Blues basics

Keeping your place without losing the groove

If, like me, you want to solo and vamp freely over what other musicians are playing, you’ve got to know what chord is playing right now. You also need to anticipate what’s coming up next (and precisely when). Solos sound best when you “play the changes” and hit chord tones precisely as the chord changes. Having a fairly static, consistent progression like the 12-bar form makes this process at least a little easier.

Before you can start playing the changes, however, it’s critically important to absolutely nail the fundamental rhythm of the blues. It’s also necessary to internalize the changes, playing them over, and over, and over, and over again until you can anticipate the changes without any conscious thought.

In other words, you must nail the fundamentals before moving onto more complex things like playing the changes.

Swung Eighths

The first and most important fundamental for any music (not just the blues) is rhythm.

You can get away with murder (completely muffing notes and chords) as long as your rhythm is tight. The opposite is definitely not true, however. Even perfect melody/harmony/articulation sounds awful if the rhythm is off.

The fundamental rhythmic groove of the blues is based on triplets and swung eighths.

Straight eighths are more common in rock and other music. Straight eighths sound like:

One-and two-and three-and four-and

with equal spacing between each pulse (downbeat or “and”). A blues progression with a fast straight eighths groove immediately sounds rock-and-roll (tap along to Johnny B. Goode by Chuck Berry, for example).

Triplets have three pulses per beat:

One-and-a two-and-a three-and-a four-and-a

Again, equal spacing between each of the pulses, but triplets come in groups of three rather than two. The gap between each beat of three pulses is the same as the gap between each pulse within a beat (but usually the first pulse in each group of three is emphasized a bit more by strumming a little harder). An example of the triplet feel is Blueberry Hill by Fats Domino (listen to the drummer playing the hi-hat — those are triplets).

Swung eighths are kind of like triplets, but without the middle pulse:

one- -a two- -a three -a four- -a

The spacing is unequal with swung eighths. There is a longer pause between the downbeat and the upbeat. Matt Smith describes the sound as the “clip-clop” of horses in old western movies. Some people also call it the “flat tire” rhythm because of the uneven sound of a punctured tire rolling around the rim. A classic example of the swung eighth groove is Jimi Hendrix playing Red House (again, pay particular attention to the drums to hear the rhythm — a mix of triplets and swung eighths).

Before studying anything else with the blues, it’s important to practice actually playing swung eighths with a metronome. I’d recommend spending even an hour or two practicing just this rhythm until it is completely ingrained and automatic.

Backbeats

Modern blues tends to emphasize the backbeats. In slower tempos, the backbeats are the “ands” (or a’s) rather than the downbeats. At faster tempos, it’s beats two and four. Simply emphasizing the backbeat can dramatically improve the overall groove of the progression.

Not losing your place within 12 bars

Even though the basic 12-bar blues has a simple structure, and the chords almost always come in the same place, it’s still surprisingly easy to lose your place. Your mind tends to wander.

The trick is to learn to hear the progression in your soul. (Laugh)

At first you use so much mental capacity just playing (remembering chords, licks, tricky rhythms, whatever) that you lose place within the progression. Wait, is this bar 4 or bar 8?

When you lose your place in a band situation, it’s almost always best to just take your hands off the guitar and wait a few measures until you are certain where you are before picking up again. Silence will invariably sound better than something flat wrong.

The only way to avoid getting lost at all is to practice the progression so many times that it enters your subconscious. Eliminate extraneous complexity and just focus on the progression until you can hear feel it in your sleep.

Before studying anything else with the blues, I strongly recommend putting in some serious practice on just these two elements: the swung eighth rhythm, and starting to hear and anticipate the changes in the chord progression.

Last modified May 9, 2020: move to en to make edit work (5cdd518)