WEBVTT 00:00:05.006 --> 00:00:07.229 Hi, how you doin'? Justin here. 00:00:07.229 --> 00:00:11.414 In this lesson today, we're going to be checking out a traditional 12 bar blues, 00:00:11.414 --> 00:00:15.175 using a chunka chunka rhythm. Now a chunka chunka rhythm is just a word 00:00:15.175 --> 00:00:19.337 that my teacher taught me to describe this shuffle which we talked about earlier, 00:00:19.337 --> 00:00:23.500 where we talked about like strumming it, now we're doing like a proper 00:00:23.500 --> 00:00:27.752 12 bar blues style. So let me just play it for you first once through. 00:00:27.752 --> 00:00:30.796 I'll play it in a medium up tempo just so it doesn't take too long 00:00:30.796 --> 00:00:34.441 but we're going to be taking through it nice and slowly. So this is what it sounds like. 00:00:34.441 --> 00:00:35.620 3, 4, 00:00:35.620 --> 00:01:05.932 . . . 00:01:05.932 --> 00:01:10.452 That's it, straight ahead 12 bar blues. You can hear chunka chunka 00:01:10.452 --> 00:01:13.352 chunka, chunka, is where you get that little rhythm from. 00:01:13.352 --> 00:01:16.969 So it's pretty straight forward. The big thing that you have to deal with here 00:01:16.969 --> 00:01:19.790 is that you're playing two strings at a time. 00:01:19.790 --> 00:01:22.092 Now we're going to start off by going to a close up of this 00:01:22.092 --> 00:01:26.225 in just a second, but we're just going to be using one finger. It's going to be on the note E, 00:01:26.225 --> 00:01:29.425 and we're going to be playing two strings on this very first chord. 00:01:29.425 --> 00:01:34.155 It's going to be an A chord. We're going to be playing the open A string, which is the 5th string. 00:01:34.155 --> 00:01:37.498 Hopefully you know that by now, because you know your open string note names, don't you? 00:01:37.498 --> 00:01:41.740 And also the 4th string, which is the one with the note E, 00:01:41.740 --> 00:01:44.329 1st finger playing the 2nd fret of the 4th string. 00:01:44.329 --> 00:01:49.550 and we're going to play those two notes (plays) then again (plays) 00:01:49.550 --> 00:01:52.956 and then our 3rd finger is going to go down on the same string 00:01:52.956 --> 00:01:56.551 as the 1st finger and your plucking the same two notes. 00:01:56.551 --> 00:02:00.293 So remember while we're on the A chord, which is the first thing we're going to look at 00:02:00.293 --> 00:02:04.219 in a second on the close up, you just want to be playing the 5th string 00:02:04.219 --> 00:02:08.299 and the 4th string, and you're going to be using all 00:02:08.299 --> 00:02:12.247 down picks for this whole exercise. OK, let's go to a close up. 00:02:14.720 --> 00:02:19.171 So here we go, here's the 1st finger in the 2nd fret of the 4th string 00:02:19.171 --> 00:02:23.902 and we're going to be playing the open A string and this note (plays) 00:02:23.902 --> 00:02:27.859 and the 1st finger kind of lifts up a little bit to make sure those other strings 00:02:27.859 --> 00:02:31.514 underneath it are a bit muted. It doesn't really matter so much on acoustic guitar 00:02:31.514 --> 00:02:35.533 but maybe on electric guitar it will make a difference, so you might as well get in a habit of muting 00:02:35.533 --> 00:02:39.029 those strings as well while you're at it. So you're going to do two picks on this 00:02:39.029 --> 00:02:40.829 . . . 00:02:40.829 --> 00:02:43.400 then your 3rd finger is going to go down two frets further 00:02:43.400 --> 00:02:47.121 which is 4th fret on the same string that your 1st finger is on, 00:02:47.121 --> 00:02:49.287 which is of course the fourth string. 00:02:49.287 --> 00:02:51.085 . . . 00:02:51.085 --> 00:02:56.395 Then we go back again, 1st finger (plays), 3rd finger (plays). 00:02:56.395 --> 00:03:00.362 1st finger, 3rd finger down. (plays) 00:03:00.362 --> 00:03:03.218 Now I just played one bar, so the count for that will be 00:03:03.218 --> 00:03:09.281 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and 00:03:09.281 --> 00:03:11.465 So that will just be one bar. 00:03:11.465 --> 00:03:13.614 If you look at the sheet music for this, you will probably notice 00:03:13.614 --> 00:03:16.860 that we do 4 bars of A, maybe you will even remember 00:03:16.860 --> 00:03:19.999 the sheet music for this, from playing the 12 bar blues 00:03:19.999 --> 00:03:21.912 with a shuffle rhythm before, with the strumming. 00:03:21.912 --> 00:03:25.117 Hopefully you remember at least the pattern, the order of the chords. 00:03:25.117 --> 00:03:28.671 If not, you need to check out the sheet music on the web site, then get back to here. 00:03:28.671 --> 00:03:33.160 So here we go. Now we're going to do this A chord for 4 bars. So we have 00:03:33.160 --> 00:03:37.807 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and 00:03:37.807 --> 00:03:42.358 2nd bar and 2 and 3 and 4 and 00:03:42.358 --> 00:03:46.755 3rd bar, and 2 and 3 and 4, 00:03:46.755 --> 00:03:52.504 and 4th bar, and 2 and 3 and 4 and. 00:03:52.504 --> 00:03:56.494 Now we go to the D. What we're going to do, is simply move our 1st finger over, 00:03:56.494 --> 00:04:00.519 like toward the ground one string, and the note the 3rd finger will go on 00:04:00.519 --> 00:04:03.026 will also move toward the ground one string. 00:04:03.026 --> 00:04:04.356 But whenever we change strings, 00:04:04.356 --> 00:04:09.861 we start with just the 1st finger on and that's it. And we do two bars now on the D. 00:04:09.861 --> 00:04:12.675 Of course the strings that we pick have also changed. 00:04:12.675 --> 00:04:15.819 We're now picking the middle two strings. Here we go for the D 00:04:15.819 --> 00:04:21.071 (plays) 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and 00:04:21.071 --> 00:04:25.085 1 and 2 and 3 and 4, 00:04:25.085 --> 00:04:30.555 and back to A, and 2 and 3 and 4 and 00:04:30.555 --> 00:04:35.353 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and 00:04:35.353 --> 00:04:40.398 1, now to E, we've moved 1st finger up toward the ceiling one string 00:04:40.398 --> 00:04:44.014 so it's now on the 5th string and we're plucking the open E string 00:04:44.014 --> 00:04:47.631 the lowest, fattest, thickest string and this note here 00:04:47.631 --> 00:04:50.299 with the 1st finger. We do 1 bar on E, 00:04:50.299 --> 00:04:57.247 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and, big jump all the way to D, 00:04:57.247 --> 00:05:05.406 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and, 1, we're back on A now, 3, and, 00:05:05.406 --> 00:05:11.942 then down to E again, 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and 00:05:11.942 --> 00:05:16.258 Now it's really important here, that you keep that 1st finger back in that 2nd fret, 00:05:16.258 --> 00:05:20.925 try to avoid going 1 and 2 and 3, this kind of thing. 00:05:20.925 --> 00:05:26.001 That's really bad form. Try and get those fingers nicely spread out all of the way through. 00:05:26.722 --> 00:05:29.019 So I'm going to play now, once through this whole thing 00:05:29.019 --> 00:05:32.055 really slowly to let you have a go at playing along with it 00:05:32.055 --> 00:05:37.412 Really try to get the feeling for this 'chunka chunka chunka chunka'-feeling; the shuffle. 00:05:37.412 --> 00:05:40.398 Because it's an integral part of playing this style. 00:05:40.398 --> 00:05:43.315 Also make sure you are picking just the right strings 00:05:43.315 --> 00:05:46.873 It's kind of difficult sometimes to make sure you're picking the open string, 00:05:46.873 --> 00:05:50.684 as well as the fretted note. And partly this is because your pick hand 00:05:50.684 --> 00:05:53.283 has got quite used to playing where your finger is, 00:05:53.283 --> 00:05:57.486 and suddenly you have to pick on the thick string above, NOTE Paragraph 00:05:57.486 --> 00:06:01.193 physically above the string your finger is on. So this hand is kind of, 00:06:01.193 --> 00:06:03.763 if it's developing a sense of connection with the other hand, 00:06:03.763 --> 00:06:05.673 you're having to break it for this exercise. 00:06:05.684 --> 00:06:12.627 That's why it can be a little bit sticky sometimes. Here we go, nice and slow, 3, 4, 00:06:12.627 --> 00:06:18.484 (plays) 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and 00:06:18.484 --> 00:06:23.756 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and, 00:06:23.756 --> 00:06:25.722 here's the 3rd bar, 00:06:25.722 --> 00:06:30.264 2 and 3 and 4 and the 4th bar, 00:06:30.264 --> 00:06:34.963 and 2 and 3 and 4 and now over to D, 00:06:34.963 --> 00:06:40.989 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and the 2nd bar 00:06:40.989 --> 00:06:45.114 and 2 and 3 and 4 and 00:06:45.114 --> 00:06:51.684 back to A and 2 and 3 and 4 and again, 00:06:51.684 --> 00:06:56.842 and 2 and 3 and 4, big jump over to E 00:06:56.842 --> 00:07:05.677 and 2 and 3 and 4, right over to D, 2 and 3 and 4 and 00:07:05.677 --> 00:07:10.293 back to A, and 2 and 3 and 4 00:07:10.293 --> 00:07:17.687 and E and 2 and 3 and 4 and, A. 00:07:17.687 --> 00:07:22.907 Always a good idea to finish this blues on an A, it kind of makes it sound finished. 00:07:22.907 --> 00:07:27.509 If you just stop on E, it sounds weird. So the thing you're going for now, 00:07:27.509 --> 00:07:30.838 really trying to make sure that you don't stop in between the chord changes, 00:07:30.838 --> 00:07:35.512 trying to make sure that you pick the right strings, and that you get the groove really nice. 00:07:35.512 --> 00:07:41.178 This 12 bar blues is in the key of A fits perfectly with the A minor pentatonic that we've been looking at. 00:07:41.178 --> 00:07:44.097 If you have a jam buddy, someone you've been doing some practice with, 00:07:44.097 --> 00:07:48.012 one guy can sit down and play the 12 bar blues, and the other guy can muck around 00:07:48.012 --> 00:07:51.388 with the A minor pentatonic scale and make up a solo over the top. 00:07:51.388 --> 00:07:55.773 That's how these two things kind of link together, very, very cool fun. We're going talk about that 00:07:55.773 --> 00:08:00.241 a little bit more later on. For now what you want to do is really work on getting that 00:08:00.241 --> 00:08:03.789 12 bar blues rhythm style properly solid. 00:08:03.789 --> 00:08:06.136 So, I hope you enjoyed that look at the blues 00:08:06.136 --> 00:08:08.822 and I'll see you for another lesson sometime real soon.