Falling in love with the blues

Buddy Guy performing at the Crossroads Guitar Festival in 2007

You know that satisfying click as two pieces of a puzzle form together? That’s how I felt when I really listened to the Blues a few months ago. It was like my ears had been formed just so in order to wring the most from every vibration of blues music. I just loved it instantly.

I found my way to the blues through my guitar. I’ve been playing a lot the past year and a bit, and have naturally tended towards playing blues tunes. Everyone who learns to play guitar learns to play the blues. It’s one of the simplest forms of music to become proficient at.

At the same time, it can take a lifetime to master. A friend asked me why I was so attracted to the blues, and I described it like this:

You know that feeling, when you’re totally in the zone, where you almost disappear? I think you can get into that zone more quickly playing blues than you can with other forms.

This means that the really great blues players and singers get to focus more on feeling, tone, and phrasing and less on complex fingerings and theory. You don’t spend a lot of time talking about the blues – you just play.

I started by formal introduction to the blues on wikipedia. That article led me to Buddy Guy, and I haven’t really recovered.

That’s more than enough writing about the blues for one day. Time to play.

2 Responses to “Falling in love with the blues”

Pentatonic Minor scale is your friend Peter!!! Embrace it!
Seriously, its the first scale I learned.

The best thing to do is to record yourself playing a rhythm part (garageband or whatever), and just solo over it, mix up the notes, find out what sounds good. Play the wrong notes sometimes too!

You need the sour notes to make the sweet ones sound good!

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