Blues Guitar 101: The Lead Player's Guide to Improvisation, Fretboard Mastery, and Rocking Solos (Guitar Technique, Improvisation, Scales, Mastery Book 2) by Dan Amerson

Blues Guitar 101: The Lead Player's Guide to Improvisation, Fretboard Mastery, and Rocking Solos (Guitar Technique, Improvisation, Scales, Mastery Book 2) by Dan Amerson

Author:Dan Amerson [Amerson, Dan]
Language: eng
Format: azw3
Tags: how to solo on guitar, how to blues solo, play the blues on guitar, blues guitar
Published: 2016-02-01T00:00:00+00:00


Do you also see the major pentatonic shape within those notes?

Begin on the ♭iii note, and work up the scale.

♭3, 4, 5, ♭7, 1, ♭3

That is the major pentatonic in essence.

If you include the #4, you've got the major blues pentatonic.

♭3, 4, #4, 5, ♭7, 1, ♭3

OR

1, 2, #2, 3, 5, 6, 1

Don't worry too much about the scale degrees just yet; simply play the notes and practice the shapes.

This track is very easy-going since it will never clash with any of the major chords in your progression.

The following track is a bit different; the track is a unified set of scales, but it changes depending on the chord that is played.



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