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Jazz Blues Guitar Lessons

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The histories of jazz and blues have a lot in common. Both originated in the African-American communities at the beginning of the 20th century in the southern United States. Since then both evolved in similar manner developing with the music facilities and interactions with other art forms. Both are expressive music genres and focus on life processes and experiences. In terms of musical structure, jazz has significantly borrowed from the blues. The blues chord progressions have acted as a dominant platform for a lot of jazz improvisation. So, if you have developed curiosity to find out how the two relate musically, going for jazz blues guitar lessons will be great.

The understanding of jazz becomes significantly easier if one learns the basics of blues first. Two most commonly used scales in the blues music are the pentatonic scale and the Mixolydian scale – with the added blues notes. When someone refers to the blues scale, it normally means the pentatonic minor scale with a b5 (or blues) note. It is this blues note that creates a certain tension, which provides the “blues” touch the music.

Mastering these scales will prepare you to understand the foundations of jazz in a better way. The first step towards learning jazz will be to learn some new chords. The most common chords in jazz are the seventh chords rather than the basic minor or major chords. You will need to develop command over the five basic types of the seventh chords. Your jazz blues guitar lessons will teach you how to master them.

For playing solos, the basic guitar techniques are hammer-ons and pull-offs, bending strings, palm muting, etc. For jazz blues music, you will also learn how to mix scales; for example, the Mixolydian scale with the blues scale.

Practically all jazz guitarists have some blues in their repertoire. Over the period of time, many different sets of blues progressions have evolved – from the original blues to the modern variants such as bebop and Coltrane blues changes. Listening to both blues and jazz from different periods can provide you valuable insight about how artists have been improvising. This will also motivate you to think in terms of various elements of music and to use them to create good music.

The jazz blues interface offers you a tremendous opportunity to test your musical creativity. It also offers you a great channel to vent your feelings and emotions in melodious ways.

By: Paul Gian

Play Jazz Guitar

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Jazz guitar music is based on various guitarists’ attempts to experiment with the form used to express musical ideas. Jazz began with the African slaves combining the song and dance forms they found in America with the musical traditions they carried with them from their homeland. Since then jazz musicians of every nationality have developed certain methods of taking a musical idiom and turning it into jazz by interpreting the music using jazz chord substitution and improvising techniques.

The trademark of the jazz guitar player is that he is inventing new music all the time. When people learn to play musical instruments it is usually with the aim of playing the songs or instrumentals of a famous musician. In jazz the aim is to build new music using other musical genres or the works of composers from outside jazz. A jazz guitarist with a number of years’ experience will have developed his own ways of improvising over a song or instrumental piece. Quite often his improvisation will be based on the techniques of using the notes in the chord he is playing to provide the material for his solo, or to simply use the notes he finds in the melody.

Whichever approach the jazz guitar player uses he will always depart from the melodic structure of the musical work he is improvising over and use melodic figures or “licks” which he has made up or learned from other guitarists. A lick is a combination of notes which can be used in improvising over music in any key. A lick is like a very short tune or fraction of a melody. Listen carefully to a jazz guitar solo. Try imitating some of the licks that you hear. You do not need to play them exactly, just imitate them and see how they fit with other licks to carry the solo to its ending.

Other jazz guitar techniques are the substitution of chords using other chords with more interest or color, the use of walking bass to add interest or changing the rhythm of a song. You can find examples of all these jazz guitar techniques by listening to the music of jazz guitar players like Charlie Christian, one of the pioneers of jazz guitar, Charlie Byrd, an exponent of latin jazz guitar who developed a genre of his own using classical guitar techniques to play jazz, or Wes Montgomery, a guitar player who ventured into many fields of music.

Anybody wanting to learn to play jazz guitar will be wondering what guitars give you that distinctive jazz sound. Of course you can play jazz on any guitar but when musicians think of a “jazz guitar” they usually have in mind a guitar with  “f” holes in the body, an arched top and a piezoelectric pickup. This gives that warm, expressive jazz feel that people associate with jazz guitar and is expressed so well in the work of Wes Montgomery. Epiphone is the brand name most jazz fans associate with this kind of guitar but they are also made by D’Angelico, Gibson and others.

To learn to play jazz guitar, even in a comparatively superficial sense entails listening to alot of jazz guitar music. As you listen you need to analyze what jazz guitarists do and what you, as a musician, WANT to do. Maybe you do not want to learn jazz as a genre but just to play in the style of a certain jazz guitar player. This will cut your work load considerably as you can find tabs for the work of many jazz guitar players on the internet.



By: Ricky Sharples