Learn Blues Soloing Strategies
I'm no guitar hero but I'm very into improvising and soloing with my guitar. I have some advices for soloing strategies. Actually they are basic but I think they work out really good. Here's my two cents.
Be a player who always has the ear and attention of the public. Make yourself interesting for them, surprise them with some various guitar playing. But keep the rules and stick to playing with the harmonies, structure and shape of the blues the band is playing. Feel the blues and know the blues-tunes harmonies (chord progressions) well. Don't be afraid to use cliches. If you break to many rules and don't play cliches you don't play blues no more - then you play some strange avant-garde jazz to a background of blues music (if you're lucky). Keep the rules and keep your own personality and originality at the same time. Then, if you sometimes have to break a rule - it will be heard and understood... But if you do it all the time it's only going to be hard and strange to listen to your music.
Here's a few tricks and tips I try to have in my trickbag for almost every solo. Not every time, not all of it at the same time in the same blues - but almost (depending on the blues tune feeling).
First of all, this is a real smooth trick you have to learn. It's a must-have thing in your "Jacky's Bag of Tricks" as a lead guitarist in a blues band.
Changing between the Mixolydian scales using "the inner logic of the Mixolydian scale" (A Berklee Uni. Term.)
You change the scales this way:
(example in G)
G mix: G A B C D E F G
C mix: G A Bb C D E F G
D mix: G A B C D E F# G
Now you can hold your left hand in one position all the time while you changing between the scales.
You also need to be able to play some bluesy arpeggios - that's the 1, 4 and 7 note of the chord. The upper arpeggios (7, 9, 11 and 13) can also be used in blues but not, never ever the ordinary 1, 3 and 5 arpeggio! Broken chords (played 1, 6 and 5 of a blues-seventh chord / dom7 chord) is also a real and true blues cliche.
A solo guitar player also need to know all the modes of the blues scale:
Mode 1: 1 b3 4 b5 5 b7
Mode 2: 1 2 b3 3 5 6
Mode 3: 1 b2 2 4 5 b7
Mode 4: 1 b3 4 #5 b7 7
Mode 5: 1 2 4 5 6 b7
The extended blues scale (the Mixolydian scale mixed whit the Aeolian scale and the "Blue Note") often used by Jimi Hendrix and in progressive blues (a genre created by Jonny Winter 1968);
1 2 b3 3 4 b5 5 6 b7
Some tips:
But don't always use the blues scale or the Mixolydian. Throw in some licks and phrases played in melodic minor, diminished and the whole tone scale too. That's sounds great in blues among blues cliches like "broken chords," double stops and please - do some Loockwood playing on top of the comping chords between your soloing phrases.
Throw in some ornaments of chromatic passing tones when phrasing (use the technique called "targeting" connecting chord notes with chromatic patterns played with slide) in a scale-and use lots of octave notes while playing the blues solo...
Larry Carlton often plays the Ionian scale over "blues seventh chord" (dom7 chord). Kind of unique but it works out just fine and real bluesy. Sometimes hes mixing the Ionian scale whit the blues scale...
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