What the teacher is teaching the American history. Next lesson, we're just gonna go back to the first position blue Xbox and take a look at some of the different double stops you can play in the first position blue Xbox. So originally we use the key of B flat. So we're going to go back to that. And basically, we've got this, this one and I showed you pretty much this double stuff and that and there's some others. And just let me just play the first position blue Xbox double stops, we've got this.
Those are all double stops that we can play. Let me show you some I haven't shown you that. If we got the first position blues box here and the flat the eighth fret second strength First and Second strength. Throw that in right there. We've got double stops on the second and third strings at both the sixth and the eighth fret. Same thing on the third and fourth string right there on the fifth, and the fourth strings, so fifth and fourth string, third string, second and third string, first and second string.
Now we've got this one. And we can also throw in this double stuff, ninth fret, second and third strings. So we can play single string on both the third string and the second string so we can play that as well and I'll show you that in more detail here. When we talk about the sending double stops. Let me show you some examples of playing these different double stuff. There's a 10 called school day, which is one of Tech's most famous turns in the key of G. And he places Phil x like this.
Stuff like that. And those are those are just simple double stops to finger positions. I have all these tabs out for you and of the band here. We'll get to those here in a little bit. But anyway, all those are examples of what you can play or how you can play double stops in that first position police box. Let's take another tune may believe that's a B flat and he has this part of the solo where he plays something like this.
And he goes back into that part again. He's just playing those double steps and he walks like that That solo he's he's he's doing a camera for exactly where it's at. But he does something like this I'll have a tapped out for you here where he winds up on the fourth and fifth strings at the eighth fret. Again, real, real simple stuff. Let's think of another one another kind of lick Ron Rudolph run where he kind of alternates these, he plays something like this and the solo where he's quickly going in the key of C from the 10th fret to the eighth fret on the second and third string to the double stuff on the third and fourth strings 10th fret. And he does that in a number of other tunes.
B flat G. You can alternate that play that in any key as long as you've got a first position, blue Xbox to plan. So listen to Maybelline the solo listen to school day. The Phil licks that he plays We're going to talk about those again here in a minute and running around Rudolph the solo. Now he does something like that in there. So these double stops like we played here, we're in B flat on the first and second strange. You can also play on the second and third strings, third and fourth strings, fourth and fifth strings.
And then a lot of Chuck Berry's solos, you're going to hear him use those those positions. So those are double stops played in the first position. blues box.