Posts Tagged ‘Blues’

How to Play the Bass Guitar : How to Play a Blues Scale on Bass Guitar


Play blues scales on bass guitar; learn how with tips from our professional bass guitar instructor in this free music lesson video. Expert: Carl Shepard Contact: www.entheosmusic.com Bio: Carl Shepard is a professional bass instructor working at Keller Music in Cincinnati, Ohio. Filmmaker: Jason Sager

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Blues Piano Lessons – a Quick Tutorial

It may surprise you but, few pianists know how to successfully execute a simple blues on the piano. Given the hundreds of different chord variations in a 12-bar blues it’s no wonder that many don’t know which to choose so they simply avoid the whole process altogether.

Here are a few simple rules to follow when learning to play blues on the piano.

Most music that you hear is based on chord progressions and the blues is no different. So let’s start with a basic 12-bar blues chord progression which would look like this in the key of F;

| F7 | | | | Bb7 | | F7 | | C7 | Bb7 | F7 | |

Now, I’ve already mentioned that there are hundreds of different variations of the blues so let’s now show you the most common jazz blues progression. Overall it’s the same progression with a few extra chords thrown in to make it sound more interesting;

| F7 | Bb7 | F7 | | Bb7 | Bo7 | F7 | A-7b5 D7b9 | G-7 | C7 | F7 | G-7 C7|

You will notice a couple of things about this progression. First is the A-7b5 D7b9 in the 8th bar before the G minor seventh chord. This is simple a minor II V put in front of the G minor chord to give it forward movement. Then you will see another II V at the end which takes us back to the top of the piece, again giving it that forward movement.

This jazz blues progression is the most common progression you will see and will serve you well in any music jam situation.

So, once you’ve mastered this progression it would be nice to learn how to solo over top. That’s where things get a bit tricky. If you’re just learning, my advice is to learn a simple blues scale which can be played over the entire progression.

A blues scale is made up of only 6 notes and here it is in the key of F;

F Ab Bb B C Eb and back to F.

Now, the fingering for this scale from bottom to top would be 1 3 4 1 2 4 5. And, of course if you kept going up to the next octave you would need to substitute 5th finger with 1.

This scale works so well on a blues progression it can become a bit monotonous. Therefore, I suggest you learn how to play some other types of scales during the II V’s such as a dorian and mixolydian.

In terms of how to comp or play chords along with other musicians here’s a neat trick. Play the root and the seventh in the left hand and cover the third, fifth and any extensions that you want to in the right hand. You will find that this is very effective in any blues situation.

What’s next? Well, you might want to go down to your local music store and get a book on blues riffs. There are standards riffs or rhythms that you can learn to make you playing sound a lot more bluesy.

I hope you enjoyed this quick blues piano lesson. Keep sounding great!

Paul Tobey is a professional concert pianist who offers online piano lessons for advanced pianists. These piano lessons can help you progress fast in just 10 short weeks.

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Blues travelers

Now, he thrives
Editors note: This is part two of a two-part series looking in-depth at the Manitowoc County Comprehensive Charter School. Part one, which was published last Sunday, addressed the schools beginnings and development, and the students day at school.

Read more on Manitowoc Herald Times Reporter

Price’s praises sung on high at concert
World-Herald News Service Dwaine Price’s face lit up the second he strutted onto the stage. His eyes twinkled. He grinned from ear to ear.

Read more on Ralston Recorder

Blues travelers
Saudi Arabia is a country where live concerts — especially for mixed audiences of men and women — are more than rare. They’re unheard of. That changed for this Tulsa band’s visit.

Read more on Tulsa World

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Students get a chance to learn, play the blues

Functional and frugal
Parkland to open Fred J. Jaindl Elementary in the fall. When building a school in the midst of the Great Recession, every penny counts.

Read more on The Morning Call

Deep in the heart of Milpitas
Johnny Cuviello is a Texas star with a California heart that marches to the beat of his own drum. The stacked row of drums lining the entrance of his doorway is just the first of many belongings in Cuviello’s home that speak volumes about the true passion he has for his craft.

Read more on The Milpitas Post

Students get a chance to learn, play the blues
There was a big stage, a live audience and children wearing fedoras. There were even paparazzi. August and Kaylee Domanchuk of La Grange have performed music before. But school talent shows and local open mics are nothing compared to the chance to perform at Chicago’s South Shore Cultural Center and at Buddy Guy’s Legends.

Read more on The Doings La Grange

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Students get special chance to learn the blues

Abbott’s principal embarrassment
TONY Abbott’s education campaign is turning sour, with another school principal endorsing the PM’s Building Education Revolution, despite his visit.

Read more on Daily Telegraph

Around Your Town
Kids are invited to the field trip of a lifetime at KGCN — Kids’ and God’s Communication Network. Get ready for a week of games, stories, crafts, and activities for kids ages 3 and up as they focus on God and the great ways He communicates with us. The event will be from 9 a.m. to noon through July 23 at the Seventh-day Adventist church, 777 S. Highway 92. Contact Lorraine Bartholomew at 227 …

Read more on The Sierra Vista Herald

Students get special chance to learn the blues
There was a big stage, a live audience and children wearing fedoras.

Read more on The Doings La Grange

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Artists explore dynamics of music using ‘Mostly Blues’

Jazz violinist John Blake Jr. to perform in Fulton series
In choosing the material for his latest album, “Motherless Child,” jazz violinist John Blake Jr. decided to return to his roots.”I remember myself crying as I listened to some of these songs when I was a child,” Blake said in a recent telephone interview. “I knew I wanted to explore working with a c…

Read more on Lancaster Online

Around Your Town: 7/11/10
(PHOTO PROVIDED BY HASRA) Officers and board members of Huachuca Area School Retirees Association recently held their yearly planning retreat at the Landmark Café. The opening activity is the annual picnic at Veterans’ Memorial Park on Aug. 19. If you plan to attend, contact President Roger Tabar at 456-9114. From left are Dave Perry, Joye and Gary Redding, Dinah McCreery, Dorothy Scheafer …

Read more on The Sierra Vista Herald

Artists explore dynamics of music using ‘Mostly Blues’
By Sarah Carlson Staff Writer The artists dropping off their works at the Kennedy-Douglass Center for the Arts can’t help but feel as if they are dropping off a child for the first day of school.

Read more on The Florence Times-Daily

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