Lesson number 83 we're gonna look at a single string lick from Johnny be good. And this is a really cool lick that he uses it pretty sure he placed this in the introduction. And it's a good example of combining the single string rounds with the double stops, and he plays the single string round. We've seen a lot of this so far, but in this L'Equipe, see if you can notice the difference and how he plays this. So what I'm doing here chokan of the strings with my right hand palm muting the strings. It's kind of disjointed, it's choppy, it's got a little funkiness.
It goes to the eighth fret of the first string, but he doesn't normally if he goes to the eighth fret. He's gonna go to the sixth fret Before he does this rod, but in this leg, he goes, he skips the sixth fret goes from the eighth to that Ron 986. And then he goes into that, which is another tip, typical Chuck Berry 123. So I'm gonna play that again. Listen to that first introductory solo, the introduction of the Johnny be good after he plays the opening late, and you'll hear him do that. Just an example of how you can take these same licks and if you play it a little differently, usually right hand a little differently.
You know, choke the strings, accent, one note over the other, you can get a lot of different sounding licks out of the same basic notes, the same basic runs. So that is exactly Call Number 83. And that's from Johnny. Be good.