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Today we are breaking down a full blown 12 bar blues solo in the key of E.... with a slide! We will discuss the phrasing, the scale used, the chord tones and break it down with a backing track so you can play this full blown tasty solo note for note. 

Will improve

Blues Phrasing

Playing with a Slide

Soloing in General

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Blues Slide Solo in E - Ukulele Tutorial

New Ukulele Tutorials every Wednesday and Saturday Today we are breaking down a full blown 12 bar blues solo in the key of E.... with a slide! We will discuss the phrasing, the scale used, the chord tones and break it down with a backing track so you can play this full blown tasty solo note for note. Make sure you subscribe and learn with us! #TenThumbs #BluesUkulele Tabs for all our tutorials here: https://www.patreon.com/TenThumbsPro Let's see you play it! https://www.instagram.com/tenthumbspro/?hl=en Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/tenthumbsproductions/ Website: https://www.tenthumbspro.com/ Private Lessons Inquiries: email tenthumbsproductions@gmail.com T-Shirts: etsy.com/shop/tenthumbspro

Comments

Mark Flynn

Hey Tyler, have you ever played a cavaquinho? Is it true you can tune it like a baritone and use the same chords? What other differences are there? (I'm thinking of buying one if I can find one for sale somewhere.)

Schantell Taylor

As Brad Bechtel outlines on his Lap Steel Guitar page: "Steel guitars were originally invented and popularized in Hawaii. Legend has it that in the mid-1890's Joseph Kekuku, a Hawaiian schoolboy, discovered the sound while walking along a railroad  This type of guitar is claimed to have been invented in about 1889 by Joseph Kekuku.

Tyler Austenfeld

No, I never have but I would love to. I will go to Lisboa the summer and and now that you said that my goal is to find one. All I know about it is that it is the Ukulele's daddy/mommy but to be honest I didn't know they actually still existed, I thought they were extinct, but now I am very intrigued.