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Learning to play jazz guitar means learning how to tackle the jazz blues form, jazz blues
phrases and bringing that bluesy flavor to your improvisations over standard tunes as well.
While you may be familiar with how to apply the blues scale and get a blues sound in your
rock and blues solos, bringing out the bluesy side of jazz may seem a bit tougher.
In this lesson, you will learn a couple of different ways to bring out a bluesy sound playing
over dominant 7th chords. Each of these techniques can be applied to a variety of musical
situations.
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Lesson Contents
1. F Jazz Blues
2. Bb Jazz Blues Solo
3. Jazz Blues Lick 1 – Mixolydian Mode
4. Jazz Blues Lick 2 – Bebop Scale
5. Jazz Blues Lick 3 – Mixolydian + Minor Pentatonic Scales
6. Jazz Blues Lick 4 – Minor Blues Scale
7. Jazz Blues Lick 5 – Minor Blues Scale
8. Jazz Blues Lick 6 – Minor Blues Scale
9. Jazz Blues Lick 7 – Major Blues Scale
Jazz Blues Lick 8 – Blues Cliche Variation
10. Jazz Blues Lick 9 – Major Blues Scale (Herb Ellis)
11. Jazz Blues Lick 10 – Major Blues Scale (Herb Ellis)
12. Wes Montgomery-Style Blues
Jazz Blues Lick 11 – Wes Montgomery Minorization
Jazz Blues Lick 12 – C Minor over F7
Jazz Blues Lick 13 – Ebmaj7 over F7
Jazz Blues Lick 14 – Ebmaj7 over F7
Jazz Blues Lick 15 – Ebmaj7 & Bbmaj7
Jazz Blues Lick 16 – Eb Augmented Major 7
Wes Montgomery Blues Solo
13. F Jazz Blues Chord Solo
Chords in This Blues Study
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F Blues Chord Solo Study
14. The Minor vs Major Blues Arpeggio Concept
Major 6 Arpeggio
Minor 6 Arpeggio
Major 6 and Minor 6 Blues Licks
Major 6 and Minor 6 Blues Solo
15. F Blues Backing Track Video
 
F Jazz Blues
To start this lesson, we’ll have a look at a jazz blues in F, where typical blues riffs are mixed
with chord punches.
Backing Track
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If you’re not familiar with the different types of jazz blues forms, check out our lesson on
jazz blues chord progressions.
Backing Track
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This technique, playing double stops on top of a root note, is common practice and is worth
exploring further.
 
 
Why is it that playing a minor scale over a dominant chord sounds so good ?
Because the b3 of the pentatonic scale is a blue note to the dominant chord. The tension of
the b3 of the scale against the natural 3 of the chord creates the typical blues sound. You
can use this tension in your solos by playing with the contrast between the blue note and
the natural 3.
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Used in rock and blues, the minor pentatonic scale is also a staple of the jazz guitar sound,
but used with fewer bends and with a bit of jazz flavor added to it.
The first bar uses the C Mixolydian scale, which has a natural 3.
The second half of the second bar uses the C minor pentatonic scale, which has a b3.
 
 
 
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Jazz Blues Lick 6 – Minor Blues Scale
Here’s another example of how to use the minor blues scale, this time over the first 8 bars
of the blues progression.
 
This lick uses the A major blues scale to create a line over an A7 chord, with the b7 (G)
thrown in at the top for good measure.
The first part of this lick is a real blues cliche. Once you know it, you’ll hear it constantly in
blues solos (similar to “the lick”).
Notice the slides and slurs in this lick, which can be just as important when getting a jazz
sound over the blues as the notes themselves.
 
 
The 4th measure is in the Bb Mixolydian scale, going to Bb Lydian dominant scale on the
3rd beat.
 
Try sliding and/or hammering on the Eb to E each time in order to give this lick that added
slipperiness that is characteristic of jazz-blues playing.
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Minorization = playing a minor-type chord built on the 5th or 6th of a dominant chord.
Cm7 Arpeggio C Eb G Bb
Played over F7 5 b7 9 4
Dm7 Arpeggio D F A C
Played over F7 13 1 3 5
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Ebmaj7 Eb G Bb D
Arpeggio
Played over F7 b7 9 4 13
 
 
Bbmaj7 Bb D F A
Arpeggio
Played over F7 4 13 1 3
 
 
The solo is over a jazz blues in F and is full of classic Wes licks and ideas that you can
apply to your own playing.
https://youtu.be/mRPFclqo8tw
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The first 8 bars use the F minor pentatonic scale, mixed with the major 3rd (bar 3).
Mixing b3 and 3 is often used by jazz musicians to create a bluesy sound. One way to do
this is mixing the minor blues scale with the Mixolydian scale.
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Bar 16 uses the B Lydian Dominant scale (= F altered scale). B7 is the tritone substitute of
F7 and creates an altered sound over F.
The classic lick in bar 20 uses the G harmonic minor scale over D7, creating a 7b9 sound:
 
This lesson helps you begin your chord soloing studies no matter where you are in your
development.
Whether you use this study to expand your chord knowledge or learn to play along with the
track, you’ll benefit from this chord solo study.
Check it out, have fun with it, and let it open new doors in your chord soloing vocabulary as
you move to the next level in your playing.
 
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Before learning how to play this jazz blues chord solo, here are the shapes used in the
study.
Start by playing through each shape to get your fingers used to these chords before you
learn them in the study below. You don’t have to memorize these shapes to play the chord
solo, but using this page as a reference will be helpful in your comping studies going
forward.
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Start by practicing each four-bar phrase at once, then combine them to play the study as a
whole. From there, put on the backing track and jam the study along with the bass and
drums on the track.
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Backing Track
 
 
Maj6 Arpeggio
To begin, let’s look at a common fingering for the maj6 arpeggio, which you can then use to
outline the I7 chord over any blues progression that you are soloing on.
Here is a Bbmaj6 arpeggio to memorize and begin to solo with, perhaps over a static Bb7
vamp to begin and then over a full blues progression once you have that under your fingers.
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Notice that the notes of this arpeggio (1-3-5-6),
when played over a dominant 7th chord
highlight the 1, 3, 5 and 13 of that chord. The
6th, when played over a dominant chord, is
written and heard as the 13th rather than the
6th. The 13th is just the 6th but raised an
octave.
Bb6 Arpeggio Bb D F G
 
Min6 Arpeggio
Now that you have the I7 arpeggio under your fingers, all you are going to do in order to
address the IV7 chord in a jazz blues solo is change one note from that initial arpeggio.
By lowering the 3rd of the Bbmaj6 arpeggio you get a Bbm6 arpeggio. You can now apply
this new shape to the Eb7 chord (IV7) when soloing over a jazz blues.
Bbm6 Arpeggio Bb Db F G
 
In this first lick, you are playing phrase A over the Bb7 chord, then repeating this same
phrase over the IV7 chord but with the m6 arpeggio added in.
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Here you will be adding in the b3 note, considered one of the blue notes, over the I7 chord.
When using the maj6 and m6 jazz blues soloing concept in this way, you can add in notes
from the surrounding blues scale in order to spice things up, and break up the arpeggiated
nature of the exercise.
 
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F Blues Video Backing Track (130 BPM)
Here’s a karaoke-style video backing track you can use for your blues practicing.
https://youtu.be/AZB6e57MSXs
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Do you want to learn how to play jazz blues step-by-step? Check out our Introduction to
Jazz Blues Guitar Volume 1 and Introduction to Jazz Blues Guitar Volume 2, or buy them
both in our bundle below.
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