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9 MIN READ TIME
STYLE

SHADES OF BLUE

Learn how to superimpose notes from parallel major and minor pentatonic scales for colorful and expressive blues soloing. BY JEFF JACOBSON
PHILIP SOWELS/GUITAR TECHNIQUES

WHEN I WAS a teenager, I went through a serious blues phase. One summer day, at a friend’s house, I was noodling around with the melody to Bobby McFerrin’s “Don’t Worry, Be Happy ” on my no-name Strat-style guitar. After a few minutes, my friend, rather perturbed, asked, “Why do you always turn everything into a blues?”

Yes, I was deep into it, and along the way I found myself searching for a different approach to blues playing, one that would give easy access to any of the sounds, or musical “colors,” afforded by the major and minor pentatonic scales, no matter where I was on the fretboard. Switching back and forth always struck me as jarring and a bit too obvious. But whatever approach I took, I had to be able to make the guitar sound nasty in that bluesy way I loved.

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Guitar Player
January 2024
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