Nevermind, i found it.... <---Noob
I've got a beginners question: Where can i find the chords/tabs of the backing tracks.
thx a lot
great lesson Ivan
THanks a lot Janos my friend!
Great lesson and cool sound Ivan!
Thank you guys!
bookmarked
this was a nice lesson!
Thanks a lot my friends, I appreciate it
Cool lesson, Ivan!
Good one,like it
Great blues lesson Ivan! Very tasteful!
Great grooves!
Sweeet
just sublime mate!
Good lesson Ivan!
Very nice Ivan
Awesome phrasing and vibrato on those bends Ivan ! Love the lesson
Very cool sounding Ivan:)
Nice lesson series Ivan!
tasteful!
Great stuff as always Ivan!! ;D
Amazing lesson my friend
Great lesson Ivane
that little tapping lick near the end was really tasteful
Very tasteful.
Thanks my friends
Good work Ivan!
I really needed this lesson...need to get my blues chops up! =)
Awesome lesson Ivan!
Ivan,
Very usefull lesson.
and great blues too
Thx.
Hello there GMC, and welcome to my 2nd-in-line lesson of my new 5 lesson series. This time the topic is mixing major and minor pentatonic patterns in blues soloing to create a more richer phrasing elements.
Mixing major and minor scales (primarily third intervals) in blues (but in other forms of music, influenced by blues) is one of the essential concepts of improvising in general.
In order to learn to mix the patterns in a natural way you have to memorize the patterns and know where are the notes in both of them at the same time. If you are already familiar with pentatonic scale, this lesson should help you mix them fluidly.
There will be 5 of these lessons, in order to cover all the boxes well. In this second lesson we will cover box 2 of the minor and box 2 of the major pentatonic scale.
Through this not-so-difficult lesson we will try to learn few cool bluesy licks along the way and couple of phrasing elements, and phrasing effects. Watch carefully the videos and try to capture all those subtle details - they are the things that makes the solo sound good.
Have fun! :)
A minor pentatonic: