Why This Riff Is Tricky to Perfect
Palm muting technique
The riff is simple power chords, but the tight palm muting is what gives it that percussive, chunky grunge sound. Too loose and it's washy; too tight and it's muffled.
Dynamic shifts
The song alternates between quiet, muted verses and loud, full-power choruses. The dynamic control is what makes it sound authentic, not just the notes.
Timing and feel
Kurt Cobain's playing had a loose, aggressive feel. Getting the timing just slightly behind the beat gives it that grunge swagger. Too metronomic and it loses the vibe.
How to Practice This Riff
Load a YouTube tutorial
Find a Smells Like Teen Spirit guitar lesson or tutorial on YouTube and paste the URL into PracticeLoop.
Slow it down to 50%
At 50% speed, you can hear exactly how tight the palm muting is and when the chord changes happen.
Loop the main riff
The verse riff is the core of the song. Set an AB loop on it and drill the palm muting until it sounds consistent and chunky.
Practice the dynamic shifts
Loop the transition from verse to chorus. Practice going from soft palm-muted playing to full power chords. The shift should be dramatic.
Gradually increase speed
Work from 50% through 65%, 80%, to full speed. Only move up when the palm muting is tight and the dynamics are controlled.
Speed Progression Plan
Nail the palm muting
Focus entirely on the palm muting technique. The notes are easy - it's the muting that makes it sound right. Experiment with hand position until it's consistent.
Lock in the timing
At 65%, focus on the rhythmic feel. The riff has a loose, slightly behind-the-beat feel. Don't rush the chord changes.
Add the dynamics
Practice the full song structure with quiet verses and loud choruses. The dynamic range is what makes it iconic.
Play with attitude
At full speed, add the aggressive feel. Hit the power chords hard in the chorus, keep the verses controlled. It's grunge - it should sound raw.
Built for Guitar Practice
Speed Control 0.25x - 2x
Fine-grained slider with presets. Pitch is preserved so the song stays in Eb tuning at all speeds.
AB Looping
Essential for drilling the palm muting. Loop the verse riff and work on consistency until it's muscle memory.
Saved Loops
Name sections like "Verse riff", "Chorus", "Bridge". Come back to problem areas across practice sessions.
Keyboard Shortcuts
Space to play/pause, [ and ] for loop points, L to toggle loop. Keep your hands on the guitar.
Frequently Asked Questions
What tuning is Smells Like Teen Spirit in?
The song is in standard tuning (EADGBE) but tuned down half a step to Eb Ab Db Gb Bb Eb. If you're learning from tutorials, check whether they're in standard or drop D tuning - some simplified versions use drop D.
Is Smells Like Teen Spirit hard to play on guitar?
The main riff is beginner-friendly - it's just power chords. But getting the palm muting tight, the dynamics right, and the transitions smooth takes practice. The solo has some faster licks that benefit from slowing down.
What speed should I start practising at?
Start at 50-60% speed to nail the palm muting technique. The riff itself is simple, but the muting and dynamics make it sound authentic. At slower speeds you can focus on clean muting without the speed pressure.
Does slowing down change the pitch?
No. PracticeLoop preserves the original pitch at all speeds. If the tutorial is in Eb tuning (half step down), it stays in Eb at 50% or 100%. You can play along accurately at any speed.