In this lesson, I'll show you how to get to the IV chord of a blues progression using altered chords, the altered scale, and ii-V-Is. This concept is frequently used by jazz-influenced blues guitarists like Robben Ford, Josh Smith, Matt Schofield, and Chris Cain.
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Guitar: 2000 Gibson ES-335 Limited Edition
Strings: @Stringjoy
Amp: @NeuralDSP Morgan Amp Suite
Table of Contents
0:00 - Introduction
1:17 - Ex. 1 - Basic 12-Bar Blues
1:49 - Ex. 2 - Adding a ii-V-I
3:50 - Ex. 3 - Altered Dominant Chord
5:27 - Ex. 4 - Moving Altered Chords
6:36 - Tritone Substitution
10:09 - Ex. 5 - ii-V-I Lick
13:27 - Ex. 6 - Altered Scale
14:58 - Ex. 7 - Altered Scale Lick
17:57 - Ex. 8 ii-V-I Lick
20:19 - Ex. 9 - Altered Dominant Lick
22:22 - Conclusion
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