New Blues Soloing for guitar book series. Learn more : https://bluesguitarbook.com/ Blues Guitar Lesson - Get the FREE LESSON HANDBOOK (Guitar TAB, Notation, Playing Tips and More) CLICK HERE: https://jamesshipwayguitar.com/blues-... CHECK OUT MY BESTSELLING BOOKS: Learn more about my bestselling NO BULL MUSIC THEORY FOR GUITARISTS - now a 3 book series!: https://jamesshipwayguitar.com/guitar... Plus...the CAGED SYSTEM FOR GUITAR - step-by-step method for mastering the fretboard -with scales, sample licks, backing tracks, practice routines and more. Learn more here: https://jamesshipwayguitar.com/guitar... BLUES SOLOING FOR GUITAR VOL.1: https://bluesguitarbook.com/ BLUES SOLOING FOR GUITAR VOL.2 : https://bluesguitarbook.com/ SEE ALL MY OTHER BOOKS HERE: https://jamesshipwayguitar.com/guitar... All available on Amazon, Apple Books, Kobo, Google Play, Barnes&Noble plus other stores and libraries around the world. For the full range visit: https://headstockbooks.com/ Learn 7 blues guitar licks, 3 essential blues guitar scales and awesome blues guitar tips and techniques for playing blues guitar solos in the style of Eric Clapton, Stevie Ray Vaughan, BB King, Albert King and other blues guitar greats. SUBSCRIBE To My YouTube Channel for more GREAT Guitar Lessons, Tips, Licks and Learning Hacks: / subscription_c. . FOLLOW ME ON INSTAGRAM: / jamesshipwayguitar FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER: / jamesshipwaygtr ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1:00 How to play a minor pentatonic scale shape. This is one of the most important scales you need to know for playing blues solos, blues licks and improvising. There are a number of different ways to play the minor pentatonic scale on the guitar neck but this is the best one to start with and contains lots of classic and awesome sounding blues licks. Check out the pattern if you don't know it! 2:20 Here's your first blues lick. You hear it in the playing of all the greats- Stevie Ray Vaughan, BB King, Eric Clapton, Buddy Guy - everyone! It's a great lick for starting a blues solobut realy works almost anywhere in the 12 bar blues. 5:00 Here's an awesome blues lick in the style of Albert King and Stevie Ray Vaughan. It's also using the A minor pentatonic pattern we looked at a minute ago. Learn it and practice using it in your blues solos - it'll turn a few heads for sure. 7:35 Another A minor pentatonic lick complete with blues curls, quarter tone bends and a funky cool sounding string bend on the top E string. Check out the fingering tips for bending here too! 12:08 A classic Eric Clapton style lick, reminiscent of his classi blues guitar work with John Mayall and Cream. Advice on using slides, pre bends and more. Check out the cool bending move that's used several times throughout this lick. It'll test your bending strenghth and finger independence. Good luck! 18:49 Take a look at this extended A minor pentatonic pattern. It's chock full of awesome sounding blues licks and ideas as heard in the playing of all the blues guitar legends. Check it out, it'll transform your blues guitar playing if you don't already know it. 21:10 You've heard this one in the solos of greats like Stevie Ray Vaughan, Albert King and Buddy Guy. It's one of the best and most versatile licks you'll ever learn. It's using the top bit of the extension we just added to the minor pentatonic scale. Powerful stuff this lick - check it out. 24:30 Look at this simple change you can make to the minor pentatonic scale to get a wich=ked and useful sound. It's the kind of trick we hear in the playing of legends like BB King and Freddie King. 25:32 Funky BB King style lick for ya! Check out that cool double stop at the start. It's almost the kind of thing you hear in the playing of jazz guitarists like Charlie Christian and T Bone Walker. That could be where BB stole it from! Notice how it uses the modified minor pentatonic scale we just looked at. 28:40 Eric Clapton style blues lick using the extended minor pentatonic shape we saw earlier in this lesson. Starts with a cool double stop slide. Then into a cheeky little pre bend before sliding up the G string then back down to end the lick. Funky, cool and worth learning and exploring. 31:07 Advice on learning licks and how to apply them to whatever level your playing is at. Don't be afraid to simplify things to make them easier to play and learn and more useful to you when you solo. Also ceate variations and make up your very own licks based on these! GET THE FREE TAB BOOK HERE! TAB, PLAYING TIPS AND EXPLANATIONS. CLICK THIS LINK: https://jamesshipwayguitar.com/blues-...