Lesson 6 – First Riffs in Open G

In this lesson you'll use Open G tuning to explore your first riffs and song ideas. Instead of worrying about theory or playing perfectly, we'll stay in a very friendly part of the neck and focus on simple ideas that already sound musical.

How to Use This Lesson

This lesson is all about exploration. You don't need to play fast, and you don't need to play perfectly. The goal is to discover sounds you like in Open G tuning and start to recognize that even very small ideas can turn into real riffs and song fragments.

We'll do three main things:

Step 1 – Tune to Open G

For this lesson we use Open G tuning. From the lowest string to the highest, the strings are tuned: D – G – D – G – B – D.

If you haven't tuned to Open G yet, pause the video and watch the bonus lesson "Open G Tuning" first, or use this diagram as a quick reminder:

Open G tuning diagram showing D G D G B D across all six strings
Open G tuning – D G D G B D. The green circles show the open strings in this tuning.

Step 2 – Explore Frets 2–5 on Any String

Once you are in tune, we'll keep things very simple. For this whole lesson, you can stay between frets 2 and 5, on any string. In Open G, this area is very forgiving – almost anything you play in this zone will sound musical, especially if you let some strings ring.

Think of this as your "exploration zone":

Open G exploration zone diagram highlighting frets 2–5 on all six strings
Exploration zone – try any notes on any string between frets 2 and 5.

Start by choosing one note in this area. Play it a few times, then move to a different note and listen to how the sound changes. There is no right or wrong choice here – the goal is to listen and notice what you like.

Step 3 – A Tiny Three-Note Idea

To give you a gentle starting point, the video shows a very simple three-note idea you can copy. It uses just a couple of notes on the lower strings so you can focus on the sound and on staying relaxed.

Remember, this is just one example. You can play the three notes in a row, or rearrange them in any order you like. You don't have to play it exactly the way it is in the video – it's simply there as a launch pad for your own ideas.

Step 4 – Use the Diagram View for Clarity

When you're watching the example in the video, it can be hard to see every note clearly on the guitar neck. For a clearer look, check the diagram view – it shows each note one at a time, using the same fretboard image and colors as the LLGS chord diagrams.

You can pause the video on any step of the diagram sequence to give yourself time to place your fingers and hear the sound.

Step 5 – Try Double Stops (Two Strings Together)

Once single notes feel comfortable, try playing two strings at the same time. These two-note shapes are often called double stops, and they are a big part of the blues and rock sound.

You can:

Again, there is no single "correct" pattern here. The goal is to hear how playing two strings together feels different from playing single notes.

Step 6 – Create Your Own Pattern

Now combine the ideas you've tried:

If you find a tiny idea you like, repeat it. When you repeat an idea, it starts to sound like a riff or a piece of a song. Even very simple ideas count – you don't need a long, complicated line for it to be musical.

Bonus – Example Riff to Try

At the end of the video, you'll see and hear a slightly longer example riff that uses the same Open G exploration zone. It is still very simple to play, but it has a more "finished" sound and uses a small pause to add character.

Watch it slowly, then follow along with the step-by-step diagram version. Let the notes ring and notice how leaving a little space – for example, letting one string ring a bit longer – can break up the riff and add groove.

You don't have to learn this riff perfectly. Treat it as inspiration, and feel free to change the order or the rhythm until it feels like your own.

Practice Ideas

Here are some simple ways to practice this lesson:

Next Steps

When you feel comfortable exploring simple ideas in Open G and can repeat one or two of your own riffs, you're ready to move on. In the next lesson we'll start looking at power chords and rock rhythm, so all the work you've done with strumming and simple riffs will begin to come together.