Description

Book Synopsis
Want to become the coolest possible version of yourself? Time to jump into learning the blues guitar. Even if you don't read music, Blues Guitar For Dummies lets you pick up the fundamentals and start jamming like your favorite blues artists. Blues Guitar for Dummiescovers the key aspects of blues guitar, showing you how to play scales, chords, progressions, riffs, solos, and more. This hands-on guide is packed with musical examples, chords charts, and photos that let you explore the genre and play the songs of all the great blues musicians. This accessible how-to book will give you the skills you need to: Choose the right guitar, equipment, and stringsHold, tune, and get situated with your guitarPlay barre chords and strum to the rhythmRecognize the structure of a blues songTackle musical riffsMaster melodies and solosMake your guitar sing, cry, and wailJam to any type of blues Additionally, the book comes with a website that shares audio samples of all the examples covered in the

Table of Contents

Introduction 1

About This Book 1

Conventions Used in This Book 2

What You’re Not to Read 3

Foolish Assumptions 3

How This Book is Organized 4

Part 1: You Got a Right to Play the Blues 4

Part 2: Setting Up to Play the Blues 4

Part 3: Beyond the Basics: Playing Like a Pro 4

Part 4: Sounding Like the Masters: Blues Styles through the Ages 4

Part 5: Gearing Up: Outfitting Your Arsenal 5

Part 6: The Part of Tens 5

Part 7: Appendixes 5

Icons Used in This Book 5

Where to Go from Here 6

Part 1: You Got a Right to Play the Blues 7

Chapter 1: Every Day I Have the Blues Hallelujah! 9

Capturing the Blues Train from Its Departure Then to Its Arrival Now 10

The pieces of blues that made the genre 10

The place of the blues’ conception 11

Rejoicing over 100 years of blues: The shifting shape of the genre 11

The qualities that made blues cats hit the big-time 12

It’s Not All Pain and Suffering — The Lighter Side of Blues 13

Surveying the Means to Make the Music: The Guitar in All Its Glory 14

The low-fi acoustic guitar 14

The semi-hollowbody electric guitar 15

Solidbody electric guitars 15

The Collision of Two Worlds: Acoustic versus Electric 16

Getting a Grip on How Guitars Work 17

You’ve gotta use your hands — both of them 17

Producing the tones: String vibration and pitch 18

Electric guitars only: Pickups and amplification 18

Performing and Looking Like a Blues Player 19

Expanding and filling your brain with know-how 19

Looking the part 20

Blues Trivia For Dummies 21

The questions 21

The answers 22

Chapter 2: Blues Meets Guitar: A Match Made in Musical Heaven 23

Beyond the Delta: Defining the Blues Guitar Sound 24

The method to the music: Chord progressions 25

The guitarist’s language of melody 25

The expression that invokes your senses 26

The groove that sets the pace 27

Dissecting an Acoustic and an Electric 27

Getting Down with the Blues: A Quick How-To 31

The foundation for all guitar playing: Acoustic guitars 31

Shifting acoustic to overdrive: Electric guitars 32

What You Need to Get Your Groove On 35

Chapter 3: Grab Hold, Tune Up, Play On! 39

Holding Your Axe (That Is, Your Guitar) 39

Grabbing your guitar’s neck 40

Pushing down on the strings 41

Getting sound to come out 42

Holding the Pick, Attacking the Problem 44

Getting Situated 45

Sitting down 46

or standing up 46

Tuning Up 47

Helping your guitar get in tune with itself 48

Holding your guitar to an electronic standard 49

Playing a Chord 50

Music Notation: Not Just for Geeks 51

Guidance for your aimless fingers: A chord diagram 52

Mapping out your short-term path: Rhythm notation 53

Guiding you all the way through a song: Tablature 54

Part 2: Setting Up to Play the Blues 55

Chapter 4: Getting a Grip on Left-Hand Chords 57

Starting Out Simple: Blues Chords Even Your Mom Could Play 58

Going to the Next Level: Barre Chords 59

Forming a barre chord 61

Naming barre chords 62

Playing E-based barre chords 63

Playing A-form barre chords 65

Combining forms 67

Taking Advantage of Versatile Power Chords 68

Chapter 5: Positioning the Right Hand for Rhythm and Lead 71

Strumming Along 71

Stroking down 72

And stroking up 72

Combining down and up 73

Striking to a beat 73

Eighth-note striking, twice per beat 74

Mixing Single Notes and Strumming 75

Separating bass and treble: The pick-strum 75

Playing common pick-strum patterns 76

Shuffling the Beats with Syncopated Strumming 78

A bit of notation: Dots that extend and ties that bind 79

Syncopation: Playing with dots and ties 80

Stopping the String Ringing (Just for a Sec) 81

Muting the sound between two chords (left hand) 81

Simulating syncopation with left-hand muting 81

Muting the sound of a note (right hand) 82

Copying the Classics: Plucking Fingerstyle Blues 83

The Right Hand’s Bliss: Different Rhythm Styles to Play 84

The shuffle groove 85

The driving straight-four 87

The slow 12/8, with groups of three 89

The two-beat feel 91

The slow and funky 16 feel 92

Chapter 6: Blues Progressions, Song Forms, and Moves 95

Blues by the Numbers 95

Recognizing the Big Dogs: Primary Key Families and Their Chords 96

The Structure of a Blues Song, Baby 97

Playing the 12-bar blues 98

Slow blues 101

The 8-bar blues 104

Straight-four (or rock blues) 104

Applying Structures to Keys 106

A move with many chords: The Jimmy Reed move 106

The sound of sadness: Minor blues 109

Accessorizing the 12-Bar Blues: Intros, Turnarounds, and Endings 112

Intros 112

Turnarounds 113

Endings 114

High Moves 115

Chapter 7: Musical Riffs: Bedrock of the Blues 119

Basic Single-Note Riffs 120

For the low-down bass notes: Quarter-note riffs 120

The big daddy of riffs: Eighth-note riffs 121

Adding a little funk: 16th-note riffs 122

Throwing rhythm for a loop: Syncopated eighth-note riffs 123

Double the Strings, Double the Fun: Two-Note Riffs (or Double-Stops) 123

Straight feel 124

Shuffle, or swing, eighths 125

High-Note Riffs, the Bridge to Lead Guitar 126

Keith Richards’s borrowed trademark: Quick-four riffs 127

Intro, turnaround, and ending riffs 127

Mastering the Rhythm Figure 133

Part 3: Beyond the Basics: Playing Like a Pro 135

Chapter 8: Playing Lead: Soaring Melodies and Searing Solos 137

Mastering Your Picking Technique 138

Becoming smooth with your simple downs and ups 138

Tackling tricky alternate-picking situations 140

The Universal Lead Language: The Pentatonic Scale 141

Why the pentatonic is the perfect scale 142

The two sides of the pentatonic scale 142

A common scale for practice: E minor pentatonic 144

Pentatonic Plus One: The Six-Note Blues Scale 147

Adding Some Extra Flava to the Blues Scale 148

Clashing bitterly 149

A dash of sweetness 149

Chapter 9: Playing Up the Neck 153

For Inquiring Minds: Why Up the Neck You Should Go 153

Positioning Your Digits for an Easy Key Change 154

The pros of closed positions 155

The details of closed, numbered positions 155

Easing Into Position: Moving the Pentatonic Up and Down 157

Changing Your Position 159

A natural first: Moving from fifth position to eighth 159

The eighth-position blues bonus 160

How low can you go? Moving from fifth position to third 160

The Technical Side of Moving 161

Like taking candy from a baby: The subtle shift 161

Seeking a bit of attention: The noticeable slide 162

When you don’t want to move, just reach or jump 163

Five Positions You Should Know: Meanderings of the Pentatonic Scale 163

Relating the positions to each other 164

Connecting the positions: Licks that take you up and down 166

Understanding the Logic behind the Corresponding Shift of Position and Key 166

Recognizing common keys and their comfortable positions 167

Mapping keys to positions 167

Chapter 10: Express Yourself: Making the Guitar Sing, Cry, and Wail 171

Appreciating the Art of Articulation 172

Going In for the Attack 172

A little bit louder now a little bit softer now: Dynamics 173

Hitting hard and backing off 174

Breaking Down the Music: Phrasing 176

Connecting notes the slippery way: Slides 176

It’s hammer time — get ready to strike a string! 179

Exposing a note by lifting a digit: Pull-offs 181

Giving Your Sound a Bit of Flair 182

Shake that string: Adding vibrato 182

The rubber-band blues: Bends that stretch a string 183

Playing a Song with Various Articulations 187

Part 4: Sounding Like the Masters: Blues Styles through the Ages 191

Chapter 11: Acoustic Roots: Delta Blues and Its Country Cousins 193

Delta Blues: Where It All Began 194

Understanding the Delta technique 194

Ladies and gentlemen, king of the Delta blues: Robert Johnson 194

Country Ragtime: The Piedmont Blues 201

Everything In-Between: Country and Folk Blues 203

A quick profile of country and folk blues 203

Giving these “in-between blues” a listen 204

Closing with a lick and some style: Ragtime tags 204

Country and Folk Blues Had a Baby; Its Name was Rockabilly 206

Quintessential Blues: Slide Guitar 208

The tools that let you slide 208

Sliding technique 208

Tuning your guitar for slide, a technique all its own 209

Chapter 12: The Birth and Growth of Classic Electric Blues 213

The Rise of the Electric Guitar in Blues 214

Giving Props to the Earliest Electric Pioneer 215

Sweet Home Chicago, Seat of the Electric Blues 218

Muddy Waters, leader of the pack 218

Elmore James, slide guitarist extraordinaire 219

Otis Rush: Soulful player with a flair for vibrato 220

Buddy Guy, the father of blues rock 221

Modern-Day Blues Styles: The Sounds of Texas 222

Four Blues Giants: Three Kings and a Collins 224

Albert King, the upside-down string bender 224

B.B King, the blues’ king of kings 225

Freddie King, a two-pick man 227

Albert Collins, master of the Telecaster 228

Children of the Post-War Blues Revival 229

Son Seals, Chicago’s favorite son 230

Robert Cray, smooth persuader 230

Bonnie Raitt, stellar lyrical slides artiste 231

Chapter 13: Blues Rock: The Infusion of Ol’ Rock ’n’ Roll 233

The Blues Had a Baby, and They Called It Rock ’n’ Roll 234

Chuck Berry, blues rock’s first superstar 234

Bo Diddley, king of the jungle beat 236

The Brits Invade the Blues 236

Clapton and Green, early blues icons 236

Jeff Beck, blues-rock’s mad scientist 237

Trippin’ the Blues 238

Eric Clapton, the original guitar god 238

Jimi Hendrix takes the blues psychedelic 240

Heavy “Blooze”: The Infusion of Hard Rock 241

Jimmy Page, frontrunner of the metal blues 241

Leslie West, big man with a big sound 241

Blackmore and beyond, where blues gets scary 242

Southern Comfort 243

The Allmans, especially brother Duane 243

Lynyrd Skynyrd 243

Hot Barbecue Blues, Texas Style 244

Johnny Winter, Texas blues-rock titan 245

Billy Gibbons and ZZ Top, giving rock some soul 246

Stevie Ray Vaughan, the greatest modern bluesman of them all 246

Blues on Steroids 249

Eddie Van Halen takes the blues to ’80s metal 249

Euro-Metal brings virtuosity and precision to the blues 249

21st-Century Soul 250

John Mayer, new kid on the blues block 250

Allmans Redux: Warren Haynes and Derek Trucks, keepers of the flame 250

Part 5: Gearing Up: Outfitting Your Arsenal 253

Chapter 14: Shop Till You Drop: Buying the Right Guitar for You 255

Before You Begin Shopping 256

Deciding On a Make and Model 257

Evaluating a Guitar 257

Construction 258

Materials 259

Workmanship 262

Appointments (aesthetic options) 263

Welcome to the Jungle: Shopping 263

Bringing a friend 264

Money matters: Deal or no deal 264

Protecting Your Guitar 266

Hard cases 266

Soft cases 267

Gig bags 267

Chapter 15: Choosing Your Amp and Effects 269

Getting Started with a Practice Amp 270

Shopping for a practice amp 270

Playing with a practice amp 272

Powering Up to a Larger Amp 273

Choosing among different amp formats 274

Feeling the power 276

Dissecting the Amplifier 277

Input jack 277

Preamp 278

Tone 278

Effects 279

Power amp 280

Speakers 280

The flexibility of having separate channels 280

What’s That Sound? Checking Out Your Amp Choices 281

Tube amps 281

Solid-state amps 283

Hybrid amps 283

Digital-modeling amps 284

Remembering the Good Old Days 284

Vintage amps 285

Reissue amps 285

Dialing in an Amp Sound 285

Chronicling Classic Amps for Blues 287

Fender Bassman 287

Fender Deluxe Reverb 287

Fender Twin Reverb 288

Marshall JTM 45 288

Marshall Plexi Super Lead 100 289

Vox AC30 289

Mesa/Boogie Mark IIc+ 290

Messing Around with Your Sound: Effects 291

Juicing Up Your Sound 292

When your sound is too hot to handle: Distortion 292

Toying with Tone Quality 293

EQ: The great tonal equalizer 294

Wah-wah, the effect that is as it sounds 294

Modulation Effects, from Swooshy to Swirly 294

Stacking sounds for a fuller effect: Chorus 294

Swooshing, like a jet plane: Flangers and phase shifters 295

Like a visit to the opera house: Vibrato and tremolo 295

Pretending (and Sounding Like) You’re Somewhere You’re Not 296

Delaying sound in a cave-like way 297

Adding reverb to make your sound slicker 297

Choosing an Effects Format 298

A string of effects: Pedals on parade 298

A box to house them all at your feet 299

A box to house them all at hand level 299

Chapter 16: Changing Strings 303

Change is Good, But When? 303

Choosing the Right Strings 304

Acoustic strings 305

Electric strings 305

Outfitting Your String-Changing Toolkit 307

Removing Old Strings 308

Stringing a Steel-String Acoustic 309

Stringing an Electric Guitar 313

Part 6: The Part of Tens 319

Chapter 17: Ten Blues Guitar Giants 321

Robert Johnson (1911–38) 321

Elmore James (1918–63) 322

T-Bone Walker (1910–75) 322

Muddy Waters (1915–83) 322

Albert King (1923–92) 323

B.B King (b 1925) 323

Albert Collins (1932–93) 323

Otis Rush (b 1934) 324

Eric Clapton (b 1945) 324

Stevie Ray Vaughan (1954–90) 324

Chapter 18: Ten Great Blues Guitars 325

Gibson L-1 Flattop 325

Gibson ES-175 Archtop 326

National Steel 326

Gibson J-200 326

Fender Telecaster 327

Gibson Les Paul 327

Fender Stratocaster 327

Gibson ES-335 328

Gibson ES-355 328

Gibson SG 328

Chapter 19: Ten (Plus One) Must-Have Blues Guitar Albums 329

Robert Johnson: The Complete Recordings 329

Blues Masters: The Very Best of Lightnin’ Hopkins 330

T-Bone Walker: Complete Capitol Black & White Recordings 330

T-Bone Walker: Complete Imperial Recordings 330

The Best of Muddy Waters 331

B.B King: Live at the Regal 331

The Very Best of Buddy Guy 331

Robert Cray: Bad Influence 331

Masters of the Delta Blues: Friends of Charlie Patton 332

Mean Old World: The Blues from 1940 to 1994 332

Chicago: The Blues Today 332

Part 7: Appendixes 333

Appendix A: How to Read Music 335

The Elements of Music Notation 336

Reading pitch 337

Reading duration 338

Expression, articulation, and miscellaneous terms and symbols 340

Appendix B: How to Use the Website 343

Relating the Text to the Website 343

Count-offs 344

Stereo separation 344

System Requirements 344

What You’ll Find on the Website 345

Audio tracks 345

Troubleshooting 350

Index 351

Blues Guitar For Dummies

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A Paperback / softback by Jon Chappell

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    View other formats and editions of Blues Guitar For Dummies by Jon Chappell

    Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
    Publication Date: 09/04/2020
    ISBN13: 9781119695639, 978-1119695639
    ISBN10: 1119695635
    Also in:
    Entertainment Music

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Want to become the coolest possible version of yourself? Time to jump into learning the blues guitar. Even if you don't read music, Blues Guitar For Dummies lets you pick up the fundamentals and start jamming like your favorite blues artists. Blues Guitar for Dummiescovers the key aspects of blues guitar, showing you how to play scales, chords, progressions, riffs, solos, and more. This hands-on guide is packed with musical examples, chords charts, and photos that let you explore the genre and play the songs of all the great blues musicians. This accessible how-to book will give you the skills you need to: Choose the right guitar, equipment, and stringsHold, tune, and get situated with your guitarPlay barre chords and strum to the rhythmRecognize the structure of a blues songTackle musical riffsMaster melodies and solosMake your guitar sing, cry, and wailJam to any type of blues Additionally, the book comes with a website that shares audio samples of all the examples covered in the

    Table of Contents

    Introduction 1

    About This Book 1

    Conventions Used in This Book 2

    What You’re Not to Read 3

    Foolish Assumptions 3

    How This Book is Organized 4

    Part 1: You Got a Right to Play the Blues 4

    Part 2: Setting Up to Play the Blues 4

    Part 3: Beyond the Basics: Playing Like a Pro 4

    Part 4: Sounding Like the Masters: Blues Styles through the Ages 4

    Part 5: Gearing Up: Outfitting Your Arsenal 5

    Part 6: The Part of Tens 5

    Part 7: Appendixes 5

    Icons Used in This Book 5

    Where to Go from Here 6

    Part 1: You Got a Right to Play the Blues 7

    Chapter 1: Every Day I Have the Blues Hallelujah! 9

    Capturing the Blues Train from Its Departure Then to Its Arrival Now 10

    The pieces of blues that made the genre 10

    The place of the blues’ conception 11

    Rejoicing over 100 years of blues: The shifting shape of the genre 11

    The qualities that made blues cats hit the big-time 12

    It’s Not All Pain and Suffering — The Lighter Side of Blues 13

    Surveying the Means to Make the Music: The Guitar in All Its Glory 14

    The low-fi acoustic guitar 14

    The semi-hollowbody electric guitar 15

    Solidbody electric guitars 15

    The Collision of Two Worlds: Acoustic versus Electric 16

    Getting a Grip on How Guitars Work 17

    You’ve gotta use your hands — both of them 17

    Producing the tones: String vibration and pitch 18

    Electric guitars only: Pickups and amplification 18

    Performing and Looking Like a Blues Player 19

    Expanding and filling your brain with know-how 19

    Looking the part 20

    Blues Trivia For Dummies 21

    The questions 21

    The answers 22

    Chapter 2: Blues Meets Guitar: A Match Made in Musical Heaven 23

    Beyond the Delta: Defining the Blues Guitar Sound 24

    The method to the music: Chord progressions 25

    The guitarist’s language of melody 25

    The expression that invokes your senses 26

    The groove that sets the pace 27

    Dissecting an Acoustic and an Electric 27

    Getting Down with the Blues: A Quick How-To 31

    The foundation for all guitar playing: Acoustic guitars 31

    Shifting acoustic to overdrive: Electric guitars 32

    What You Need to Get Your Groove On 35

    Chapter 3: Grab Hold, Tune Up, Play On! 39

    Holding Your Axe (That Is, Your Guitar) 39

    Grabbing your guitar’s neck 40

    Pushing down on the strings 41

    Getting sound to come out 42

    Holding the Pick, Attacking the Problem 44

    Getting Situated 45

    Sitting down 46

    or standing up 46

    Tuning Up 47

    Helping your guitar get in tune with itself 48

    Holding your guitar to an electronic standard 49

    Playing a Chord 50

    Music Notation: Not Just for Geeks 51

    Guidance for your aimless fingers: A chord diagram 52

    Mapping out your short-term path: Rhythm notation 53

    Guiding you all the way through a song: Tablature 54

    Part 2: Setting Up to Play the Blues 55

    Chapter 4: Getting a Grip on Left-Hand Chords 57

    Starting Out Simple: Blues Chords Even Your Mom Could Play 58

    Going to the Next Level: Barre Chords 59

    Forming a barre chord 61

    Naming barre chords 62

    Playing E-based barre chords 63

    Playing A-form barre chords 65

    Combining forms 67

    Taking Advantage of Versatile Power Chords 68

    Chapter 5: Positioning the Right Hand for Rhythm and Lead 71

    Strumming Along 71

    Stroking down 72

    And stroking up 72

    Combining down and up 73

    Striking to a beat 73

    Eighth-note striking, twice per beat 74

    Mixing Single Notes and Strumming 75

    Separating bass and treble: The pick-strum 75

    Playing common pick-strum patterns 76

    Shuffling the Beats with Syncopated Strumming 78

    A bit of notation: Dots that extend and ties that bind 79

    Syncopation: Playing with dots and ties 80

    Stopping the String Ringing (Just for a Sec) 81

    Muting the sound between two chords (left hand) 81

    Simulating syncopation with left-hand muting 81

    Muting the sound of a note (right hand) 82

    Copying the Classics: Plucking Fingerstyle Blues 83

    The Right Hand’s Bliss: Different Rhythm Styles to Play 84

    The shuffle groove 85

    The driving straight-four 87

    The slow 12/8, with groups of three 89

    The two-beat feel 91

    The slow and funky 16 feel 92

    Chapter 6: Blues Progressions, Song Forms, and Moves 95

    Blues by the Numbers 95

    Recognizing the Big Dogs: Primary Key Families and Their Chords 96

    The Structure of a Blues Song, Baby 97

    Playing the 12-bar blues 98

    Slow blues 101

    The 8-bar blues 104

    Straight-four (or rock blues) 104

    Applying Structures to Keys 106

    A move with many chords: The Jimmy Reed move 106

    The sound of sadness: Minor blues 109

    Accessorizing the 12-Bar Blues: Intros, Turnarounds, and Endings 112

    Intros 112

    Turnarounds 113

    Endings 114

    High Moves 115

    Chapter 7: Musical Riffs: Bedrock of the Blues 119

    Basic Single-Note Riffs 120

    For the low-down bass notes: Quarter-note riffs 120

    The big daddy of riffs: Eighth-note riffs 121

    Adding a little funk: 16th-note riffs 122

    Throwing rhythm for a loop: Syncopated eighth-note riffs 123

    Double the Strings, Double the Fun: Two-Note Riffs (or Double-Stops) 123

    Straight feel 124

    Shuffle, or swing, eighths 125

    High-Note Riffs, the Bridge to Lead Guitar 126

    Keith Richards’s borrowed trademark: Quick-four riffs 127

    Intro, turnaround, and ending riffs 127

    Mastering the Rhythm Figure 133

    Part 3: Beyond the Basics: Playing Like a Pro 135

    Chapter 8: Playing Lead: Soaring Melodies and Searing Solos 137

    Mastering Your Picking Technique 138

    Becoming smooth with your simple downs and ups 138

    Tackling tricky alternate-picking situations 140

    The Universal Lead Language: The Pentatonic Scale 141

    Why the pentatonic is the perfect scale 142

    The two sides of the pentatonic scale 142

    A common scale for practice: E minor pentatonic 144

    Pentatonic Plus One: The Six-Note Blues Scale 147

    Adding Some Extra Flava to the Blues Scale 148

    Clashing bitterly 149

    A dash of sweetness 149

    Chapter 9: Playing Up the Neck 153

    For Inquiring Minds: Why Up the Neck You Should Go 153

    Positioning Your Digits for an Easy Key Change 154

    The pros of closed positions 155

    The details of closed, numbered positions 155

    Easing Into Position: Moving the Pentatonic Up and Down 157

    Changing Your Position 159

    A natural first: Moving from fifth position to eighth 159

    The eighth-position blues bonus 160

    How low can you go? Moving from fifth position to third 160

    The Technical Side of Moving 161

    Like taking candy from a baby: The subtle shift 161

    Seeking a bit of attention: The noticeable slide 162

    When you don’t want to move, just reach or jump 163

    Five Positions You Should Know: Meanderings of the Pentatonic Scale 163

    Relating the positions to each other 164

    Connecting the positions: Licks that take you up and down 166

    Understanding the Logic behind the Corresponding Shift of Position and Key 166

    Recognizing common keys and their comfortable positions 167

    Mapping keys to positions 167

    Chapter 10: Express Yourself: Making the Guitar Sing, Cry, and Wail 171

    Appreciating the Art of Articulation 172

    Going In for the Attack 172

    A little bit louder now a little bit softer now: Dynamics 173

    Hitting hard and backing off 174

    Breaking Down the Music: Phrasing 176

    Connecting notes the slippery way: Slides 176

    It’s hammer time — get ready to strike a string! 179

    Exposing a note by lifting a digit: Pull-offs 181

    Giving Your Sound a Bit of Flair 182

    Shake that string: Adding vibrato 182

    The rubber-band blues: Bends that stretch a string 183

    Playing a Song with Various Articulations 187

    Part 4: Sounding Like the Masters: Blues Styles through the Ages 191

    Chapter 11: Acoustic Roots: Delta Blues and Its Country Cousins 193

    Delta Blues: Where It All Began 194

    Understanding the Delta technique 194

    Ladies and gentlemen, king of the Delta blues: Robert Johnson 194

    Country Ragtime: The Piedmont Blues 201

    Everything In-Between: Country and Folk Blues 203

    A quick profile of country and folk blues 203

    Giving these “in-between blues” a listen 204

    Closing with a lick and some style: Ragtime tags 204

    Country and Folk Blues Had a Baby; Its Name was Rockabilly 206

    Quintessential Blues: Slide Guitar 208

    The tools that let you slide 208

    Sliding technique 208

    Tuning your guitar for slide, a technique all its own 209

    Chapter 12: The Birth and Growth of Classic Electric Blues 213

    The Rise of the Electric Guitar in Blues 214

    Giving Props to the Earliest Electric Pioneer 215

    Sweet Home Chicago, Seat of the Electric Blues 218

    Muddy Waters, leader of the pack 218

    Elmore James, slide guitarist extraordinaire 219

    Otis Rush: Soulful player with a flair for vibrato 220

    Buddy Guy, the father of blues rock 221

    Modern-Day Blues Styles: The Sounds of Texas 222

    Four Blues Giants: Three Kings and a Collins 224

    Albert King, the upside-down string bender 224

    B.B King, the blues’ king of kings 225

    Freddie King, a two-pick man 227

    Albert Collins, master of the Telecaster 228

    Children of the Post-War Blues Revival 229

    Son Seals, Chicago’s favorite son 230

    Robert Cray, smooth persuader 230

    Bonnie Raitt, stellar lyrical slides artiste 231

    Chapter 13: Blues Rock: The Infusion of Ol’ Rock ’n’ Roll 233

    The Blues Had a Baby, and They Called It Rock ’n’ Roll 234

    Chuck Berry, blues rock’s first superstar 234

    Bo Diddley, king of the jungle beat 236

    The Brits Invade the Blues 236

    Clapton and Green, early blues icons 236

    Jeff Beck, blues-rock’s mad scientist 237

    Trippin’ the Blues 238

    Eric Clapton, the original guitar god 238

    Jimi Hendrix takes the blues psychedelic 240

    Heavy “Blooze”: The Infusion of Hard Rock 241

    Jimmy Page, frontrunner of the metal blues 241

    Leslie West, big man with a big sound 241

    Blackmore and beyond, where blues gets scary 242

    Southern Comfort 243

    The Allmans, especially brother Duane 243

    Lynyrd Skynyrd 243

    Hot Barbecue Blues, Texas Style 244

    Johnny Winter, Texas blues-rock titan 245

    Billy Gibbons and ZZ Top, giving rock some soul 246

    Stevie Ray Vaughan, the greatest modern bluesman of them all 246

    Blues on Steroids 249

    Eddie Van Halen takes the blues to ’80s metal 249

    Euro-Metal brings virtuosity and precision to the blues 249

    21st-Century Soul 250

    John Mayer, new kid on the blues block 250

    Allmans Redux: Warren Haynes and Derek Trucks, keepers of the flame 250

    Part 5: Gearing Up: Outfitting Your Arsenal 253

    Chapter 14: Shop Till You Drop: Buying the Right Guitar for You 255

    Before You Begin Shopping 256

    Deciding On a Make and Model 257

    Evaluating a Guitar 257

    Construction 258

    Materials 259

    Workmanship 262

    Appointments (aesthetic options) 263

    Welcome to the Jungle: Shopping 263

    Bringing a friend 264

    Money matters: Deal or no deal 264

    Protecting Your Guitar 266

    Hard cases 266

    Soft cases 267

    Gig bags 267

    Chapter 15: Choosing Your Amp and Effects 269

    Getting Started with a Practice Amp 270

    Shopping for a practice amp 270

    Playing with a practice amp 272

    Powering Up to a Larger Amp 273

    Choosing among different amp formats 274

    Feeling the power 276

    Dissecting the Amplifier 277

    Input jack 277

    Preamp 278

    Tone 278

    Effects 279

    Power amp 280

    Speakers 280

    The flexibility of having separate channels 280

    What’s That Sound? Checking Out Your Amp Choices 281

    Tube amps 281

    Solid-state amps 283

    Hybrid amps 283

    Digital-modeling amps 284

    Remembering the Good Old Days 284

    Vintage amps 285

    Reissue amps 285

    Dialing in an Amp Sound 285

    Chronicling Classic Amps for Blues 287

    Fender Bassman 287

    Fender Deluxe Reverb 287

    Fender Twin Reverb 288

    Marshall JTM 45 288

    Marshall Plexi Super Lead 100 289

    Vox AC30 289

    Mesa/Boogie Mark IIc+ 290

    Messing Around with Your Sound: Effects 291

    Juicing Up Your Sound 292

    When your sound is too hot to handle: Distortion 292

    Toying with Tone Quality 293

    EQ: The great tonal equalizer 294

    Wah-wah, the effect that is as it sounds 294

    Modulation Effects, from Swooshy to Swirly 294

    Stacking sounds for a fuller effect: Chorus 294

    Swooshing, like a jet plane: Flangers and phase shifters 295

    Like a visit to the opera house: Vibrato and tremolo 295

    Pretending (and Sounding Like) You’re Somewhere You’re Not 296

    Delaying sound in a cave-like way 297

    Adding reverb to make your sound slicker 297

    Choosing an Effects Format 298

    A string of effects: Pedals on parade 298

    A box to house them all at your feet 299

    A box to house them all at hand level 299

    Chapter 16: Changing Strings 303

    Change is Good, But When? 303

    Choosing the Right Strings 304

    Acoustic strings 305

    Electric strings 305

    Outfitting Your String-Changing Toolkit 307

    Removing Old Strings 308

    Stringing a Steel-String Acoustic 309

    Stringing an Electric Guitar 313

    Part 6: The Part of Tens 319

    Chapter 17: Ten Blues Guitar Giants 321

    Robert Johnson (1911–38) 321

    Elmore James (1918–63) 322

    T-Bone Walker (1910–75) 322

    Muddy Waters (1915–83) 322

    Albert King (1923–92) 323

    B.B King (b 1925) 323

    Albert Collins (1932–93) 323

    Otis Rush (b 1934) 324

    Eric Clapton (b 1945) 324

    Stevie Ray Vaughan (1954–90) 324

    Chapter 18: Ten Great Blues Guitars 325

    Gibson L-1 Flattop 325

    Gibson ES-175 Archtop 326

    National Steel 326

    Gibson J-200 326

    Fender Telecaster 327

    Gibson Les Paul 327

    Fender Stratocaster 327

    Gibson ES-335 328

    Gibson ES-355 328

    Gibson SG 328

    Chapter 19: Ten (Plus One) Must-Have Blues Guitar Albums 329

    Robert Johnson: The Complete Recordings 329

    Blues Masters: The Very Best of Lightnin’ Hopkins 330

    T-Bone Walker: Complete Capitol Black & White Recordings 330

    T-Bone Walker: Complete Imperial Recordings 330

    The Best of Muddy Waters 331

    B.B King: Live at the Regal 331

    The Very Best of Buddy Guy 331

    Robert Cray: Bad Influence 331

    Masters of the Delta Blues: Friends of Charlie Patton 332

    Mean Old World: The Blues from 1940 to 1994 332

    Chicago: The Blues Today 332

    Part 7: Appendixes 333

    Appendix A: How to Read Music 335

    The Elements of Music Notation 336

    Reading pitch 337

    Reading duration 338

    Expression, articulation, and miscellaneous terms and symbols 340

    Appendix B: How to Use the Website 343

    Relating the Text to the Website 343

    Count-offs 344

    Stereo separation 344

    System Requirements 344

    What You’ll Find on the Website 345

    Audio tracks 345

    Troubleshooting 350

    Index 351

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