Minor Blues Scales
Usually one of the first scales that any guitarist learns when beginning their exploration of lead playing, the Minor Blues Scale is both one of the easiest scales to learn, and one of the trickiest to make sound unique and original when applied to a soloing situation.
In this lesson, we’ll take a look at the theory behind the Minor Blues Scale, how it is built, how to apply it to your soloing and a few common fingerings that you can explore in the practice room.
How to Build a Minor Blues Scale
The Minor Blues Scale is built from the following interval pattern.
Root - b3 - 4 - #4 - 5 -b7
You can see these notes laid out in tab and notation for an A Minor Blues Scale below.
To apply this scale in a soloing situation, you can use the Minor Blues Scale over just about any chord progression, depending on style, and it will work to varying degrees of success.
It works over Major and Minor chords, as well as maj7, 7th and m7 chords, which is why it can be used over a variety of progressions when using this scale to build solos on the guitar.
2 Common Minor Blues Scale Fingerings
To help get you started, here are two common fingerings for the A Minor Blues Scale, one with a 6-string root, and one with a 5-string root.
Try memorizing these scales in the key of A first, then take them to the other 11 keys around the neck as you expand on these scale shapes in your guitar practice routine.
Minor Blues Scale Practice Guide
To finish up, here are a number of ways that you can practice these scales in order to get the fingerings, and theory, behind these scales under your fingers and into your guitar playing.
1. Sing the root note, A for example, and play the corresponding Minor Blues Scales over that root.
2. Play a root note on the guitar, A for example, and then sing the corresponding Minor Blues Scale over that root note.
3. Say the note names, or interval numbers, such as A C D D# E G or 1 b3 4 #4 5 b7, as you play and sing the notes in the above exercises.
4. Put on a static vamp, A7, A, Am, Am7 or Amaj7 for example, and practice soloing over those chords using the related Minor Blues Scale as the basis for your solo.
6. Repeat any/all of the above exercises in all 12 keys.
Do you have a question or comment about Minor Blues Scales? If so, share them in the comments section below this thread.
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