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Hello friends, 

welcome back to Swiftlessons for another lead guitar tutorial. In today's session we'll combine notes from the minor blues and major pentatonic scales to create three stylish turnaround licks in the key of A. Take time to memorize the sound of each lick before practicing these phrases in distinct chunks for faster learning. Let's get started!

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3 Blues Turnaround Licks - End Your Solos in Style!

Enjoy this and all my other popular YouTube lessons with tabs at: http://www.patreon.com/swiftlessons Hello friends, Welcome back to Swiftlessons for another lead guitar tutorial. In today's session we'll combine notes from the minor blues and major pentatonic scales to create three stylish turnaround licks in the key of A. Take time to memorize the sound of each lick before practicing these phrases in distinct chunks for faster learning. Let's get started! Tabs for this lesson at: https://www.patreon.com/posts/33736707 _______________________________________________________________________________________________ Links: Request a song at: http://swiftguitar.com/request Facebook: http://facebook.com/swiftguitarlessons Instagram: https://instagram.com/swiftguitarlessons Twitter: https://twitter.com/swiftlessons #guitarlessons #bluesguitar #learnguitar

Comments

Anonymous

Really useful! Rob, how about three turnaround jazz blues licks on the acoustic next?

Anonymous

How do I print tabs I have in the past but I can’t seem to with this lesson

Anonymous

Hey Rob! I find the last lick particularly interesting, because I it combines the minor to major ending of the turn around. I always remember this as going from the minor second pentatonic position (upper extension of the 1st minor position) blending to the major forth position (hiding the BB box) and allowing to come up with the apergio trick as well as to go back to the G shaped E dominant 7 position... By the way I am a learner who prefers not to reference to the tabs and the numbers of the notes on the neck. I prefer your references to pentatonic positions and caged positions as well as hints to where are the ones, the thirds and the fives. Anyway thanks for this excellent blues lesson which helps me a lot!