And then at the end of the song, he plays this really cool and tech. And so let's go through that. He does the slides and then he gets to right here and he plays over the first position g blue Xbox, let me play it for you on time. That's how he ends heads up. So we're starting on the fifth fret of the fourth string, okay, going to the third fret of the third string, bending up twice on the fifth fret of the third string. And then I'm gonna come back down to the fifth fret with the ring finger, I'm gonna do a pull off, pulling off from the fifth fret of the third string to the third fret.
Like that, so it goes this way. And I'm coming back to the fifth fret of the fourth string. Like that plays that twice. And then he does this. Something similar events up twice. five, three, no pull off this time 535 on the fourth string.
So let's play that whole thing so far slowly. Then to wrap it up, he's gonna play this ninth ish court. And I always thought that Freddie King played a G ninth at the end of his songs, but it turns out he doesn't. And one of my subscribers on my YouTube channel, old school blues guitar, showed me or told me how to play this properly. And apparently, what Freddy was playing is something that looks kinda like a beast seventh core. This is how I Remember, I make my B seven, and I put it at the third fret.
And then I just move everything over. So you've got this, listen to this, instead of this, which is your knife. It's a slight difference, but it's a difference. And this is what Freddy was playing. So to make this chord, I've got my first finger, actually, it will start with my second finger on the third fret of the sixth string, that's my G, my second finger is getting the second fret of the fifth string, but it's also going to get the second fret of the fourth string. And then my ring finger is on the third fret of the fourth string, and my pinky is on the third fret of the second string.
So I've got this. If you've ever listened to much Freddie King, that should sound familiar to you. So when I make this chord, I pretty much make a B seventh, but the one difference is I, I tend to rest my first finger on both the fifth and the fourth. You can play around with this and see, see what you think. But I think that's where you get that sound there that he gets at the end of the song. So let's play that in tag one more time.
And there is the end of our first Freddie King instrumental heads up.