There’s something personal—almost spiritual—about guitar solo tips.

When it’s done right, it’s not just a flurry of notes. It’s a voice. A statement. A sonic fingerprint.

But here’s the truth:

Most players spend years learning licks and scale shapes, but never feel like they’re saying anything when they solo.

I’ve been there. Maybe you have too.

So if you’re looking for real, creative, soulful guitar solo tips that go beyond “learn the pentatonic scale,” then keep reading.

In this post, we’ll explore how to solo with intention. You’ll learn how to craft solos that feel alive—with storytelling, dynamics, emotion, and phrasing. We’ll talk about artists who do it well, and I’ll show you how our visual learning tool FretDeck and the Guitar Freaks Discord can help you grow faster and more creatively.

Let’s plug in.

minor pentatonic scale on guitar

❌ Stop Guessing. Start Shredding.

If you’re still fumbling through scale patterns and box shapes… it’s costing you progress.

FretDeck™ is the no-fluff system that shows you exactly how to master the fretboard—fast. Early access.

⚡️ This isn’t for dabblers. It’s for players who want results.

👉 Click here to join the pre-launch now

Early access. Limited rewards. Don’t wait.


🌀 Guitar Solo Tips #1: Stop Soloing—Start Speaking

A great solo feels like a conversation.
It has phrases. Pauses. Punchlines.

Think about the solos from David Gilmour, B.B. King, or Mark Knopfler. They don’t rush. They say something—often with just a handful of notes.

So here’s your challenge:

🎯 Treat your next solo like you’re speaking a sentence—one phrase at a time.

Use rests. Leave space. Imagine your guitar is answering a question or telling a short story.


🎶 Guitar Solo Tips #2: Learn the Rules—Then Break Them Intentionally

It’s important to know your scales, your chord tones, and your modes. But once you do, the real magic begins when you bend those rules.

  • Play a note outside the key for tension
  • Slide into a phrase late
  • Repeat a phrase slightly off time

Players like Jeff Beck, Nels Cline, and John Mayer break the mold on purpose—and that’s what makes them unforgettable.

🎸 Want to see how your scale shapes connect across the neck in all 5 positions?
That’s what FretDeck helps you master.

👉 Join our Kickstarter here »


⚡ Guitar Solo Tips#3: Know Where Your Solo Lives on the Fretboard

Here’s a common mistake:

Players learn Pattern 1 of the minor pentatonic, then never leave it. Every solo starts in the same spot. Every lick feels recycled.

Instead, you need to know where your root notes are, how to connect shapes, and how to move across the neck—not just up and down it.

Imagine if you could see your solo before you even play it.

That’s the visual skill pro players rely on. And it’s what our community is learning with FretDeck every day.


🔁 Guitar Solo Tips #4: Repeat Yourself (It’s Not a Mistake)

There’s power in repetition.

Some players avoid it, thinking it’s “too simple.” But the truth is, repetition is what hooks the listener. It builds tension. It creates expectation. And it makes your solo feel like a song within a song.

Just ask Carlos Santana.

Try this:

  • Play a 4-note phrase
  • Repeat it 3 times
  • Then vary the 4th version slightly—maybe change the last note, or extend the rhythm

It’ll sound like you meant it.


🎯 Guitar Solo Tips #5: Use Chord Tones to Land With Meaning

Scales are your roadmap. But chord tones are your destinations.

If you’re soloing over a blues in A7, and you keep landing on C (the flat 3) when the band’s on D7… it sounds disconnected.

Instead, try targeting the root, 3rd, or 7th of each chord.

🎸 Here’s an easy trick:

When you’re learning a solo, go back and analyze where each phrase lands. You’ll often find they hit the chord tones right on the changes.

It’s not an accident. It’s intentional storytelling.


🧠 Guitar Solo Tips #6: Practice Backwards

This may sound strange, but it works wonders.

We usually practice solos from start to finish. But what if you started from the last phrase and worked your way back?

  • You build confidence at the end
  • You get used to strong finishes
  • You’ll learn to shape your narrative arc

This method is common among classical musicians—and it’s a powerful tool for soloing guitarists who want their phrases to land hard.


📐 Guitar Solo Tips #7: Design Your Solo in Three Acts

Just like a great story, a solo has a shape.

Try breaking it into three parts:

Act 1 – Introduction

  • Use fewer notes
  • Leave space
  • Set the tone

Act 2 – Development

  • Increase energy
  • Add variation
  • Explore new positions

Act 3 – Resolution

  • Return to a motif
  • Land on a powerful note
  • Let it breathe at the end

This is how Joe Bonamassa and Robben Ford craft their blues solos. It’s not accidental—it’s architecture.


🎸 Why FretDeck Helps Guitarists Solo with Intention

Most soloists hit a wall not because they lack talent—but because they lack structure and visibility.

FretDeck gives you a visual map of the fretboard, helping you:

✅ Learn all 5 pentatonic patterns in any key
✅ Identify root notes, target tones, and scale shapes
✅ Practice solo-building prompts with real musical application
✅ Break out of pattern 1—without getting lost

It’s not just theory. It’s a practice system you can hold in your hand.

We’re launching it now on Kickstarter with exclusive rewards for early backers:

🎸 👉 Back the FretDeck Kickstarter Here

guitar solo tips

❌ Stop Guessing. Start Shredding.

If you’re still fumbling through scale patterns and box shapes… it’s costing you progress.

FretDeck™ is the no-fluff system that shows you exactly how to master the fretboard—fast. Early access.

⚡️ This isn’t for dabblers. It’s for players who want results.

👉 Click here to join the pre-launch now

Early access. Limited rewards. Don’t wait.


🎶 Join the Guitar Freaks Hangout (and Share Your Solos)

Want to trade solos with other guitar players?

Inside our Guitar Freaks Discord, you’ll find:

  • Weekly solo challenges
  • Feedback from fellow players
  • Deep-dive discussions on tone, gear, phrasing
  • Lick breakdowns (SRV, Gilmour, Mayer, and more)
  • Live Q&A events and riff-of-the-week threads

If you’re serious about growing as a soloist, but want a space that’s encouraging—not competitive—this is your group.

🎸 👉 Join the Guitar Freaks Hangout on Discord

guitar solo tips

Join Guitar Freaks Hangout on Discord! 🎸

Get Fret Logic FREE!

Join the Guitar Freaks Hangout Discord and get exclusive access to my entire e-book, Fret Logic! Master the fretboard and elevate your solos with this comprehensive guide.

👉 Don’t miss out—join now and download your free copy!


💬 Real Talk: Are You Practicing or Just Playing?

It’s fun to jam along to tracks. But if you want to get better at soloing, here’s what I recommend:

  • Record your solo
  • Listen back (cringe and all)
  • Identify what worked
  • Ask: Did I tell a story? Did I repeat motifs? Did I land on strong tones?

You don’t have to be a perfectionist. You just have to be curious.


📦 Bonus: 3 Solo Prompts You Can Try Tonight

🎯 Prompt 1: Solo with Just 3 Strings

Use only the G, B, and high E strings. This will focus your phrasing and force melodic discipline.


🎯 Prompt 2: Solo Without a Backing Track

Set a metronome. Solo freely. Focus on dynamics, phrasing, and emotion.


🎯 Prompt 3: Solo Using Only One Pentatonic Position

Don’t move. Stay in one box. Explore bends, slides, space, and note length.

🎸 Want all 5 positions in every key at your fingertips?
That’s what FretDeck gives you.

👉 Click here to back the Kickstarter »


🔥 Final Thoughts: Play Solos That Matter

You don’t need to be fast. You don’t need to be flashy. You don’t need to be “the best.”

You just need to care.

When you play with intention, rhythm, tone, and phrasing, you’re already ahead of 90% of guitarists out there.

And when you surround yourself with tools and people who encourage your growth?

There’s no limit to how expressive your solos can become.

🎸 👉 Back the FretDeck Kickstarter Now »
🎸 👉 Join the Guitar Freaks Discord Today »
👉 Read: How to Craft a Blues Guitar Solo That Tells the Truth
👉 Ultimate Guitar Tabs – for solo transcription ideas

Let’s build solos that say something.


Justin Comstock
Guitar Freaks Blog & FretDeck