Happy New Year everyone! Thanks for watching the channel! If you want more exercises and examples, you can check out my book "Guitar Soloing Like a Pro" which is available on Amazon. Info here: www.bluemorris.com/shop
This is literally the video that i've been wanting to see but haven't found. I listen to a lot of blues and always wondered about those jazzy "transitional" chords that pop up from time to time.Thanks!
My first youtube video of 2023... and what a great start. Another one of those sounds amazing and conceptually quite simple tutorials. Here's hoping you continue to provide us with more great content. All the best to you and your family blue.
Thank you so much, That middle of the neck 9 chord ties in all of my other blues chord's like a champ for chordal shape walks, my missing ingredient ties it all together. The lead shapes make it almost impossible to hit a bad note. keep these video's coming. I've been playing for decades and teach. Your one of the best teachers. Hats off young man. Gypsy jazz on the way. Cheers.
“Mmm sweet.” I laughed out loud at that in excitement. What an epic lesson. Thanks so much for this 🙏 Looooong time metal guitarist trying to start learning blues from scratch 🎸 🤘🏼
Nice lesson. But beautiful Samick. I just bought a 1996 Vantage 635v with SD pearly gates. This is the second one I have owned. Same company. Thanks for your great lessons.
It's the riff im playing at that moment in the video. See this tab from another video bars 1-2, it's the same: www.bluemorris.com/post/acoustic-blues-chord-solo-lesson
Thx for so enlightning lessons, always as simple to get and efficient ones ! Like your sparkling sound also, very bright and punchy in a good way ( treeble boost somewhere ?) Thx again for good job here 👍
You are fuckin great, SUBSCRIBED!! I just jumped into my first blues jam today, not bad but wasn't too sure what chords to play, I faked it, but now I won't! Thanks man
Thanks, this is cool. I did a little exploring and compared the notes in each of the scales of A, D and E. What I noticed was that the notes that are common between them are: A, B, C#, E, and F#. which is the major pentatonic scale. So, wouldn't it be better to play the A major pentatonic scale over this chord progression rather than the A minor scale?
The blues form is a curios one, and maybe that's what makes it so fun. You are right, major pentatonic is the natural scale for these chords, but somehow minor pentatonic also works, the dissonance giving us the blues-y sound. So you can do both. I have a video coming soon on that 😀
@@GuitarLessonsVancouver Yeah, I realize that the blues is basically minor scale played over major chords, and that's what makes it sound bluesy. Thanks for the feedback!
Seems that the major scale is more tricky to use on blues progression... Some advices needed to help avoid non fitting notes in that harmonic context ? Launching the major/ minor hard deal ? Thx again 👍
@@Flashtofchannel Major pentatonic will work on a blues form, though not the full major scale, you're right about that. I do have a video coming up that deals with switching from major pentatonic to minor pentatonic. It will be out soon :)
Hmm not sure what you mean shape wise, of course that's hard to describe in text. There are some shapes that can be ambiguous on the guitar, and of course many that are similar but different.
Sorry I don't. I'd like to make one, but I'm finding I'm running out of time each week. I have our Patreon group which is mostly electric guitar and soling, next up I'm working on Book 2 of my Soling book www.bluemorris.com/shop
How are these dominant 9th chords if the 3rd is absent? Formulas keep saying that the 3rd must be present. This is confusing. I noticed the flat 7 but no 3rd.
Forgive me if I'm wrong, I'm still learning but don't jazz musicians often omit the 3rd out of chords? So can't you still have a dominant 9th without the third? Or is the third a guide tone in that case?
The 2 and 9 are the same note, the difference is usually if you had a chord where you're playing the root 3rd 5th 7th and 9th you'd probably note it as a 9th chord whereas if you had the 2 further down closer to the root perhaps sus2. Same chord really but different ways to say it based on where they are relative to eachother. but really it doesn't matter too much, it's the same notes
Blue, if you carry on taking the mystery out of learning guitar then pretty soon any old chump will be able to play! 😂 How bout a lesson on those licks you used to fill between the chords?
I think this is aimed at people who are already used to 12 bar blues form and have gotten bored of the same old chords. This is the next step so to speak, if you're a beginner who isn't able to wrap their head around the 12 bar blues form just by hearing it (and most standard 12 bar blues forms are incredibly easy, they don't particularly move around past the I IV V unlike jazz, jazz blues, blues rock etc) then they probably need to return to this video after that. This is just spicing up the chords of that same basic progression
Happy New Year everyone! Thanks for watching the channel! If you want more exercises and examples, you can check out my book "Guitar Soloing Like a Pro" which is available on Amazon. Info here: www.bluemorris.com/shop
In less than a week and 5 years of watching music video tutorials...you have become my favorite instructor
Awesome thanks for the great feedback!
I agree. No disrespect but move over Marty & Justin. Blue is my new go-to guy. Plus he’s 🇨🇦. 👍
Yes, this exactly. I bet Blue is buzzing with his amazing feedback.
Blue is the best. Marty is awesome and there are many good ones but Blue rules.
This is literally the video that i've been wanting to see but haven't found. I listen to a lot of blues and always wondered about those jazzy "transitional" chords that pop up from time to time.Thanks!
Great thanks Paul!
You have some lucky students. You are a great teacher. Thanks for doing these videos.
Thank you Tim!!!
Thanks for the inspirational lesson. Great way to shake up those regular chords!
Thanks very much for the extra support 😀
Vielen Dank für deine Videos. Es ist erstaunlich, wieviel man in 10 Minuten lernen kann. Du bist einer der besten Lehrer im Internet.
Thanks Rene!!
My first youtube video of 2023... and what a great start. Another one of those sounds amazing and conceptually quite simple tutorials.
Here's hoping you continue to provide us with more great content.
All the best to you and your family blue.
Thanks so much Bb! Happy new year! It's still 2022 here, but not for long.
@@GuitarLessonsVancouver Living in Australia, I get to see your videos in the future 😃 Happy new year to you too,
I’m glad you explained the 7 and 9 chords and put up diagrams. That’s very helpful and the chords sound great. Thank you!
Glad it was helpful!
@GuitarLessonsVancouver671 Keep up the good work. I enjoy all your lessons!
Awesome lesson! This is essentially playing in different voicings, adds so much color and feel! …
Glad to hear it thanks! Lots more lessons on the channel and our Patreon www.patreon.com/guitarlessonsvancouver
Thank you, this is the lesson I've been looking for, great teacher !
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for commenting Chris!
Wow, this is what I call a great lesson. Subscribed! Best wishes from Spain!
Thank you very much! Welcome to the channel 🎸
Coz I’m a big T Bone fan 👍
Thanks for the extra support Colin!
Thank you so much, That middle of the neck 9 chord ties in all of my other blues chord's like a champ for chordal shape walks, my missing ingredient ties it all together. The lead shapes make it almost impossible to hit a bad note. keep these video's coming. I've been playing for decades and teach. Your one of the best teachers. Hats off young man. Gypsy jazz on the way. Cheers.
Thank you great to hear! Lots more coming 🎸👍
Brilliant love it
Glad it was helpful! Lots more lessons like it on the channel and our Patreon lessons group www.patreon.com/guitarlessonsvancouver
You have a real talent of explaining things simply . Thanks man, good teacher 🤙🏽
Thank you! Lots more coming.
“Mmm sweet.” I laughed out loud at that in excitement. What an epic lesson. Thanks so much for this 🙏 Looooong time metal guitarist trying to start learning blues from scratch 🎸 🤘🏼
Thank you! Glad it helped. Lots more lessons on the channel!
Perfect mix of ideas, technique and theory.
Glad you enjoyed it
@@GuitarLessonsVancouver Rimouski
That cool Vancouver. Did you heard about Rimouski jazz festival?
@@jsouellet901 I have not heard of that festival. Just looked it up. Looks cool.
Thanks!
Thank you for the extra support!
Wow! Really brought blues to life for me! Great lesson. Thanks!
Glad to hear it! Lots more on the channel 👍
what a great lesson - I tried adding the 9 to the min pentatonic and it sounds great as a passing note into the min 3rd
Cool! Good idea. I have a video on adding the 9 to minor pentatonic if you haven't seen that yet th-cam.com/video/DBaWwznXxnw/w-d-xo.html
How you don’t have more subscribers is crazy. Thank you
Thanks! It's growing, slowly but surely. Thanks for your support
Excellent I'm glad I found this.
Thanks Charles!
So glad to find your lesson, expands my playing and improv. Liked and sub'd.
Thanks Curt!
The 9 chord is an octave plus 1 . Been playing 5 years and thats new . Makes sense . Thanks
Sure is! Thanks for watching 😎
Another beauty... thanks Blue
Thanks David!
Nice lesson. But beautiful Samick. I just bought a 1996 Vantage 635v with SD pearly gates. This is the second one I have owned. Same company. Thanks for your great lessons.
Thanks Gary! I got that Samick from a pawn shop in the 90s. I still really like it.
@DM ON NICEGRAM APP👉GuitarLessonsVancouver ok.what?
Exactly the info I was looking for. Thank you.
Great to hear thanks! Lots more guitar lesson videos on our channel and Patreon www.patreon.com/guitarlessonsvancouver
0:07 um how do you do 'the old Stand by' ?
and the guitar is Gorgeous !
It's the riff im playing at that moment in the video. See this tab from another video bars 1-2, it's the same: www.bluemorris.com/post/acoustic-blues-chord-solo-lesson
@@GuitarLessonsVancouver thanks for this
Great lesson. Cheers from White Rock Ca.
Thanks Ben!!! 🎸
Another great lesson. Keep them coming
Thanks Henry!
Thanks , awesome lesson , earned yourself a subscriber
Cool, welcome to the channel! New lessons here almost every Saturday, and much more on our Patreon channel www.patreon.com/guitarlessonsvancouver
Thx for so enlightning lessons, always as simple to get and efficient ones !
Like your sparkling sound also, very bright and punchy in a good way ( treeble boost somewhere ?)
Thx again for good job here 👍
Thanks Chritophe, for most of the videos I'm playing through the UA Dream 65.
Thank you soooo much. Finally my 9 chord shape has good use.
Nice! Thanks for watching and commenting 😀
Great lesson, many thanks.
Glad you liked it! Thanks! Lots more on the channel 👍
👏👏👏parabéns pela aula! muito boa 💪💪🇧🇷
Thanks for watching!
Love this! Thanks as ever 😁👍❤️
Thank you for watching and commenting :)
@@GuitarLessonsVancouver Always a pleasure mate 👍
Very cool!
Thanks Tony!
Try this tomorrow. Thx!
Thanks for watching 👍
Great lesson!
New one on this subject coming this Saturday will be called something like Jazz Up the Blues
What guitar is that? Love the sound and the look. I am a sucker for hollow & semi-hollows.
Thanks! It's a Samick Artist Series I bought from a pawn shop in the 90s. They don't make them any more.
You are fuckin great, SUBSCRIBED!!
I just jumped into my first blues jam today, not bad but wasn't too sure what chords to play, I faked it, but now I won't! Thanks man
Nice! Good for you for getting up there on stage. 👍
Thanks, this is cool. I did a little exploring and compared the notes in each of the scales of A, D and E. What I noticed was that the notes that are common between them are: A, B, C#, E, and F#. which is the major pentatonic scale. So, wouldn't it be better to play the A major pentatonic scale over this chord progression rather than the A minor scale?
The blues form is a curios one, and maybe that's what makes it so fun. You are right, major pentatonic is the natural scale for these chords, but somehow minor pentatonic also works, the dissonance giving us the blues-y sound. So you can do both. I have a video coming soon on that 😀
@@GuitarLessonsVancouver Yeah, I realize that the blues is basically minor scale played over major chords, and that's what makes it sound bluesy. Thanks for the feedback!
Seems that the major scale is more tricky to use on blues progression... Some advices needed to help avoid non fitting notes in that harmonic context ? Launching the major/ minor hard deal ? Thx again 👍
@@Flashtofchannel Major pentatonic will work on a blues form, though not the full major scale, you're right about that. I do have a video coming up that deals with switching from major pentatonic to minor pentatonic. It will be out soon :)
@@bluemorris thx again Mr Blue for one more great lesson comming ! I'll be all ears and following 😉✌️
Another awesome lesson! Thank you!
Glad you liked it!
great lesson!!!
Glad you liked it!
This is good stuff
Thanks Ron!!
Excellent video!!!! Happy new year!!!!!
Thank you! Happy new year!
Excellent video!
Thank you very much!
Great lesson. If one moves the 9 chord two frets up the neck, isn’t it A6? I see some notation for D9 that also bars the high E. Is that correct?
Hmm not sure what you mean shape wise, of course that's hard to describe in text. There are some shapes that can be ambiguous on the guitar, and of course many that are similar but different.
Hey thanks, fun lesson. Do you have a course for intermediate/ advanced acoustic blues? 🙏✌️🎸🍺
Sorry I don't. I'd like to make one, but I'm finding I'm running out of time each week. I have our Patreon group which is mostly electric guitar and soling, next up I'm working on Book 2 of my Soling book www.bluemorris.com/shop
How are these dominant 9th chords if the 3rd is absent? Formulas keep saying that the 3rd must be present. This is confusing. I noticed the flat 7 but no 3rd.
Couldn't agree more. This chord is G9 sus2.
Sorry G6add9
Forgive me if I'm wrong, I'm still learning but don't jazz musicians often omit the 3rd out of chords? So can't you still have a dominant 9th without the third? Or is the third a guide tone in that case?
Very helpful, thanks
Thanks for watching!
Great lesson. So is that A9 shape also a G6/9 chord?
Interesting... G6/9 would be G B D E A and this A9 shape is A G B E ... I think you could say that, though with A on the bottom.
Thank you 🙏.
Thanks for watching Joe!
Excellent lessons! Can I ask the name and the model of this beautiful guitar?
That is a Samick Artist model that I bought at a pawn shop in the 1990s. They don't make them any more.
@@GuitarLessonsVancouver thank you!!
So, I am confused. My chord analyzer app says your A9 is an A7sus2?
Pretty much the same thing, a 9 is a 2 up an octave. You could call it that.
The 2 and 9 are the same note, the difference is usually if you had a chord where you're playing the root 3rd 5th 7th and 9th you'd probably note it as a 9th chord whereas if you had the 2 further down closer to the root perhaps sus2. Same chord really but different ways to say it based on where they are relative to eachother. but really it doesn't matter too much, it's the same notes
Wishing you would have shown the pentatonic patterns for four and five chords! Great lesson though!🙏🙏🙏
Best thing about 9chords is it looks like you're giving someone the finger.
I've noticed that too
Blue, if you carry on taking the mystery out of learning guitar then pretty soon any old chump will be able to play! 😂 How bout a lesson on those licks you used to fill between the chords?
Thank you! I do have a video on my favourite licks here: th-cam.com/video/R7cgcC3aMGk/w-d-xo.html
❤
👍🎸
For that first chord, why wouldn't you just use your thumb?
You can use your thumb if you prefer. Works both ways.
thanks! New to your channel but I'm pretty sure I'll get through them all eventually.
@Tom King Cool, welcome to the channel, happy to have you here 😀
You might wanna give out a rhythm count or explain your timing for people who don't know how to count your changes
I think this is aimed at people who are already used to 12 bar blues form and have gotten bored of the same old chords. This is the next step so to speak, if you're a beginner who isn't able to wrap their head around the 12 bar blues form just by hearing it (and most standard 12 bar blues forms are incredibly easy, they don't particularly move around past the I IV V unlike jazz, jazz blues, blues rock etc) then they probably need to return to this video after that. This is just spicing up the chords of that same basic progression
9th's don't sound as good to my ear as 7th's
Nice to some variety of sounds either way. Thanks for watching 👍
que mrd mejor enseña a niños puse niff neo soul y me sale esta mrd
What’s up with your hair?!?
I mean is this a guitar tutorial or a fashion/hair tutorial? My Gawd!
@@tammywalla7259 Does everyone HAVE to EXPLAIN A JOKE TO YOU (asking for a friend)?!? Sheesh!
Lol I love how rude comments are supposed to be funny! Oy vey!
Brilliant lesson 👍
thanks Mike!
Great lesson, thank you!
Great to hear thanks! Lots more guitar lesson videos on our channel and Patreon www.patreon.com/guitarlessonsvancouver