Washout second verse is very similar to the first verse, not quite exactly the same, but almost. And the big variation comes when you play over the sea. So let's start out the second verse, we're just going to play it, I'm just going to play it slowly because it's exactly the same as what we played the first time around. Now when he goes to the sea, he leads into it just like he did the G on the fifth string, eighth ninth 10th fret of the fifth string with the C at the eighth fret of the sixth string, so like this, then right to that double stop. Like that, and then the second time around, I hear this so almost the same lick but Instead of going to the sixth string, he's going to go to the 10th fret of the fourth string. Something like that.
I don't know if that's exactly how he plays it, but I think that's what he's playing that back to this with the slide to get you back to the one then we go to the five for the one that wraps up the second verse, getting ready for the solo. So again, the only variations the really the tricky variations in this 10 as far as the main melody of the song comes when you're playing over the sea, and he just does some variation. So play it like we saw in the first verse. Then in the second verse, He leads into it something like that. So it's really subtle, but it's it's cool. And if you want to play this stuff exactly like Freddie King, and that's what you gotta got to figure out are those parts.
We'll come back and we'll get into the first solo.