Good major blues riffs: 1) That's the way of the World. - Johnny Graham 2) Blue Sky/Rambin' Man - Duane Allman 3) Doctor Funkenstein/Pass the Peas- Fred Wesley 4) Reeling in the Years- Elliot Randall 5) I Was Only Joking - Rod Stewart's guitarist(?)
When you play the blues, you usually use more the minor pentatonic even if the blues is in a major key. You can use the major pentatonic on the tonic chord and the minor pentatonic on the rest of them, it works very well. The diagram has the minor pentatonic with one added note from the major pentatonic, the major third wich works very well on the A chord. Hope this answers your question :)
Ok I'm new again, but when i was younger i was told to learn the pentatonic scale. How do I apply the shapes I was told to learn with the key that these backing tracks are in? This probably sounds real stupid but I'm really trying to learn I just need a lil kick in the right direction.
@@aaronfairless8165 I'm new at this too, just started learning a week ago. I just find the right key that the songs are in, then I search for the pentatonic scale of that key (minor/major) and then start playing those notes that are in the pentatonic scale, and try to make a good solo out of it Then you can explore more frets, use a little of techniques (like hammer on, slide...) Hope that helps!
This is a major blues progression in A, but in the blues you can improvise with the minor pentatonic over a major tonality. However that doesn't make the song minor, it's just an option for improvisation. And that's why I put the diagram for the minor pentatonic with an added major 3rd to fit the A7 chord.
I love how simple it is and help me a great deal with my playing. Thanks
Thank you Simon! That was my goal exactly ✌️
Now i get it thank you. This the best and useful explanation i ever seen. Beeesssst
AWESOME! I just learned a new sliding rhythm a couple minutes ago and this was PERFECT to jam with....I appreciate the upload
Thanks, I'm glad you found this helpful!
Sweet track! Well done...thanks!
Thanks man, you're welcome!
Wow. I have heard the light! Ty
🙏🙏
Good major blues riffs: 1) That's the way of the World. - Johnny Graham 2) Blue Sky/Rambin' Man - Duane Allman 3) Doctor Funkenstein/Pass the Peas- Fred Wesley 4) Reeling in the Years- Elliot Randall 5) I Was Only Joking - Rod Stewart's guitarist(?)
I will look those up for inspiration when I make my next blues track. Thanks
What a nice track love it easy thumbs up ! Thank you!
Thank you! 🙏
I'd love to read and understand these tabs... they're so cool 😔
It is not as hard as you think. Get a good teacher and you will learn it very quickly with a couple lessons. Thanks for your comment!
% = repeat the note
This is a gr8 jam 😎🎸🎶🍺
Thank you very much! 🙏🤘
Even better this time 👍🎸😎
This is an AWESOME CHANNEL -- SUBBED ASAP and Love it.. You need more Subs.. Thanks for sharing this with us..
Thank you so much, I will be posting regularly again starting on October. You're welcome
I want to know some blues songs which are similar to this cord progression.
Can f#m pentatonic work on this track?
The F# minor and A major scales share the same notes, because they are relatives, so yes there is no difference ;)
I thought this note scheme ( minor pentatonic) only works with A minor ?
When you play the blues, you usually use more the minor pentatonic even if the blues is in a major key. You can use the major pentatonic on the tonic chord and the minor pentatonic on the rest of them, it works very well. The diagram has the minor pentatonic with one added note from the major pentatonic, the major third wich works very well on the A chord. Hope this answers your question :)
Thank you very much for explanation. It is very useful for me as for beginner)
Or a
C Diminished !
Ok I'm new again, but when i was younger i was told to learn the pentatonic scale. How do I apply the shapes I was told to learn with the key that these backing tracks are in? This probably sounds real stupid but I'm really trying to learn I just need a lil kick in the right direction.
@@aaronfairless8165 I'm new at this too, just started learning a week ago.
I just find the right key that the songs are in, then I search for the pentatonic scale of that key (minor/major) and then start playing those notes that are in the pentatonic scale, and try to make a good solo out of it
Then you can explore more frets, use a little of techniques (like hammer on, slide...)
Hope that helps!
this is A minor
This is a major blues progression in A, but in the blues you can improvise with the minor pentatonic over a major tonality. However that doesn't make the song minor, it's just an option for improvisation.
And that's why I put the diagram for the minor pentatonic with an added major 3rd to fit the A7 chord.
Yes its in a major
@@pocketjamtracksthank you! I do t know that 😄
im a minor