
Learn quick interval shortcuts to improvise blues guitar solos, including fifth, minor second, and major second intervals, and use fretboard shortcuts to memorize notes and power chord shapes.
Explore blues improvisation using a pentatonic minus scale and blues-note groups, emphasizing flat five and perfect five to craft authentic blues solos in any key with expressive lick patterns.
Learn how seventh chords extend a triad and identify five types—major seventh, minus seven, minor seventh, half-diminished seventh, and fully diminished seventh—using C major seventh.
Practice 7th chords to unlock blues guitar solo improvisation for beginners. Build fluency in chord progressions and phrasing to improvise with confidence.
Use dominant chords to prepare resolutions toward target chords, including dominant seventh as a major chord with a minor seventh. Practice counting five notes and two five progressions.
Explore the construction of the ninth chord, built from 1, 3, 5, 7, and 9, and discover how these chords shape blues, funk, and jazz solos for beginner guitarists.
Explore the blues 12-bar form built on the one four five progression and dominant seventh harmony. Learn to improvise by modifying notes and following the turnaround back to the start.
Explore the minor pentatonic blues scale, a five-note framework, and learn how adding two notes, degrees two and six, sharpens blues guitar solos.
Connect minor pentatonic and pentatonic blues shapes across the neck by repeating string patterns, then improvise with licks that move up the neck.
Connect scale shapes across the neck and play blues licks in different octaves, using pentatonic minor patterns and hammer-ons to create expressive solos across two octaves.
Explore the eight-bar blues structure, recognize major chords and minor seventh changes, and practice improvisation using the minor pentatonic blues scale, blues accents, and chromatic ideas.
Learn a pentatonic minor blues lick with bluesy intervals, including flat five and perfect five, on a G riff with pull-offs; use the guitar lick database to improvise.
Master the guitar lick 5 to build speed and technique using the e minor pentatonic scale, open strings, pull-offs, and a slide, with improvisation across blues solos.
Learn a pentatonic minor blues lick and bluesy intervals, including pull-offs and one-note phrases, and practice using the guitar lick database to improvise blues solos.
Learn guitar lick 7 built on the minor pentatonic scale, featuring pull-offs and deliberate fingerings. Practice single notes on open strings and on different strings to improve speed and improvisation.
Explore how to order guitar pedals in your signal chain without a fixed rule, choosing positions for pitch shifters, overdrives, and wah to shape and develop your own signature sound.
Compare pedals and computer emulation to find the best way to shape blues guitar tones. Learn how a laptop can replace pedals and amps for a portable, cost-effective setup.
Use reliable cables and connectors to minimize noise between pedals, ensure a power supply with enough current, and adjust placement and volume to prevent feedback.
Compare a $25 replica overdrive pedal to a $1,200 original, noting the replica delivers about 95% of the sound and guiding beginners or pros on investment.
Learn to transform a three-chord blues progression into a blue jazz guitar sound using a 12-bar structure, walking bass, and chromatic approaches.
So, you just got a guitar and you're a fan of the blues. Well, this course is a fantastic place to start your journey! You'll learn more than just how to apply scales, guitar licks, and chords to set you on a path to play the blues. You'll learn the necessary approaches and techniques that work for blues, jazz, and rock.
This is a true Beginner course so, don't worry if some of the chords, techniques, and concepts are new. Many of the examples are at slow tempos so that you can build confidence and make music quickly.
I'll show you how to apply everything necessary to compose and improvise Blues Guitar Solos.
You will find lessons about:
*Blues Harmony and Theory.
*Why are there both sharps and flats.
*3 blues approach to improvise guitar solos in any key.
*Connecting Scale Shapes and Playing Up The Neck.
*How to Play a Jazz Blues Chord Progression on Guitar.
*What nobody teaches you about the BLUES SCALE.
*Common Blues Chord Progressions.
*Blues Guitar Licks.
*Pentatonic minor scale and Blues scales.
And much more…
Thanks so much for checking out this course and I look forward to helping you become a better blues lead guitarist!