This is a shining example of how to mix the major and minor blues scales/sounds using boxes 1 and 2 of the blues scale…
It pivots around the root up top (which I talk about a lot) and then ends on the major 3rd instead of the minor 3rd – creating a pair of perfectly major bookends around an otherwise minor blues idea.
I stole this fair and square from Matt Schofield, but truth be told it’s not an unusual idea and it’s the kind of thing a lot of guitar players might play.
In addition to the lick, itself, I hope you’ll watch the last half about how to learn and really assimilate the lick into your own playing…
Most people do this very wrong and don’t spend nearly enough time and energy on each new idea – leaving them, in the end, with little to nothing they can actually play well đ
There are 2 courses of mine that outline some of these concepts:
Major Minor Blues Shapes – for pivoting and working between all pairs of shapes (major and minor) across the entire fretboard
How To Improve Blues Solos – for breaking down licks and really assimilating them and using them in your own solos.
7 replies to "A Great “Mixer” Lick"
For anyone “keeping score” you may recognize this lick as being essentially the same as Group 3, Example 11 in Griff’s “Blues Speed Building Blocks” course.
Nice job with this Griff.
What a great lesson with all kinds of good stuff. But I’m a little confused about your comments regarding not playing over some chords. I think you start playing over a 4 chord (8:20) but then you later delay the start (8:35) saying you don’t want to start on a D which is the 4 chord. Seems like the same thing. Is there some rule about playing this lick over chords that I’m missing? Since it spans 2 measures I wondered if that had something to do with it. Thanks, this really rolls a lot together and I’d like to nail it.
Scott
Hi Griff. I’m an All Access member, but when I looked for the “Major Minor Blues Shapes” in the My Courses list, I didn’t see it there. Is it perhaps called something different there?
Itâs listed as âMajor Minor Blues Scalesâ.
Itâs now listed in your course list correctly as âMajor Minor Blues Shapesâ.
griff; you are great, love your lessons, lawrence