Transcript loooooong
Click to play – Robert Johnson – Sweet home Chicago
Click to play – John Mayer – Everyday I have the blues
Old Blues
New Blues
TASK: Discuss the similarities… Are there any?
TASK 1:
Dotted Rhythms:
Are made up of pairs of notes in the pattern longshort. The first note is dotted and the second is
one third of the dotted note’s value.
How to count dotted rhythm
Swing time, same thing:
Blues music is mainly performed / composed in
swing time. Clap along with the beat changing from
straight to swing time every 2 bars (8 beats).
http://www.youtube.com/v/B9HvvjbVWz0
LOOOOOONG
short
LOOOOOONG
short
1 & 2 & 3 & 4 &
Dotted notes:
http://www.musictheory.net/lessons/14
Notes with
dots after them
increase the
note duration
by half
Dotted Rhythms:
An uneven rhythm (usually ‘long-short’) produced when a note with a dot is
followed by another of one third the value of the first note. If you try singing
Three Blind Mice, while clapping the beats, you will find that they stick fairly
firmly to the beat. Dotted rhythms, on the other hand, have a different feel
altogether. Try tapping the beat while humming or singing We Are The
Champions by Queen, and hear the difference.
Diatonic Blues
Blues music has nothing to do with the colour. It originates from
African slaves working the cotton fields in America creating sad
music.
3 chords to use
Blues music is always based on 3 chords of a scale. Chords I, IV
and V . No matter what key (root note) its always the same
chords with blues. Work out chords I,IV and V of the A major
scale.
A
…
B
Tone
… D
C#
…
E…
Tone SemiTone Tone
I
II
III
Tonic
Supertonic
Mediant
IV
… G#
F#
… A
Tone
V
Sub-dominant Dominant
Tone
VI
SemiTone
VII
Sub-mediant Leading tone
VIII
Octave
12 bar blues
Blues chords are played in a specific order called 12 bar blues.
Teacher will jam along with sound clip in C major
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jluYpcoeoCo&feature=related
TASK 3: Put these chords in order
Replace the roman numerals for the correct chords of C major
I
I
I
I
A
A
A
A
IV
IV
I
I
D
D
A
A
V
IV
I
E
D
A
TASK:
V or
I
E
A
Perform the 12 bar blues to a metronome.
http://www.bgfl.org/custom/resources_ftp/client_ftp/ks2/music/piano/
Slide guitar
Dominant 7th chord
A dominant seventh chord is used in blues all the time!!
It is simply a chord composed of a It can be also viewed
as a major triad with an additional minor seventh.
1.
2.
3.
4.
Root
Major third
Perfect fifth
Minor seventh
C7
Task:
Compose a blues song using as many of the features you’ve learnt today.
Guitar and piano only!!!
Play 7th chords
C7
Activity: Teacher brings in bass guitar.
Class discuss the role of a bass.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rY0WxgSXdEE&ob=av3n
Listen:
What’s happening in the 5,6,7,8’s?
Working out a walking bass line
A
B
Tone
C# D
Tone SemiTone Tone
I
II
III
Tonic
Supertonic
Mediant
I
…A
E
IV
F# G# A
Tone
V
VI
Sub-dominant Dominant
III
V
VI
C#
…
…E
F#
…
bVII
…G
Tone
SemiTone
VII
Sub-mediant Leading tone
VI
V
III
F#
…
E
…
C#
…
VIII
Octave
I
…A
TASK 1, 2 & 3: Perform walking bass line in A,D and E.
EXTENSION TASK:
1 person plays the walking bass line and the other plays the chord
sequence from last week.
Blues has its own scale
The blues scale is any major scale with a minor 3rd, minor 7th and
an added flattened 5th.
Blues scale:
A
B
Tone
C# D
I
E
Tone SemiTone Tone
I
II
III
Tonic
Supertonic
Mediant
IV
bIII IV
bV
V
bVII
F# G# A
Tone
V
Sub-dominant Dominant
Tone
VI
SemiTone
VII
Sub-mediant Leading tone
VIII
Octave
Task 2: Improvise to a backing track
Improvisation is where you make it up on the spot. I’m going to give you sometime to get comfortable
where the notes are. I’m then going to play a backing track and you are going to improvise over the
top.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HNSiWeFXrNI&feature=related
LONG AND SHORT NOTES
Extension task:
Improvisation is an excellent skill and must be use wisely. To
avoid it being boring and repetitive use Disjunct and conjunct.
MAKE YOUR MELODIES INTERESTING
Conjuct:
Melody that moves by step
never more than a tone.
Disjuct:
Melody that moves using
lots of jumps. Larger than
a tone.
My Song has…
7th Chords
walking bass line
Improvisation
Dotted rhythms (swing time)
Basic triads (chords)
Verse Chorus
Blues scale
12 Bar blues
Play an individual role in a group
Select appropriate timbre
Lyrical content
Keep in time