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This one is a most for all intermediate blues jammers out there. What we are doing is playing with the ambiguity between the major and minor scales that takes places in the blues. We will walk you through what the curl is, how to identify it, and in the PDF we will show you how to find it in all five pentatonic shapes. This will for sure take your playing to the next level and makes good fills and solos great fills and solos!

Will improve

Blues curl

Solo phrasing

Blues phrasing

Files

The Blues Curl - Ukulele Blues Soloing Tutorial with lick and tabs

Better Blues Solos on Ukulele -The Blues Curl - Ukulele Blues Soloing Tutorial Today we are going look at how to take good blues licks and make them great. With the blues curl you will really be able to make our solos pop on blues tracks. Think Chuck Berry style wild intros when you here that slight bend up a little bit that really gives the blues a nice tasty discord. Eric Clapton practically curled every single b3rd when he was a blues breaker, and of course blues legend B.B. King was a master of this little nudge, really all the blues legends are. The blues curl is a little micro bend, or a 1/4, which would be somewhere in the sonic area between the two frets that you can not access. In this lesson we will teach you how to identify that blues curl, because only one note in the scale is good for it, and than how to put it into your Ukulele jamming and soloing, so you will be able to play better blues solos on your Ukulele in the style of legends like BB King, Eric Clapton and Chuck Berry. We will also walk you through a nice tasty blues lick after all that is done to show you exactly how it can be put into play over a one bar fill, the one that is playing in the intro, so you can be shredding in no time. If you want more Ukulele blues lessons, turnarounds, chords, licks, solos, tabs and riffs all you have to do is subscribe and learn. Your favorite blues ukulele teacher is doing new videos every single Wednesday and Saturday on the Ukulele, just subscribe and learn!

Comments

Jack Lupton

C# + C sounds ironic to me. Or, maybe foretells ominous forth-comings. Builds anticipation which the full C chord satisfies. I'm using it.

William Amenta

THIS LESSON IS EVERYTHING. thanks. I don't know if it was your lesson or somewhere else that sparked me, but I been messing around with a variety of A blues riffs, kinda been like an evolving jam thing for me, and this opened up another layer.