The Rolling Stones Songs

The Rolling Stones
© Mauricio Santana / WireImage / Getty Images
Artist / Title / Progress
Difficulty / style

There are 2 fuzz tone guitars in this song. Guitar 1 strums the chord progressions and adds some single note riffs, while Guitar 2 plays high register blues licks throughout. This song uses barre chords, steady strum approaches, chord arpeggiation, and some killer bluesy rock lead approaches.

Published: 05/04/2023 Upgrade

The song features one acoustic guitar that strums the progressions throughout. Any acoustic guitar can be used to play this song. This song uses open chords and barre chords, steady strumming approaches, and dynamics.

Published: 05/18/2023 Upgrade

There are 2 electric guitars in this song. Guitar 1 strums a single riff throughout the song, while Guitar 2 digs into some bluesy lead fills all the way through. This song uses barre chords, steady strum approaches, and some killer bluesy rock licks.

Published: 05/25/2023 Upgrade

There are 2 electric guitars in this song. Guitar 1 plays chords and diad riffs and licks throughout, while Guitar 2 plays staccato chord stabs and adds some melodic leads. This song uses triad and diad riffing, staccato chord stabs, and bluesy lead approaches.

Published: 06/08/2023 Upgrade

There is 1 electric guitar in this song that strums and arpeggiates the chord progressions throughout. This song uses barre chords and triads, steady strum approaches, and chord arpeggiation.

Published: 06/15/2023 Upgrade

There are 2 electric guitars in this tune. Guitar 1 plays the rhythm while Guitar 2 digs into some bluesy slide licks throughout. Both guitars are tuned to open G tuning. This song uses open G chord shapes and embellishments, steady strummed approaches, and some tasty bluesy slide guitar.

Published: 06/29/2023 Upgrade

There is 1 electric guitar in this song that plays chords, lines, and licks that outline the chord progression. This song uses barre chords, staccato strumming, syncopation, and single note fills.

Published: 07/06/2023 Upgrade

The song features one acoustic guitar that strums the progressions and embellishments throughout. Any acoustic guitar can be used to play this song. This song uses open chords, bluesy embellishment ideas, steady strumming approaches, and 3/4 time.

Published: 07/20/2023 Upgrade

This tune features 1 electric and 1 acoustic guitar. The electric guitar plays staccato chord stabs and fuzzed out power chords, while the acoustic strums barre chords throughout. This song uses open and barre chords, triads, and staccato strumming.

Published: 08/17/2023 Upgrade

This tune features 1 acoustic and 1 clean electric guitar. The acoustic strums and arpeggiates the chords, while the electric plays single note riffs and light chord strums throughout. This song uses open chords, steady strumming, chord arpeggiation, and single note riffing.

Published: 08/24/2023 Upgrade

The song features one acoustic guitar that plays a main riff and strums chord progressions throughout. Any acoustic guitar can be used to play this song. You’ll need a capo placed at the 3rd fret to play along with this tutorial. This song uses a capo, single note riffing, open chords, and steady strum approaches.

Published: 07/27/2023 Upgrade

The tune features 2 clean electric guitars. Guitar 1 plays the main rhythm, while Guitar 2 is a 12 string electric guitar that adds some single note melodies throughout. A 12 string guitar is ideal, but not necessary to play these parts. This song uses double stops, open chords, single note ornamentations, and some steady strumming approaches.

Published: 08/03/2023 Upgrade

The tune features 1 clean electric guitar that plays mostly staccato chord stabs throughout. There is also an electric dulcimer on the recording that we’ve adapted over to an electric guitar. You’ll need a capo placed on the 3rd fret to play these parts. This song uses extended chords and barre chords, staccato stab strums, and the use of a capo.

Published: 09/14/2023 Upgrade

The tune features 2 slightly overdriven electric guitars. Guitar 1 plays the main rhythm, while Guitar 2 uses open D tuning to play a simple slide riff throughout. This song uses a blues shuffle feel, boogie riffing, dynamics, and slide with an open D tuning.

Published: 08/10/2023 Upgrade

The tune features 1 acoustic and 1 clean electric guitar. The acoustic strums and riffs throughout the tune, while the electric adds some slide guitar embellishment with open G tuning. This song uses open chords, steady strumming, chord embellishments and riffing, and some simple slide approaches in an open tuning.

Published: 08/31/2023 Upgrade

The tune features 1 acoustic and 1 clean electric guitar. The acoustic strums the chords throughout, while the electric adds some country and blues tinged riffing to add texture to the arrangement. This song uses open chords and extended chords, strumming with a country swing groove, double stops, and bluesy riffing approaches.

Published: 11/02/2023 Upgrade

This tune features 1 acoustic and 1 clean electric guitar. The acoustic strums the chord progressions, while the electric adds slide fills using an open A tuning. You’ll need a slide to play along with the electric parts in this tutorial. This song uses open chords and barre chords, 16th note syncopated strumming, slide approaches in an open tuning, and dynamics.

Published: 11/16/2023 Upgrade

This tune features 1 acoustic and 1 clean electric guitar. The acoustic strums the chords throughout the tune, while the electric adds arpeggiated notes and lines. This song uses open chords, an eighth-note triplet strumming pattern, simple riffing off of root notes using slides, and palm muted arpeggiations.

Published: 11/09/2023 Upgrade

There are 2 electric guitars in this song. Guitar 1 lays the foundation with a rhythm riff throughout the song, while Guitar 2 digs into some exciting blues rock licks in the solo. This song uses barre chords, blues based riffing, steady strum approaches, and some killer early rock licks.

Published: 11/30/2023 Upgrade

This tune features 1 acoustic and 1 electric guitar. The acoustic strums the chord progressions throughout, while the electric adds single note parts to add some texture to the arrangement. This song uses double stops, single note motifs, open chords and steady acoustic strum approaches.

Published: 12/07/2023 Upgrade

There are 2 electric guitars in this song. Guitar 1 lays the foundation with a rhythm riff throughout the song, while Guitar 2 digs into some exciting blues rock licks and fills throughout. This song uses boogie riffing using power chords, steady strum approaches, and some killer early rock licks.

Published: 12/14/2023 Upgrade

This tune features 2 electric and 1 acoustic guitar. The electric plays fuzzed out power chords and lead fills throughout, while the acoustic strums the chords throughout. There is a 2nd electric guitar in the intro that adds a simple lick with a filter effect. This song uses power chords, open chords, steady strumming patterns, and lead fills.

Published: 12/21/2023 Upgrade

This tune features 1 acoustic and 2 electric guitars. The acoustic strums the chord progressions throughout, while the electrics adds plenty of riffing with chords, single notes, and double stops. One of the electrics also digs into a great solo. This song uses double stops, boogie riffing, open chords with solid acoustic strumming, and some simple lead licks.

Published: 12/28/2023 Upgrade

This tune features 1 acoustic and 2 electric guitars. The acoustic strums the main riffs and chord progressions throughout. One overdriven electric guitar digs into riffs and rhythms, while the other adds some lead fills to the arrangement. This song uses melodic riffing, solid acoustic strumming, open and barre chords, and tasty fills and licks.

Published: 01/04/2024 Upgrade

This tune features 1 acoustic guitar and a dulcimer that we’ll adapt for a clean electric guitar. The acoustic arpeggiates the chord progressions throughout, while the dulcimer parts play high register octave melodies. We’ll use a special tuning on the electric guitar to get closer to the vibe of the dulcimer heard on the recording. This song uses open chords, chord arpeggiation, and octaves.

Published: 01/11/2024 Upgrade