Learn To Play Blues Guitar

18th March

If you want to learn to play blues guitar then where do you start? Well, the two most fundamental elements of blues guitar playing to learn are the 12-bar blues chord sequence and the blues scale. The most important thing for beginners learning to play blues guitar is to get both of these under your belt.

4f68af80138335e Learn To Play Blues GuitarThe 12-bar blues sequence is the fundamental sequence which many blues songs are built on. As it is so fundamental most guitarists know it, and so it is often used as the basis for jam sessions. It can be played with a few variations, but fundamentally it follows this form for each verse (using major chords): Root chord for 4 bars, fourth chord for 2 bars, root chord for 2 bars, fifth chord for 1 bar, fourth chord for 1 bar and root chord for 2 bars. This can be used in any key – for example in the key of A Major, the root chord is A, the fourth chord is D and the fifth chord is E so the pattern is A for 4 bars, D for 2 bars, A for 2 bars, E for 1 bar, D for 1 bar and A for 2 bars.

A number of variations can be introduced in order to make the 12-bar blues sequence more interesting. A common variation is to play the fifth chord for the last bar instead of the root, which gives a good “turnaround” to lead into the next verse. Another common variation is to use 7th chords, particularly to lead into a chord change. For example, you could vary the 12-bar blues in A to be 3 bars of A, 1 bar of A7, 1bar of D, 1 bar of D7, 1 bar of A, 1 bar of A7, 1 bar of E7, 1 bar of D7, 1 bar of A7, 1 bar of E7 or something similar depending on your taste.

So once you’ve learned to play blues guitar rhythm, you’ll want to learn blues guitar lead as well and this is where the blues scale comes in. The blues scale is the fundamental scale on which many blues guitar solos are based and you can play a very convincing blues solo using nothing else but the blues scale.

Technically, the blues scale is the minor pentatonic scale with the addition of a sharpened fourth note, which is known as the “blue note”. So the notes in a blues scale are the root, minor third, fourth, sharpened fourth, fifth and flattened seventh. For example, in the key of A, the blues scale is A, C, D, D#, E, G, A. It’s quite straightforward to learn a blues scale pattern on the guitar fretboard that you can then move around the fretboard depending on which key you want to play on.

Once you have learned the blues guitar scale in at least one fretboard pattern, you’ll want to start using it to create blues solos. Either buy commercial blues guitar backing tracks or record yourself playing a 12-bar blues pattern repeatedly, ideally with a drum machine. Use this to practice playing phrases built from notes in the blues scale. Remember that the root note is fundamental to music, so you’ll often want to start or end phrases on the root. Also, the “blue note” is really a passing note so you shouldn’t usually start or end on that note.

If you want to study blues guitar seriously then it’s a good idea to purchase online blues guitar lessons that give you a structured program of study and introduce you to the many facets of blues guitar playing. An excellent choice is Learn & Master’s Spotlight Series Blues Guitar.

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Learn Blues Guitar – Add Interest To Your Blues Guitar Solos

29th March

b4779c7c6bd23cf Learn Blues Guitar – Add Interest To Your Blues Guitar SolosIf you’re learning blues guitar, you’ve probably learned the 12-bar blues and the blues scale, and you understand that you create phrases using notes from the blues scale played over a 12-bar blues pattern, putting them together to make a solo. But maybe your solos still aren’t sounding like the professional blues guitarists you hear? Partly this may be down to technique, which you can develop, but also it is knowledge on how to properly structure a solo so that it sounds musical and not just like some notes randomly chosen from a scale! Here are a few tips to make your solos sound more musical:

Chord-tones are key! These are the notes that are used to make up whichever chord you are soloing over at a particular time. These chord tones provide you with the strongest resolution points, so you should usually try and start and end phrases using chord tones from whichever chord you are playing over.

To practice this, start with the root note of the chords. Practice phrases that start, end or both on the root note of the chord that you are playing over. As you get the hang of it, start using other notes from the chords as the start and end of your phrases instead. You will find that your phrases seem to make more musical sense if they resolve to chord tones. Also, arpeggios of the chord you are playing over are obviously all chord tones, so throw a few of these into your solos!

Repetition is very important as it gives the listener’s mind something to get hold of and so good use of repetition can make your solos sound better structured and more composed. There are a few different ways that you can use repetition:

  • Just play a lick, and repeat the same lick a few times. If the chord changes beneath it, the repeated lick over a different harmonic base can sound very effective.
  • Repeat the rhythm of a lick, but play different notes.
  • Just repeat the same note over and over again. Try double-stops with a triplet pattern for a great Chuck Berry effect!
  • Use “Question and Answer” patterns where a lower “question” is repeated, followed by different “answer” phrases played higher up the scale. If you’re playing with a friend, one of you can play the question and the other can play the answer.

So, I hope you find these tips useful to help you with your guitar playing. If you really want to learn blues guitar, you can find a lot more information in a course such as Learn & Master’s Spotlight Blues Guitar.

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Learn Blues Guitar – Beyond 12-bar Blues

24th March

1235068 96334558small <b>Learn Blues Guitar –
Beyond 12 bar Blues</b> If you’re fairly new to the blues and have just attended a
few jam sessions, you may be forgiven for thinking that the 12-bar blues is the
only game in town. In fact, much blues music does not rely on the 12-bar blues
pattern exclusively. The 12-bar blues is really a quite commercial standard
developed on the recommendation of record companies, but many of the great
early blues guitarists in particular didn’t conform to such standards.
Legendary musicians such as Robert Johnson, Mississippi John Hurt, Leadbelly,
Muddy Waters and others would often feature inconsistent bar lengths and form
in their recordings – maybe a verse of 11 bars followed by a verse of 8 bars,
dropping beats to suit the lyrics as required.

So if you’re learning blues guitar, while it’s great to
start with the 12-bar blues form, remember that this isn’t the only form used
in blues music. A common alternative are 8-bar blues chord structures. Probably
the most common 8-bar blues progression is (in A):

| A / / / | A / / / | D / / / | D / / / |

| A / / / | E / / / | A / D / | A / E / ||

Another common variation is the one used in “Heartbreak
Hotel”, where you play four bars of the root chord, two bars of the fourth, a
bar of the fifth and a bar of the root in each verse. Of course, there are also
more complex blues chord patterns such as the following:

| C7 / / / | A7 / / / | Dm / A7 / | Dm / / / |

| F# / F#o / | C / A7 / | D7 / / / | G7 / / / ||

Another good example of an 8-bar blues structure is this
one:

| A7 / / / | A7 / / / | D7 / / / | D#o7 / / / |

| A7 / F#7 / | B7 / E7 / | A7 / D7 / | A7 / E7 / ||

Note that the “o” represents a diminished chord, for example
F#o is F#, A, C, D#.

These are all valid 8-bar blues patterns used in a great
deal of blues music, but all have very different styles. And these are only four
patterns – there are many more that you can discover as you explore the blues repertoire,
as well as variations using different numbers of bars.

So if you’re stuck in a rut with your blues guitar playing,
try learning a few of these 8-bar chord progressions and dig out some old blues
records and transcriptions to see what other chord patterns you can find to
use.

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Learn To Play Blues Guitar