How to Play Electric Lead Guitar Blues Lesson ez riffs part3
www.nextlevelguitar.com Click the above link to get three free jam tracks from Next Level Guitar. In this lesson we teach you some fun and simple beginner blues licks. The licks are played over a jam track – be sure and get the free jam tracks and start practicing your blues licks. This is part three or a six-part series. Click the below link for our free You Tube jam track in C minor: uk.youtube.com
Related posts:
- Beginner Blues electric guitar Licks ala Eric Clapton pt5
- Solo electric guitar lesson arpeggio blues rock over chords
- Funk R&B Rhythm playing electric guitar lesson funky blues
Tagged with: blues • Electric • Guitar • Lead • Lesson • part3 • Play • riffs
Filed under: electric guitar
Like this post? Subscribe to my RSS feed and get loads more!



so.. why don’t you upload some videos to teach ppl if your so incredible?
Fantastic lick to build up speed. Very nicely clarified too. Not quite sure what the last comment is all about tho. Out of time. Your always get people who are jealous of other peoples talent.
dude your very terribly out of time … something most guitar players suffer from . before you start giving lessons i suggest you spend some speacial time with a metronome and realise your not a teacher ..
These really aren’t blues licks, more Eddie Van Halen-nish than say Mike Bloomfield, or Mick Taylor.
@medra1980 thanks about the heptatonics thing. but i get what you mean now.
No, the blues scale from its basic is a hexatonic scale i.e. a minor pentatonic with an added tritone, there is also the blues pentatonic scale which consists either of I-IIIb-IV#-V-VIIb or I-IIIb-IV-Vb-VIIb and scales with 7 notes are called heptatonics not septatonics
@medra1980 yea it is but the blues scale for some reason is called the scale with a tone before it. so a blues pentatonic is really a different kind of hexatonic. the hexatonic blues scale would be a septatonic ( i dont even know if that exists or if its ever called that but whatever lol ) you get what i mean right
the blues scale IS a hexatonic scale
@medra1980 thats the blues scale so it adds another note to the scale which is the blue note
yeah, you are.
The Blues scale is the pentatonic scale (5 notes) with an added ‘Blue note’, in this case F#, hence 6 notes.
exactly. thats the way i was taught, other people might say differant though
so if you add the word “blues to it” it always automatically adds this augmented 4th / dminished 5th to the original minor pentatonic scale I – bIII – IV – V – bVII ? I never did music school and teach guitar myself (got these things from books) , but if I remember correctly this is just called “the blues scale” and not the blues pentatonic scale …
this is just called “Blues Pentatonic” othing fancy like hextatonic, but yeah it has 6 notes even though its pentatonic
pathetic !!!
I thought a pentatonic scale was built up of 5 otes? Isn’t this the hexatonic blues scale in Cm?
If your fingers are getting caught under the string above you should lower your action. Take it to a shop if you can’t do it yourself.
i doubt that. to a certain extent yes but with what im talking about not at all. reckon about it. how does the amp affect the action? its about the guitar set up
its all about the amp my friend
ok how is his action so low and he doesnt get fret buzz???? mine feels like an acoustic, i cant even bend up cuz my fingers get caught under the other the strings above and i end up plucking them and it inevitably sounds like crap! also a strat.. HELP!!!!!!!!!!!!
I’m childish!
haha nicely found
omg i like you man every video i hav seen of u i alwayz get it right keep rockin!
“And we play this lick on the g string”
lol
you rock on the guitar u r fantastic thanks.