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Home » Blues Guitar Tips » Blues Rhythm Guitar

By: Mike Hammil

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If you are keen on playing the blues rhythm guitar, you need to practice as much as possible, and also profit from whatever advice comes your way. In fact, most experts will advice you that playing the blues rhythm guitar will require using an economy of style and realize that good play in fact means that you do not overplay the music which would only end up taking away the real focus of your music from the singer or solo player in your band. Also, it is also a good idea at the very outset to know what elements are necessary to get the most out of your blues rhythm guitar. Right Chords And Good Rhythm There no doubts that good blues rhythm guitar play requires playing the right chords and having a good rhythm as well, and the short and quick chord in beat 1 is a common rhythm that is most often played, while another option is the “AND” of beat 2. However, the seventh chord is a better chord choice, though there are many more chord choices that are worth checking out as well. Also, there are many variations on your main rhythm such as the twelve bar blues in E that includes standard voicings for B7, A7 as well as A7 chords. In any case, one of the more amazing aspects to playing the blues rhythm guitar is that often musicians that have never played together before can get on stage and begin jamming together like they have been playing together forever. The reason for this is that all that is required knows how a blues song is structured and then play the rhythm section without any trouble at all. Also, rhythm is something that has its roots in Africa and in its original form required that only a single chord be played throughout the entire song. With western influences changing the way rhythm evolved, there were many more chord changes introduced and so a new kind of blues rhythm was born which were different to what was known at that time. In fact, after many changes as well as different forms evolving, the twelve bar blues came to be the most popular form of blues that every blues musician worth his salt included in his repertoire of blues rhythm guitar playing. What it meant was that this led to playing the blues rhythm guitar with repetition of the twelve bar form over and over again throughout the song, though variations do exist such as the eight and sixteen as well as twenty-four bar Blues. However, most exponents of the blues rhythm guitar stick mostly to the twelve bar Blues in which at least three chords need to be played.


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