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The Bend

Lesson 2/73 | Study Time: 5 Min
The Bend

The Bend

The bend is achieved by "pushing" a string with the left hand fingers in the direction of the adjacent strings. This causes the note to rise in pitch. Notes are most commonly bent one tone (2 frets in pitch) or one semitone (1 fret in pitch). The following examples use the third finger to bend the notes.

You will find bending easier if the second finger also helps "push up" the string (bending the string). The bend is indicated in tablature by a curved arrow (see ex. 64 ) and the letter "B" above it. In music notation a slur is used to connect the bent notes, so you will need to refer to the letter B above the tab.

In the following example, the C note on the 5th fret of the 3rd string is bent up a tone to a note equivalent to the D note on the 7th fret. Experience and practice will help you bend to the correct pitch. If you use very light gauge strings on your guitar, bending will be easier.

Play note on 5th fret, 3rd string.

Third finger bends string upwards with help of the second finger.

The common notes to bend within Pattern 1 Extension are shown in the following example. The example given uses notes from Pattern 1 at the 5th position and the diagram also highlights which direction to bend each note. When improvising, you should only bend from and to a note in the pattern.

Either the 3rd or 4th finger can be used to bend the notes on the 1st and 2nd string. Practice using both fingers.

Gary Turner

Gary Turner

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Class Sessions

1- Alternate Picking 2- The Hammer-on 3- Improvising and Scales 4- The Slide 5- The Tie 6- The Bend 7- Vibrato 8- Open String Slurs 9- 12 Bar Blues 10- The Blues Scale 11- How to Read Music 12- INTRODUCTION 13- Pick Tremolo 14- Other Titles in This Series 15- Right Hand Fretting 16- Licks Using Bends 17- The Major Scale 18- Pattern 1 Extension 19- Notes on the Guitar Fretboard 20- The Pull-off 21- Pattern 1 Licks 22- Quarter Note Riffs 23- Rests and Syncopation 24- 12 Bar Blues in A Minor 25- The Natural Minor Scale 26- Using Pattern 1 27- Two Handed Tapping 28- Double Notes 29- Riff Variation 30- Approach to Practice 31- The Chromatic Scale 32- The Release Bend 33- Chord Progressions 34- The Quick Slide 35- Shuffle Rhythm 36- The Quarter Note Triplet 37- Licks Using Release Bends 38- Additional Riffs 39- Notes on the Guitar Fretboard 40- Licks Using the Slide 41- Technique Combinations 42- Tuning Your Guitar 43- Slurring 44- Three Fingered Slurring 45- Lead Guitar Solo Number 4 46- Learning all the Keys 47- Other Improvising Patterns 48- Electronic Tuner 49- The Quick Hammer-on 50- Lead Guitar Solo Number 1 51- The Quick Bend 52- Lead Guitar Solo Number 3 53- Fretboard Diagrams 54- Using Pattern 2 55- Key Signatures 56- Lead Guitar Solo Number 2 57- Technique Symbols 58- Scales 59- Using Pattern 3 60- Using Pattern 4 61- The Chromatic Scale 62- Using Pattern 5 63- The Major Scale 64- Jamming Progressions 65- The Minor Scale 66- 12 Bar Blues Progressions 67- The Minor Penatonic Scale 68- Minor Key Progressions 69- The Blues Scale 70- Major Key Progressions 71- The Major Pentatonic Scale 72- Major Key Progressions 73- More titles by LearnToPlayMusic.com

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