In this lesson, we're going to double back and take a closer look at a pattern that I showed you in the previous lesson. And in this lesson, we're going to take a look at a lick from the tune 30 days, which is in B flat, and then B flat. The the chord progression is B flat, E flat, F, that's the basic three chord progression of the song. And there's a lick in the second solo, where he's wrapping up actually, the first cell is wrapping up the first solo and he's gone from the five of the song back to the one and he plays this lick here. Not sure how he wraps up that lick but this part. It's really neat.
And it's another one of those double stops. Now the pattern is just like I showed you in the last last lesson. When you're playing over the four chord, so in 30 days, the four chord is our second position barre chord E flat, most of the song he's playing, playing that Maybelline rhythm over the top of it. And he does this lick. Remember this pattern when we're in that court are playing over that chord in the song. So in 30 days the first lick is the shape the first shape of the double stops, first finger on the ninth fret of the first string, second finger on the 11th fret, it's going to go to this shape with the first finger on the eighth fret, second finger on the ninth fret of the second string, and then back to that shape which is an E flat double.
This is an E flat seven, E flat seven, back to the E flat so this is a little passing double stop in between so the whole leg and he rapidly picks it with heavy distortion on the guitar, it's really cool. And then when he wraps it up, he's gonna go back to the first position, blue spot, play something like that it's hard to tell what he's doing in the song. So here's another example these double stuff, so you don't always have to play them, like. Here's another example where I'm picking it differently, less than 230 days and the first solo, that's where you find that lick just a little bit, we're going to take a look at the second solo, which is entirely made up of slightly double stops, and it is a bear to play. And I can't play it really well all the time, but I know what he's doing and I'll share that with you.
So try that try that picking. Quick picking, that's something to practice and try to get the hang up. And that's what you hear in the song 30 days. So there's yet another example of one of these little licks using the sliding double stops on the first Second strength