Alice Cooper - No More Mr. Nice Guy - Guitar Lesson

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Alice Cooper - No More Mr. Nice Guy - Guitar Lesson

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Key E minor
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Classic Rock

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Billion Dollar Babies (Deluxe Reissue) album cover
Billion Dollar Babies (Deluxe Reissue)
1973 3:08
Capo Advisor 0 E minor · Original key

No More Mr. Nice Guy


"No More Mr. Nice Guy" is a rock track by Alice Cooper, released in 1973 as the third single from their sixth album, Billion Dollar Babies. The song reached No. 25 in the US and No. 10 in the UK, contributing to the album hitting No. 1 in both countries. Its driving rhythm guitar riffs and straightforward hard rock structure make it an accessible and rewarding song to learn on electric guitar.

  • The track comes from Billion Dollar Babies, which hit No. 1 in both the US and the UK.
  • At just over three minutes long, the song is compact and riff-driven, good for focused practice sessions.
  • Released as the album's third single in 1973, it performed stronger in the UK charts than in the US.
Fender Telecaster
Guitar

Fender Telecaster

Alice Cooper's original band occasionally used the Telecaster for bright, cutting tones that sliced through the dense Marshall crunch on tracks like 'School's Out.' Its twang provides sharp articulation contrasting the warm humbucker thickness Cooper preferred.

Gibson Les Paul Standard
Guitar

Gibson Les Paul Standard

The Les Paul Standard delivers the warm, singing sustain that defines Cooper's classic era solos and rhythm crunch when paired with Marshall Plexis. Its balanced PAF humbuckers give Cooper responsive dynamics, from controlled verses to saturated solo tones.

Gibson Les Paul Custom
Guitar

Gibson Les Paul Custom

Michael Bruce and later players like Ryan Roxie relied on the Les Paul Custom for its thicker body resonance and hotter output, providing the sustaining lead tones and aggressive rhythm crunch essential to Cooper's theatrical hard rock sound.

Gibson ES-335
Guitar

Gibson ES-335

Dick Wagner and Steve Hunter used the semi-hollow ES-335 for warm, singing lead lines with natural breakup, capturing the '70s solo era's melodic sophistication while the semi-hollow body added organic warmth against Marshall's aggressive gain.

Marshall JCM800
Amp

Marshall JCM800

The JCM800 became Alice Cooper's tone foundation from the '80s onward, delivering tight, mid-heavy gain with note clarity that cut through dense arrangements on 'Poison' and beyond. Its responsive push lets Cooper shift from controlled verses to explosive solos.

Seymour Duncan JB
Pickup

Seymour Duncan JB

Hotter ceramic humbuckers like the Seymour Duncan JB powered Alice Cooper's '80s sound, delivering saturated gain and compressed sustain for arena-filling solos while maintaining the midrange definition the JCM800 amplified.

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Play with Backing Track

Solo (Backing Track)

Solo (Backing Track)