October 19, 2021 by Klaus Crow
Being able to transcribe a song or guitar solo is a great skill that anyone can learn. One of the things that is really helpful developing and applying this skill, is to have some good solid tools that make this process as effortless as possible.
Back when I was 15 I had a cassette recorder with a slow down function, so I could figure out the notes of a guitar solo. The only problem was the slow down function also lowered the pitch when you’d slow down the song.
So when I had to deal with a fast blazing solo I set the pitch exactly an octave lower than the original key so I could transcribe the solo by ear. The downside was that some notes were so low they became undefinable and I couldn’t tell what notes they were playing anymore. :)
The tools we have today are something I could only have dreamed of back then. I’m not complaining, because I learned a lot from those limitations, but I also enjoy the benefits of the technology today. And oh, what makes it transcribing fun and easy!
Working out a song by ear is an important skill that is often overlooked. It takes your guitar playing to a higher level and gives you a deeper understanding and insight in many aspects of guitar playing. So, try to develop the skill of transcribing and use the appropriate tools to improve your skill and take it to the next step.
I created a list with the best tools that make the process of transcribing and learning a song or solo going as smooth as possible. These tools will help both guitar players who can already transcribe and guitar players who can you use some extra help.
Enjoy!
1 – YouTube Speed Selector
For those who (are learning to) transcribe songs by ear and eyes the YouTube speed selector is a pretty convenient tool. It’s easy to miss because it’s somewhat hidden in the “settings”. Click the Settings icon in the lower right corner of the window, then click “speed”. You can choose 0.5 for half-speed or even 0.25 for quarter-speed playback.
This is really great for learning guitar solos that are too fast for the eyes and ears. I just finished transcribing the solo of “Get the funk out” by Extreme. And what better way than learning it from the master himself, so I checked a lesson video from Nuno Bettencourt where he attempts to explain the solo slowly. He is not so good at playing slowly :) For me, the Youtube slowdown setting was a great help to figure out the tapping part successfully.
2 – Amazing Slow Downer
The Amazing Slow Downer is absolutely my favorite go-to app for figuring out guitar parts. You can import any song from Spotify or Apple Music into the app and then slow down or speed up the music, you change the pitch and create a loop from any part of the song. It’s only available for iPhone.
3 – VLC Media Player
If you want to keep things simple VLC Media player is a free software tool for playing any kind of audio format. It has a slow-down tool, a great advanced EQ and even a loop function. It’s for both Windows and Mac.
4 – Anytune
Anytune helps you learn, transcribe or practice songs by slowing down the tempo, adjusting the pitch, repeating loops, setting navigation marks, sharing timed comments and much more. Only for Mac and iOS.
5 – Tablature
The tablature you find on internet can be a great help, but there are still a lot of flat-out-wrong tablature transcriptions out there. If you want better quality and precision then get yourself a tablature book with some nice solos.
If you don’t want the entire book, but just one song, Musicnotes allows you to buy a single copy of your favorite song on high quality tablature. You can view online how it looks. You can learn to transcribe by ear using one of the slow down tools and have the book or musicsheet as your backup support whenever you need it.
6 – Aural Skills
Here are two posts that will help you develop and train your aural skills to transcribe solos and songs by ear. 8 ways to develop your aural skills and 12 Ways How to Transcribe What You Hear.
7 – Guitar Pro and Mysongbook
Guitar Pro is a great piece of software along with their Mysongbook project to learn songs and solos, read tabs and sheet music, create your own tabs (I use it myself to create tabs for Guitarhabits), mix your sounds and share your music. A beautiful combination.
8 – TuneTranscriber
TuneTranscriber is a free online tool where you can upload your mp3 or paste the link of a YouTube video and then slow down the music. Using mp3 you can slow down the tempo anyway you like. YouTube can only slow down 50 percent. You can also add markers, add a loop really easy and save your work. Love it!
9 – Capo
If your using Mac or iOS then Capo and Neptune are very cool tools for learning all your favorite songs and solos. You import the song and it automatically detects the chords in your music. You can switch easily between different instruments like bass guitar, mandoline, ukelele and banjo. Capo is used by pros like Vernon Reid from Living Colour and Hanan Rubinstein (Guitarist for Alicia Keys, Pharrell, Rita Ora, Carole King and Ellie Goulding.) Here’s how it works.
10 – 50CBLI
It is great to learn and copy a guitar solo from tablature and online lessons, but eventually you want to know what you’re playing and how a solo comes into being, so that eventually you will be able to transcribe a solo by ear.
Most Blues, (Classic)Rock, Pop and heavy metal solos are based of the pentatonic/blues scale. The The 50 Cool Blues Licks Improvisation course will help you develop a thorough understanding of how to play the pentatonic/blues scale all over the neck and how to use it for soloing and improvisation, which will make the process of transcribing guitar solos a lot easier.
Do you know a great music transcribe tool? And what song or solo are you going to transcribe today? Please share in the comments. Love to hear from you!
Joe Blake says
Thank you very much for that. I knew some, but not all, of the tools you’ve listed. I’ve been figuring out chords and melodies by ear for 60 years and I’m still not really good at it, so a few tools are great. Thanks.
Klaus Crow says
Hi Joe,
Sure, a little help to work out a song is nice to make the process go smoother. It’s great though that you keep trying. Guitar playing is all about continuously learning and improving.
Thanks for your comment!
Best regards,
Klaus Crow
Shree says
Hello.. Thanks for the lessons :) and i am buying my first electric guitar, i am struck between choosing ibanez 250 and fender squier deluxe strat, would you please help me with that. And also is it good to start with yiur blues licks and lesson?
Klaus Crow says
Hi Shree,
If you are all about rock, shredding and metal I would recommend the Ibanez.
If you want to be more an allround guitar player, blues, rock, country, pop, etc then I would go for the fender squier deluxe strat. It depends on your musical taste. Both are nice guitars. I also have ibanez and squier guitars. If better quality and an allround good tone is a priority I’d go for the Squiere deluxe strat. but again if your going to focus mainly on shredding and metal, I’d go for Ibanez.
The 50CoolBluesLicksImprov course is an intermediate course. If you’re a beginner I would wait a while.
Best regards,
Klaus Crow
Shree says
Thank you :)
DsPolleke says
I really like Chordify! It is a website you post a link to a YouTube video (or any other videosite) and it will try to transcribe the song. It is fast and pretty good. Not perfect but a good starting point.
Klaus Crow says
Hi DsPolleke,
Indeed for simple songs it works really nice. Moreover it’s free. For more complex songs I’d go for something like “Capo”.
Thanks for sharing.
Suresh says
Hi :) do you take skype lessons?
I am from india :)
Suresh says
Please dont say no :p ,
Klaus Crow says
Hi Suresh,
What is it that you want to learn? How can I help?
At what stage of guitar playing are you? Beginner, intermediate, advanced?
And do you want to learn something specific?
Suresh says
Hi :) thank you so much, i am playing acoustic over a year now, but i was just playing chords for songs, never played solos ,learnt to play scale positions from your lessons, i am interested in learning classical finger style and blues!
Suresh says
Hi i am playing acoustic over a year, but i just play chords for some of my fav songs, never played solo, learnt major and minor scale positions from your lessons, i am interested in learning classical fingerstyle , shredding, blues
Klaus Crow says
Hi Suresh,
If you’ve never played solo before you might want to try some of these solos.
https://www.guitarhabits.com/top-30-easy-guitar-solos/
Here are some basic classical fingerstyle patterns:
16 Legendary Fingerpicking Patterns
Before you’re off to shredding you might want to start to learn some riffs:
Top 25 Easy Guitar Riffs and Intros
50 of The Greatest Guitar Riffs of All Time
Pick one solo or riff and I’ll make a video lesson for you.
Klaus Crow
Klaus Crow says
Transcribing and practicing a solo with Riffstation. Just downloaded the 30 day trial. Absolutely awesome if you want to filter the music and really hear to solo shine through or the other way around. Digging it!
suresh says
hi, sorry for late reply,i will first learn solos and fingerstyle , then i will try riifs :) , thank you
rohit aggarwal says
thanks for the information
kshitij says
good one keep it up
varun gupta says
thanks for sharing this tips
Ronald Enos says
Thanks for the informative post. Keep posting. Please let me know for the upcoming posts.
Steve H says
The app ‘Looper for YouTube’ let’s you loop any section so you don’t have to manually keep going back to the same point.