GUITARHABITS

Free Quality Guitar Lessons

  • Home
  • Best Posts
  • Categories
  • All Lessons
  • Donate♥
  • About
  • YT
  • IG
  • FB

Top 30 Best Electric Guitar Rock Songs of the 70’s

By Klaus Crow 6 Comments

Top-30-Best-Electric-Guitar-Rock-Songs-of-the-70s-1The 70’s really was the area of great electric guitar rock bands. Strong riffs, beautiful solos and solid rock songs were emerging from the ground. It was a great decade for the guitar.

As students for life we are still reaping the fruits today when we are practicing and playing the songs from that time and learning from the minds of those creative guitar players.

To get started we’ve got a list of 30 legendary electric guitar rocks songs from the 70s. As always the list is to inspire, explore and motivate. It’s in no particular order and definitely incomplete ;) If you’re more into acoustic, no problem, check out the Top 30 Best Acoustic Guitar Songs of the 70s.

Please share your favorite electric guitar rock song from 70’s in the comments. I really appreciate it.

Each song title contains a YouTube link to the original song. The “Chords” and “TAB” links provide the sheet music and the “Official Chords/TAB” link will show the official chords and tablature.

Note: As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Enjoy the songs and keep on rocking!

1 – Hotel California – The Eagles – Chords – TAB – Official Chords/TAB

2 – Layla – Derek and the Dominos – Chords – TAB – Official Chords/TAB

3 – Stairway to heaven – Led Zeppelin – TABS – Official Chords/TAB

4 – Comfortably Numb – Pink Floyd – Chords – Official Chords/TAB

5 – Bohemian Rhapsody – Queen – Chords – Official Chords/TAB

6 – Free Bird – Lynyrd Skynyrd – TAB – Official Chords/TAB

7 – Sultans of swing – Dire Straits – Chords – Official Chords/TAB

8 – The Boys Are Back in Town – Thin Lizzy – Chords

Continue Reading

Your First Pentatonic Scale

By Klaus Crow 2 Comments

This tutorial has been conceived for beginner guitar players who want to go beyond strumming chords and start playing scales all along the fretboard.

Learning how to play scales is a great way to expand your musicality and exercise your fingers agility; one of the easiest scales to learn at the beginning of your lead guitar adventures is definitely the scale pentatonic.

We’re going to see the pentatonic scale in open position, that means that the shape of the scale uses some open strings. This decreases the complexity of the fingering and makes easier to play great melodies.

What is a Pentatonic Scale
In the word “pentatonic”, “penta” means “five”, in fact a pentatonic scale is composed of 5 notes (in this tutorial we’re not going to investigate the historical origin of this scale, you can find an interesting article on that here)

We already know the major scale. In the key of C, the major scale is:

C D E F G A B

By definition, a major scale pentatonic is like a major scale, without the 4th and 7th degrees. Thus the C major scale pentatonic is composed of the following notes:

C D E G AContinue Reading

3 Cool Blues Guitar Licks for Soloing (50CBLI)

By Klaus Crow 2 Comments

3 Cool Blues Guitar Licks for SoloingToday I’ll show you 3 cool blues licks from the 50CoolBluesLicksImprovisation Course. (See below this post for more info).

Blues licks are an essential part of learning to solo and improvise on your guitar. They are small parts/fragments of an entire solo. You can see them as the beautiful words that spice up your story line, bringing drama, elegance, juice, soul, and excitement to your soloing. You can incorporate licks into your solos, copy them, learn from them, rip them apart, and rebuild them to create your own.

Building a vocabulary of licks expands your musical ideas and insight, and gives you greater flexibility in your soloing and improvisation.

Know that blues licks are not just for blues music. They are used widely in rock, country, jazz, pop and many other styles of music. They are beneficial to your playing in every way.

So let’s get started.

Enjoy!

blues lick 34

blues lick 11

blues lick 41

If you want to learn more cool blues licks, how to create your own, connect licks together, learn to solo and improvise all over the neck, and dive into the scale shapes, tricks and tools to really master the Pentatonic / Blues Scale inside out, check out:

The 50CoolBluesLicksImprovisation Course

Get Your Soloing and Improvisation Skills to the Next Step!

How to Play and Use Power Chords

By Klaus Crow 4 Comments

How to Play and Use Power Chords-1

The primal feelings that derive from strumming power chords on a guitar that’s plugged into a great sounding amp or distortion, is what makes you wanna play the instrument over and over again. Add a drummer and bass player on top of that experience and superb feelings of euphoria will unfold.

Power chords are indeed powerful and that’s why they are mainly used in rock music, metal or any type of music that consists of electric guitars and distortion. However during the 90s a lot of rock bands started shifting the power chords to the acoustic guitars due to the MTV’s unplugged series, which set the stage for a new area on the acoustic guitar.

The power chord is a fairly easy chord to play, especially on an electric guitar or when played higher up the neck. It’s a moveable chord shape, that can be played in every key just by moving it up and down the fretboard (explained later).

This is why a lot of guitar players love to play rock music. The use of just one chord shape moving around the guitar neck throughout the entire song makes playing rhythm guitar quite accessible for the eager rock beginners.

Continue Reading

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Most Popular Posts

Easy Guitars Songs For Beginners

Best Acoustic Guitars under 450 Dollars

8 Most Important Chords for Beginners

Learn The Guitar Fingerboard in 16 Days

Easy Guitar Riffs & Intros for Beginners

16 Legendary Fingerpicking Patterns

The 5 Pentatonic Scale Shapes

How to Play Beautiful Open Chord Shapes

Best Guitar Amps for Practice and Small Gigs

Categories

  • Chord Melody
  • Chords
  • Chord progression
  • Strumming | Rhythm
  • Fingerpicking
  • Scales
  • Soloing | Improv
  • Licks
  • Riffs
  • Excercise
  • Motivation
  • Rock
  • Blues
  • Gear
  • Songs
  • Solos
  • Music theory
  • Practice
  • Intervals
  • Arpeggios
  • Vocals | Singing
  • Ear training
  • Songwriting
  • Recording
  • Performing
  • Online guitar tools
  • Country
  • Metal
  • Jazz
  • Pop of all times
  • Best buy
  • Christmas
  • Ear practice
  • Lifestyle Design
  • Beginner
  • Intermediate
  • Advanced
  • Uncategorized

Copyright © 2025 · Guitarhabits - About - Privacy Policy - Change Consent - Do Not Sell My Personal Information - Cookie Policy

Note: As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Scroll Up