The course is set up so
every 2 sections go together. In each 2 section “group” the process is essentially the same using different licks and "grooves".
For example:
Section 1 introduces 49 one bar licks. In
Section 2 Griff presents a "Blues in E "Groove and gives suggestions and a 5 chorus demonstration on how to incorporate these licks with turnarounds, chords or riffs.
He doesn't expect you to learn all 49 licks or the "demonstration" note for note. (It's not a course in memorizing solos.)
Take a couple of licks and work up your own one bar lick “solo” using that groove.
The idea is to get a feel for how you can come up with something on your own using the licks and groove presented.
Then
Section 3 & 4 introduce 2 bar licks in E (10 new licks per groove from now on
) and a demo using a "Blues in E" groove.
Section 5 & 6: 2 bar licks in G with a Slow Blues groove.
Sections 7 & 8: 2 bar shuffle licks in A
Sections 9 & 10: 2 bar slow shuffle licks in G
I would select a few licks in whichever of the 5 "grooves" you feel like working in and get the feel for that groove. Then continue to work with other licks in that section or go on to another groove.
This should be an ongoing process using licks Griff has provided and/or ones you discover on your own.
It’s the process and the "groove" that is most important, not memorizing any particular licks or "solo".