Lesson 96, we're going to take a look at a couple different licks, which are both examples of how to check is this one of his more common double stops. The first example comes from the tune, go Bobby soccer, which is one of his songs in the mid 60s. And in the solo, he's in the key of C, he's going to use this lick. We've done this one. So many times. It's one of checks, you know, four or five standard licks that he uses over and over again.
And when I play this, I've got my first finger on the 11th fret of the first string, ring finger on the 10th fret of the second string, first finger anchored on the eighth fret first and second strings and then go Bobby Sachs or he just plays and stays on this and he plays it kind of like this. And really just, you know, you think oh how easy just playing the same thing over and over again. But it's a variety. It's different than the way he plays it in other songs. And what I hear is he's picking out it's it's groups have to pick and he's bending up. letting down and adjusting the pressure on the strings and how much he pushes it up, lets it down and gets a different sound out of it.
Listen to the solo, I think it might be the second solo and go Bobby socks and the KFC. Now along the same lines, you take a song like 30 days, which is in B flat, and in that tune, he kicks off the first solo with that same leg and B flat. We've got our pinky on the ninth fret of the first string, ring finger on the eighth fret of the second string. And he starts out I'm not sure if this is exactly it, but he plays something like this. He's playing. And he's really chopping it up making it funky and using the fast stroke and the staccato picking and bending at the same time.
So instead of just playing there's lots of different ways you can play some of these licks. And I wanted to show you that because that's a lick that you can do a lot of different things with. So two examples, one from go Bobby soccer in the key of C, and the other one from 30 days and B flat.