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Writing a solo

Sayonil Mitra

Free Bird Player
Nov 11, 2019
676
280
I always had this question. I just want to know about the proper approach to write a good guitar solo for a song. I know different guitarists do it differently. I want to know those different thought processes. How do you guys do it?
 

Tory Capman

One Stringer
Nov 11, 2019
176
1
It depends on the person. I haven’t written much… but when I do, I generally loop the backing track and start with a general idea and then just keep playing it over and over until I’ve modified it to a place where I’m happy with the outcome. Now, one day when I’ve solidified my music theory, I would dive much deeper into chord/scale relationships and study my heroes to find out what they did to make things so great. What chord/scale combinations sound like what I’m looking for. Then eventually, it becomes second nature.
 

Graeme Meekison

Free Bird Player
Nov 11, 2019
2
0
Never one way to write a solo. Most of my solo ideas originate from improv, though I try to make the solo echo melodies from the other sections of the composition as to help build a larger theme and find its place in this particular song. That way it’s not just noodling that, while it works musically, doesn’t always add to the piece outside of just having a solo for the sake of it.
Soloing is a great way to tell a story in your playing. If you think of the solo as a conflict chart from a story, you want to have the right exposition, rising action, climax, and resolution. What you do to accomplish those depends entirely on both the song and the player (things like increasing speed, having more vibrato and bends, changing position/scale/mode, etc, can all accomplish this), but having that type of crescendo outline helps me generally evoke more feel out of solo sections. Even in solos that don’t really increase very much in intensity/speed/etc, you can often still pinpoint those parts of the structure.
A good example of that would be the solo from ‘So Far Away’. The first part brings back a familiar sounding vocal melody from the song to fit it into the piece, then the tension rises as Syn moves higher up the neck, the climax is at the big bends right at the end before resolving the whole solo back at the route of the key. Even though he mostly follows Matt’s vocal melody, you still get that implied story crescendo.
Not saying at all that this is the way all soloists think through their playing, but I think a lot of players write solos with a similar structure even absentmindedly because it just works so well, and you’ll find this in a LOT of solos from all kinds of players.
Just a little something that helped me get on track to writing solos that felt both more structured as well as ‘in-place’ in the song! 🙂
 

Calvin Phillips

Music Theory Bragger
Nov 11, 2019
2,588
1,988
When I write a song, I dont even think about the solo. I think about the song structure first. Eventually through jamming your brain wills tart to make connections of what you want to hear over the rhythm track. Then obviously, you pick up the guitar and figure out where on the guitar you are playing whats in your head. And honestly from there, you just let yourself flow and what comes comes. This is the easiest approach for me as sometimes the solo will not work and you will have to remaster or mix or even trash it and start again. But in the end you’ll figure out what you wanted there. I’ve rewritten parts and solos over and over so many times, always wanting to perfect it.