How to Play Blues Guitar Lesson 3 Pdf
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The Major Blues Scale | Guitar Lesson with Shapes
What is The Major Blues Scale?
The major blues scale is one of the most important blues scales to know. It is built with tonic (1), second (2), minor third (b3 - passing tone), major third (3), fifth (5) and sixth (6). The major blues scale is a useful device when you want to improvise over major and dominant chords, indeed it will gives some bluesy vibes to your guitar solos.
How Is Built The Major Blues Scale?
This is a hexatonic scale, it means that it contains six notes per octaves just as the minor blues scale. In comparison with the major pentatonic scale, there is an additional note between the second (2) and the major third (3).
This note is named flat tenth (b10) or flat third (b3), this a blue note. Flat tenth is more appropriate in this harmonic context because a scale can't have two thirds in its composition.
In brief the major blues scale is made up of : tonic (1), major second (2), a flat tenth (b10) or minor third (b3), major third (3), fifth (5) and sixth (6).
C major blues scale | C | D | Eb | E | G | A |
Formula | 1 | 2 | b10 or b3 | 3 | 5 | 6 |
Intervals | W | H | H | W + H | W | W+H |
Comparison With The Major Pentatonic Scale
As you see in the shapes below, the major blues scale has a b3 in comparison with the major pentatonic scale.
![Major blues scale vs major pentatonic 1](https://www.jazz-guitar-licks.com/medias/images/major-blues-scale-vs-major-pentatonic-1.png)
Comparison With The Minor Blues Scale
The two diagrams below show the differences between the minor blues scale and the major blues scale. The minor blues scale interval pattern is 1 - b3 - 4 - b5 - 5 - b7, this is a minor pentatonic scale with a b5 between the fourth and the fifth.
Here is a comparative chart between the major scale, the major pentatonic scale, the major blues scale, the minor pentatonic scale and the minor blues scale :
Major scale | 1 | 2 | X | 3 | 4 | X | 5 | 6 | X | 7 |
Major pentatonic scale | 1 | 2 | X | 3 | X | X | 5 | 6 | X | X |
Major blues scale | 1 | 2 | b10 or b3 | 3 | X | X | 5 | 6 | X | X |
Minor pentatonic scale | 1 | X | b3 | X | 4 | X | 5 | X | b7 | X |
Minor blues scale | 1 | X | b3 | X | 4 | b5 | 5 | X | b7 | X |
![Difference between minor blues and major blues scales 1](https://www.jazz-guitar-licks.com/medias/images/difference-between-minor-blues-and-major-blues-scales-1.png)
How To Play the Major Blues Scale on Guitar?
Here are some guitar shapes to play the major blues scale. The first thing to do is to locate the tonic note (1), this is the orange note in the diagrams. It gives the key and will serve as basis for the transposition of these shapes. Notice that the passing tone (b3) is represented in blue. The first four charts show how to play the major blues scale in positions within the space of one octave.
![Major blues scale guitar](https://www.jazz-guitar-licks.com/medias/images/major-blue-scale-guitar-1.png)
Here are the five positions of the major blues scale covering the whole guitar neck.
![Major blues scale guitar positions](https://www.jazz-guitar-licks.com/medias/images/major-blue-scale-guitar-positions-1.png)
Major Blues Scale Application
The major blues scale can be used over major chords as maj6, maj7, maj9 and maj13. It can also be employed over dominant chords as dom7, dom9, and dom13. Playing a major blues scale over dominant and major chord highlights the 9 and 13.
Major Blues Scale Guitar Patterns
Here are six easy guitar patterns using the A major blues scale (A - B - C - C# - E - F#). Each lick starts on a specific interval of the scale : Root (A), second (B), minor third (C), major third (C#), fifth (E) and sixth (F#).
- Exercise 1: Starting on the root
Exercise 2 : Starting with the second (B)
Exercise 3 : Starting with the minor third (C)
Exercise 4 : Starting with the third (C#)
Exercise 5 : Starting with the fifth (E)
Exercise 6 : Starting with the sixth (F#)
Blues Study
The following exercise is a classic blues in A7. There are only three chords A7, D7 and E7 corresponding to I7, IV7 and V7 degrees. As you can hear, three major blues scale are employed, A major blues over A7, D major blues over D7 and E major blues over E7.
![Major blues scale guitar solo](https://www.jazz-guitar-licks.com/medias/images/major-blues-scale-guitar-solo.png)
Last edited: 2021-05-17
How to Play Blues Guitar Lesson 3 Pdf
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