Lesson 32, we're going to wrap up our look at Chuck's double stop slides on the second and third strings. And there's one pattern that he used quite a bit. And I call this kind of an a position, double stop lick. And I'm going to show you three different examples of what I'm talking about. They're all kind of similar, but they're, they're different. The first one comes from a tune called lucky so and so.
And it's I'm just a lucky zone. So it's in the key of B flat, and E play something like this. I think it's at the end of the first solo, something like this. So this leg, you're going from that position, which is a B flat, a position B flat to that double stop liquids is in the first position. B flat blues box in between. You've got this long a shape, so really a B flat chord and I'm playing right in there and check it and do that a whole lot, but he used this lick.
Enough that is one of one that I always think of. So anyway, what I'm doing is starting from really the third fret of it, and I'm starting from the third fret, the fourth string. I'm going three, five on the fourth string to the third fret of the third string. And then I'm gonna do the double star pattern like that sliding from the fourth and fifth frets to the sixth and seven. Coming back on the third string, seven, five. Know play a little bad.
On the fifth fret of the third string using three fingers so that leg that's not exactly what he plays and I'm just lucky so and so but it's it's it's close. And that's the idea. Let's take a look at another example promised land in the key of C, where he's playing. And he does this that kind of like the kickoff his first solo, same idea we're starting from this time from the fifth fret which is our C, same pattern, this time fifth fret, seventh fret on the third fourth string, fifth fret of the third string. So this idea where he goes from, really the a position into the first position blue Xbox with that double stop, he got A lot. One more example of this in his version of the things I used to do in the kid, he, he plays a lick like this, which is really neat.
So what I'm doing is that same lick this time now and then, as the song goes to the floor, he walks us down from the ninth fret to the eighth fret to the seventh. There's another addition to our pattern. So he we've got this and then the song goes into the four That's another example of this idea. So we'll go back to the key of C. We're going back and forth between the first position blue spots that double stop. And right here, the second position barre chord or the a position, C court, Chuck did this out quite a bit. And those three examples I gave you, the first one is from the solo of my lucky so and so just to lucky so and so.
The second one is from the first solo of Promised Land. And the third one is from the things I used to do, it's really a lick that he uses in different ways throughout that whole song. So there are some other examples of how Chuck would play double stops in the second and third string sliding double stops. And you could do that in any key really where you have access to those positions.