By definition, a double-stop lick is when you play a lick with two notes at the
same time. Why would you want to play licks with two notes at a time you might ask?
Double-stops can take your solos to another place that sometimes sounds like two people
playing at the same time. There are many different ways to approach playing double-stop
solos. You can harmonize in third, fourth, fifth, or sixth intervals.
If you don't
know what intervals are, it’s the distance from one note to another. For example, in the
major scale if we were to play the first note of the scale at the same time as the third
note of the scale, that would be a third interval. In the key of C it would be C and E.
Fig. 1 is an example of a lick that uses thirds the way Vince
Gill approached the intro of his hit “Don’t Let Our Love Start Slipping Away.”

If you want to get into the chicken pickin'
double-stops like Jerry Reed, Brent Mason, Albert Lee, and others, a good place to start
is outlining chord tones. Chord tones are the notes that make up the chords you are
playing. It’s super important when playing this type of country guitar that you follow the
chords with your solos. In other words, playing a blues scale over the whole progression
is not going to get you that sound. It will sound like you are playing a blues
solo over a country tune, which is fine if that is what you are going for, but if you are
trying to sound a little more country, then you need to approach it a little differently.
The most important chord tones that you will want to nail are the 3rd and b7. Let's try a
little repeating lick that nails those tones and has some cool voice-leading.
We
could play this first lick in the root position up and down the neck and the notes would
be “right,” but would it sound cool? Not really. So, for the sake of sounding cool, let's
try to stay in the same five-fret region and get all the chords. Check it out in
Fig. 2.

One of the five coolest sounds you can make
on the guitar is a cranked up Tele, digging in with your picking hand middle and ring
fingers on the low strings and snapping the strings against the fretboard on some
double-stop rhythmic pattern. The pattern in Fig. 3 goes over the I, IV,
and V in the key of G—which would be G, C, and D, respectively. This would be used in more
of a rhythm guitar setting, but it is hooky enough to be a signature lick as well. With
your picking hand, you will snap the 4th and 5th strings with your middle and ring
fingers, and attack the 6th string with your flatpick. As you move through the progression
to the IV chord, just move everything down a string so your middle and ring fingers will
be snapping the 3rd and 4th strings.
