Joe Bonamassa
Joe Bonamassa
Joe Bonamassa
"This is a great way to start a blues if you're with your jamming buddies, and maybe they say,
'Hey, you kick it off'. Try this little lick out for size - it's great for starting a blues, because you get
these ominous kind of half-bends within the chord. It's a lot of fun if you can get your hands
trained to anticipate the changes and bend down. And the real trick with that is making sure that
the intonation's right, because if you don't get that right it just sounds like you're making a lot of
mistakes!"
Ex 1a
Joe demonstrates a cool way of adding thickness to bluesy doublestops by using a wider interval.
The minor 3rd (top note) is pushed up to the major 3rd, creating a partial major chord, and the
rest of the lick uses a G blues scale (G Bb C Db D F). This would work well on the last four bars of
a 12-bar blues.
Ex 1b
In this example, Joe applies the same doublestop technique to all three chords from the I-IV-V
progression. Also, note the Eb chord leading down into the D at the end and the Abchord at the
start... the neighbouring chromatic chord is used for temporary tension.
Ex 2a
This lesson is about the importance of learning notes all over the fretboard, so you're not
restricted to single-box positions. Joe plays some descending E minor pentatonic lines in various
positions, sneaking in a C# note from the Dorian mode (E F# G A B C# D) in bar four.
Ex 2b
Another Dorian note (F#) creeps in here and adds melodic interest. This is the simplest form of
what Joe is demonstrating here, but don't just play complete descending scales in your own
solos; there's a whole lot more you can do besides
Ex 2c
For a start, you can add little 'kinks' in the melodic contour, so the notes don't just go straight
down or up. If you're a feel player, this might seem a deliberate, studied way of working, but the
more ideas you feed into your brain during practice sessions, the more variety you can call on
when you're really playing.
Ex 2d
Now Joe opens up, adding more position shifts and those 'kinks' within each melodic contour. You
might not think that a single position shift would do much to your playing, but just applying
comfortable patterns to a different part of a scale can create melodies you wouldn't normally
play.
Ex 3a
In this lesson, Joe shows how a knowledge of chord inversions can help you get thick, meaty
sounds, even when the current chord's root note isn't particularly low on the guitar. When the
chord moves from G to C (bar 3), he plays a 2nd inversion C chord (with G, the 5th, at the
bottom), keeping things low and pungent!
Ex 3b
Here, Joe isolates the I-V-IV chords, using chromatic neighbouring chords to lead into each one.
Ex 3c
Now Joe uses the inverted chords within the context of a full 12-bar progression in G. As well as
using the inversions to mark the main chord changes, he's using them to create nice chromatic
doublestop lines.