee, Kim Humberto Menezes Imran Ahsan Isaac Clark Jake Collier Jan Buß Jared Jed Marsillo Jeremiah Wolf JF Joe Hocking Joe Limeri Joey Gabra John Womack Jonathan Blubaugh Justin Justin Allen Kami Karim Sokar karlo petigny Keith Cahoon Kenji Simmons Kevin Barbour Lasse Larsen LHP Liam Petch louis horvath lzj Macedonio Cervantes maconSTUFF Marcel Rockel mario curay Mark LaQue Mark Son Martin Schicklgruber Maxime Berget mediaman Melvin Schmidt Michael Lehmann Michal Mikael Samuelsson Neil Werner Nicholas Verdon Nick Everson nikola Patrick Brunton Patrick Brunton Paul Baglio Paul Forsyth Paul Ribka Pegleg_Jenkins peTe Peter Sassy Phillip N Reed Ramirez Robert Kadlick Roman Karimi Ross Gabay Russ Edwards Ry Sal Sativa_cyborg sau1itud3 Scott Walden sean m Sebastian Johansson Sebastian Morlang Sergio Garcia Seth ruiz Shane Leonard Shane Phillips Stefan Pschenitza Tony Baker Tony Norris Val Vic Thome Victor Otranto Vigg Vince Sanchez Vincent voodoochild Wanildo Rodrigues Willie T Wolfgang Niestroj XylyXylyX Zach Дмитрий Полищук Сергей Мигай

Comments

Anonymous

Wow, Licks 1 and 2. Wish I could play that fast.

bernth

Lick 2 is very, very tricky - to switch fluidly between those shapes is really hard! Lick 1 comes relatively easy by now, it's that relaxed right-hand motion that kicks in here - took many years to learn not to push too hard here... that's something I discussed with our community member Anas recently via email, most players tend to pick really aggressively when they play fast, I do my best to stay relaxed! Aside from that, I recommend the 'Killer Shred Guitar Trick' lesson where we combine slow note values with faster ones to gradually push tempo :) Short bursts really help with developing a sense for speed - I'm sure you will get there Scott!