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Hello friends,

welcome back to Swiftlessons for another lead guitar tutorial. In today's session we're going to shift our focus away from scales, and learn to create complete solos by visualizing chord shapes. The goal for this session is to zero in on the chord tones present on the B and high E strings, and establish three boxes that can be applied to a common 1.4.5 blues progression. Let's get started!

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How to Play a Blues Solo on Two Strings | 6 Hot Licks!

Printable Tabs, GP7, and Audio Samples at: https://www.patreon.com/posts/30473939 Hello friends, welcome back to Swiftlessons for another lead guitar tutorial. In today's session we're going to shift our focus away from scales, and learn to create complete solos by visualizing chord shapes. The goal for this session is to zero in on the chord tones present on the B and high E strings, and establish three boxes that can be applied to a common 1.4.5 blues progression. Let's get started! ____________________________________________________________________ Links: Request a song at: http://swiftguitar.com/request Facebook: http://facebook.com/swiftguitarlessons Instagram: https://instagram.com/swiftguitarlessons Twitter: https://twitter.com/swiftlessons

Comments

Anonymous

One of my favorite lessons you’ve done. Cool piece and your breakdown of what you were doing was very clear.

swiftlessons

Thanks Anne, I'm really happy with the way this video turned out. So glad you're enjoying it!

Anonymous

Hi Rob, the blues scale you mention, is that a Pentatonic blues scale?

swiftlessons

Hey Sven, the term pentatonic implies a five tone scale. The blues scale is the minor pentatonic scale with the addition of one extra note: the flatted 5th interval.

Anonymous

Thanks Rob

Anonymous

the instruction and step by step explanation gave me some key pointers for playing off chords...good lesson Rob. Thank you.