Description
In this week’s lesson, you’ll be playing a minor key Blues in the key of F# minor and will play the entire solo using only the Minor Pentatonic scale.
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Super cool lesson Brain , much appreciated. Happy days 🙂
I love this idea and great lesson! Thank you Brian
Great lesson. I always question whether to play chord tones or just play in the key of the song, or both.
“STEP BACK AND TRY TO FEEL IT A LITTLE BIT”…GREAT WORDS OF WISDOM. I LOVE YOUR STYLE OF PLAYING ON THIS. ALL GUITARISTS ARE IMPRESSED BY SPEED AND COMPLEXITY, BUT I WOULD RATHER LISTEN TO YOU PLAYING WITH FEEL AND DYNAMICS AND A GREAT TOUCH. JUST LIKE I WOULD RATHER LISTEN TO SOMEONE SPEAK SIMPLY AND CLEARLY RATHER THAN SOMEONE WHO BABBLES ON AND I’M NOT QUITE SURE WHAT THEY ARE TRYING TO SAY.
(LOVE THE LICK @:20)
EXCELLENT LESSON IN NOT “OVERTHINKING “.
RALPH P.
Well said, and I totally agree – Brian is the man to be sure!!!!
Brian. You so could be a jazzer if you went in that direction. If you’ve taught me anything, it’s that with practice and instruction you can learn anything. once upon a time I found your jimmy rogers tutorial. I so wanted to learn , but at the time it was way too hard for me. I couldn’t ever learn something like that. But I thought oh what the hell, I’ll try it. And I worked on it with your instructions. Guess what. It is now part of my regular rounds. I don’t play it exactly like you, but I’ve got it. Whatever. My point is, you’re so good at guitar, you could be a jazzer if you wanted. You just choose not to.
Keep pickin, y’all.
The six blade knife will, evidently, do anything for you. That first 15 seconds reminded me of Knopfler! Very tasty licks. Cheers Brian 🍻
My first thought at the start…Knopfler! Tasty vibe
Perfect lesson for this underthinker! 😊 This has a nice JJ Cale vibe to it.
Great lesson.
The backing track reminds me of another lesson Brain did sometime back.
I found 318-JJ Cale style in my favorites and this reminds me of that lesson. Both good lessons!
Interesting integration with the previous lesson
Wieder eine Deiner lehrreichen „Lessons“ so großartig! Du nimmst einem die Angst vor der Improvisation! Ich bin voll begeistert! Das Griffbrett führst Du einem wirklich einfach vor! Bin total begeistert! Danke, danke danke!
Ich auch!
Brian is the Aminor shape always minor pentatonic pattern 4?
No. the patterns are just the same 5 notes of the pentatonic scale (major or minor) in different regions of the fretboard.
Im confused if the A shape isn’t always a specific pentatonic pattern 4 for for example how does one know which patter available
*A minor shape
never mind I was confused , I got it
the A minor shape inA shape is but not the A minor E shape .That is pattern 1 .If i am not mistaking
Nice lesson and as you say very sonically pleasing.
My lightbulb moment… I think:
I love playing the changes but frequently the scale pattern associated with the chord shape clashes with the song, even though the chord is in the key family of the song. Realization:
If I simply lead in the key of the song, I can still play the chord changes by picking notes out of the chord shape rather than the scale notes associated with the chord being played. When it time to “sing”, revert back to the key of the song.
Brian, how did Jerry Garcia do it? It is sonically obvious he plays the changes but his playing is(was) so seamless and so challenging to replicate.
I like the way this piggybacks on last week.
Hi Brian, very nice, I love it. If you put an F maj into it, than you have all the cords of Upperhand from Pearl Jam.
Please listen to that song I ´m sure you like it
I keep hearing Witcy Woman. Kind of driving me crazy
Thank you
Hi Brian,
Great lesson. I am new to your site. Would you be able to tell us in your videos how you get your guitar sounds with the amps and peddles?
Thanks,
George
Another Great Lesson! Thanks. Also I know u are using a Kemper Profiler for your amp. Any chance u could give us the Profile Name u are using for the lesson?
Thanks
on this one – i didn’t use any hardware… just used an Fender Tweed amp modeler from Universal Audio
Nice lesson Brian!……I like the way you think……this shows me there is a lot of opportunity to make great sounds just using the pentatonics
You made something so simple so beneficial. And it sounds great too!
At the end of the day I love simplicity. Great stuff.
Great lesson, nice chord variations over minor pentatonic.
Although not in the same spirit of not over thinking, I just discovered tritone substitution of the dominant is as easy as just drawing a straight line across the circle of fifths, so instead of going from G7 to C, can use Db7 to C. This adds a surprising different flavour and probably not to be overused outside jazz, but wondered if you could put this into context?
Perhaps this is easier on guitar than piano? is it also just paying a 7 and moving down a fret for resolution?
Good lecture! Why take the high road with obstacles when you can take the low road and get better results.
Great vibe on this one!
Each time I go thru the lesson I pick up something new! Thanks for the another great lesson!
Je m’aperçois que les notes que vous jouez dans le lead correspondent aux accords. Vous suivez l’harmonie des accords quand vous construisez un lead. Pouvez vous faire l’analyse des accords de la chanson, quelle relation à le A et le E avec la tonalité de fa#m?
Could someone explain why the B major chord works when it is not in the key of the song?
This is a good catch. I think has to do with Brian changing the subdominant chord (IV) which is a Bm to a Major Subdominant (IV) – B.
D#, the 3rd, in the B major is not part of the notes of F# natural minor scale. I wonder if he is trying to change the tone of the song just for a bit. Adding a D# effectively takes you from F# natural minor scale (also Aeolian mode) into F# Dorian mode which is still a minor sound as the b3 and b7 aren’t changing. You are essentially only changing the b6 to a 6 by adding the D#.
Thanks for responding Terry. Not sure where you are getting that D#.
I think I make sense of that B major chord which sounds so cool in this arrangement by thinking of it in terms of A major, the relative major of F#minor (ie the 6 chord). The 5 chord in A major is E or E7, a vary stable and often-gone-to chord. From there, B major or B7 is the 5 chord of E. So the B chord is kind of a subdominant even though here Brian just plays B major.
Playing in a minor key always seems to lead me back its relative major . Funny but i don’t really have that problem when playing in a major key.
what do you think?
So the notes of B major are B, D#, & F#.
The chords of F#m key are F#m, G#dim, A, Bm, C#m, D, E.
So to your point, B major which is what is on the composition is not in the key of F#m.
The IV chord is Bm and V chord is C#m.
I don’t believe you can say the E chord is the V because we aren’t in major key.
Generally yes thinking of relative major and minors is fine, but there is a distinct difference when playing in minor vs its relative major, because your home base chord/tonic is F#m which will sound sad not A major which will sound happy.
Great vibe indeed…subtle undertones of Wallflowers ‘One Headlight’…awesome post!
So Good !!!
Brian am I right to assume that you are not thinking about landing on chord tones, or playing to changes? Are you just using the the F# minor pentatonic, and moving it around the fretboard? Thus the keep it simple
Yes and yes 🙂
I knew that, just my way of saying hi! 😊
Brian often finds chord tones by ear within any scale he’s using.
Great lesson! So many nuggets you can take away for future playing.
Great lesson Brian, and I also think your sound is what I’m trying to achieve but like Vince says, “it’s all in the hands”.
I’m trying not to overthink it but that’s sorta like saying “don’t think of a yellow Volkswagon”. My brain does it anyway. Danged old brain.
Brilliant! I love the sound of the F#m chord.
I know I could benefit from a slowed down versison of the jam track – maybe like 75 or 80 instead of 110.. When I go to the 50 % version on my I-phone it gets really garbled. Has anyone tried out the Pulse metronome like tool? Regular metronomes are not my friends I have difficulty concentrating when using one but I don”t want to spend the money for the pulse if it doesn’t work well.
Love LOVE this composition, Brian! thank you so much!
Very informative lesson…. enjoyed very much watching it. I will be rewatching it too. Thank you
Great lesson Brian.
So, yes, I’m that guy that has to get under the hood.
I think the chords of the verse are actually E major with F#m as the tonal center and, therefore, an F# dorian progression for which F# minor pentatonic sounds great.
The chords of the chorus don’t seem to be in the same family. I think these are actually F# minor now, with that secondary dominant sustitution for the C#m and later returning to the diatonic C#m.
Nice lesson but I can’t help but overthink it!
Speaking of Don’t Overthink this stuff! These past couple of years worth of Lessons have been excellent to even Groundbreaking for me as a Continuing Education Student here at ActiveMelody.com, Brian!!! Through the beginning inspirations of the EP500-599 series of Lessons…..and even more importantly the EP600 series of Lessons since….just keeps getting better and better Brian!!! Keep up the great Groundbreaking Innovations, the big Jazzy Blues fan I am more than ever!! Per some Studio Session guitar band friends of mine. Strumming On!!! Seano
I really like this lesson – reminds me of JJ Cale – One suggestion, if I may……I wish Brian would allow all his backing tracks to resolve rather than just slamming the door shut mid-stream. Otherwise, I think AM is one of the best resources online today. Brian’s YouTube channel and this website have definitely rekindled my passion for playing music after a very long hiatus ………
Can you do a lesson connecting ML 121 and this lesson
gGreat lesson, and especially so after ML121. Lotsa lightbulbs.
I have never seen you with a Les Paul
Hi Brian, thanks for this great lesson. I appreciate the way you teach!
Great, great lesson! Thank’s Brian! If you compose a text on this music, you have a hit!
Wow, so helpful; its like the movie the Matrix when you see all those shapes and can use them to your advantage. Thanks Brian, late to this lesson, but its awesome.