tahrey said:
someonehairy-ish said:
Wait, you want to learn fast leads but you don't want metal?
Yeah... I'm of no help here then. Maybe Knights of Cydonia by Muse? Or any of their origin/absolution era stuff. Orrrr give some Hendrix a shot. Little wing is a fun one to learn.
I'm pretty sure most Muse guitarwork is actually ripped off of lesser known chiptunes, or composed on a synth first or something, it just seems so weird compared to most other guitar stuff. But then I say that as a non-player. Guy I know who was trying to learn it said it was kinda difficult ... I had less difficulty transcribing some of their leads into Nokia Composer ringtones than he did playing them on the actual instrument
Yeah he writes everything on a synthesizer (+ sometimes a piano I think, not sure) before transcribing them onto guitar. Plus he rips off classical music occasionally too. A lot of it's fairly hard to play, but it's certainly doable 'cos there's no lightspeed solos or anything. Except resistance, which he plays on a doublenecked guitar, tapping on one neck and doing slides and vibrato on the other... if you can pull that off, serious kudos.
OP: Given it some more thought and here are some more suggestions.
MUSE
The upside of learning Muse stuff is that basically everyone knows it, so it goes down well whenever you play it.
Hysteria is fairly straightforward if you can get the bends right and it sounds extremely tasty,
Plug in Baby is a great fingering exercise to improve your general technique, and
Knight of Cydonia is a great one to learn tremolo picking, so I'd recommend learning those to basically anyone who wants to play guitar.
Plus
Animals is extremely slinky and in 5/4 so it would be good if you want to get into non-standard time signatures. Haven't learned it yet and it sounds fairly tricky, but it would be worth giving a shot.
TOOL
Tool write some cool fucking riffs. Learn some Tool.
Schism mostly alternates 6/8 and 7/8 but varies a lot, so it's a great one to practice alternate time signatures. Plus there's some interesting palm muting and rolling hammer-ons and stuff, so it's fun too.
46 & two also has some interesting timing stuff but it's more straightforward and the riffs are more in-your-face, so it's fun too. Basically any of their stuff in worth learning though.
+Hendrix. Learn some Hendrix.
Can you tap? If you can tap you might find this one interesting to learn, even if it is a bit metallic:
XMark said:
Learn Nothing Else Matters (Metallica). It gives an easy introduction to fingerstyle guitar playing, and it's also a great song to impress women
^ This too. He knows his stuff.