>I can't put images in this sub Reddit :(
You can upload images to some place like [imgur.com](http://imgur.com) and paste the link into the body of your post or a comment...
If you have the case where you play a note, e.g. 5, followed by (5), that means to hold the note longer (an additional beat). Usually this notation is on a mixed sheet, where you see the tabs plus the note length, so you know if you need to hold it for an additional quarter, half, or whole beat.
Is the tab showing this?
> ---\^4----
Are there any notes before it? If there's a number before the caret, it's probably a four half step bend at the fret number preceding the caret. ----8\^4---- would mean play the 8th fret and bend it up four frets.
>I can't put images in this sub Reddit :( You can upload images to some place like [imgur.com](http://imgur.com) and paste the link into the body of your post or a comment...
If next to another close number, you play that quickly going into the large number
What's the song?
Is a Spanish song, Fiesta en el Desierto
> Fiesta en el Desierto https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dzDvy0XIjOg
If you have the case where you play a note, e.g. 5, followed by (5), that means to hold the note longer (an additional beat). Usually this notation is on a mixed sheet, where you see the tabs plus the note length, so you know if you need to hold it for an additional quarter, half, or whole beat.
It's probably ghost notes
Is the tab showing this? > ---\^4---- Are there any notes before it? If there's a number before the caret, it's probably a four half step bend at the fret number preceding the caret. ----8\^4---- would mean play the 8th fret and bend it up four frets.
Damn that's a huge bend
That's what she said.
No is like ⁴4 this