Admin admin Posted September 13 Admin Report Share Posted September 13 Here I show you an easy blues guitar riff in E by using open strings to give it that mississippi blues vibe. I show you 2 versions - one with finger picking and one with the pic. Here you can download the files associated to this tutorial : Randy 1 Quote www.hanspeterkruesi.comif you love this website please support it either with aPremium Membership or / andDonation Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members eastbayjay Posted September 13 Members Report Share Posted September 13 Hi, I really enjoyed this but it's tough to get that sweet blues tone. The TAB says it's free . How do I download it. admin and Randy 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Admin admin Posted Saturday at 12:50 PM Author Admin Report Share Posted Saturday at 12:50 PM Hey there - thanks for the nice feedback. That's a bug in the system which I can not solve. The TABS are for free for all premium members. So you need to make the upgrade. For the sound - maybe check this tutorial here : Randy 1 Quote www.hanspeterkruesi.comif you love this website please support it either with aPremium Membership or / andDonation Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium medikon Posted Sunday at 05:58 PM Premium Report Share Posted Sunday at 05:58 PM Hey Hanspeter, thank you for this tutorial! I have a possibly odd question. But it made me crazy for a while, because i suggested that my guitar would be out of tune. So I reall worked hard on the tuning device. And i tested the turnaround on higher strings as well.... But finally it just seems to me, that the turnaround (Ab, A, Bb up to B7) sounds in my ears a bit better or maybe just a bit more natural, when i play after the A the next note not as Bb, but as a 1/4 bended A. Is there any theoretical explanation for this, or is the reason just an old man's bad hearing in this case? I hope my question isn't totally stupid Have a nice evening and thank you! Greg and Randy 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Admin admin Posted Sunday at 09:09 PM Author Admin Report Share Posted Sunday at 09:09 PM 3 hours ago, medikon said: Is there any theoretical explanation for this, or is the reason just an old man's bad hearing in this case? I hope my question isn't totally stupid In fact a very interesting question. I would say the reason for this is that you might be used to play the blue note very often which is in fact 1/4 bended A. There is a german word for that which I don't know how to translate : Hörgewohnheit ( something like " ways your ears are use to hear music ) and in this case this lead to your personal perseption that the 1/4 bend in this case sounds correct. At the beginning of music there was first the " Hörgewohnheit " and that leaded to theory. So your way is the original, intuitiv one. medikon and Randy 1 1 Quote www.hanspeterkruesi.comif you love this website please support it either with aPremium Membership or / andDonation Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Greg Posted Monday at 12:23 AM Premium Report Share Posted Monday at 12:23 AM 6 hours ago, medikon said: Hey Hanspeter, thank you for this tutorial! I have a possibly odd question. But it made me crazy for a while, because i suggested that my guitar would be out of tune. So I reall worked hard on the tuning device. And i tested the turnaround on higher strings as well.... But finally it just seems to me, that the turnaround (Ab, A, Bb up to B7) sounds in my ears a bit better or maybe just a bit more natural, when i play after the A the next note not as Bb, but as a 1/4 bended A. Is there any theoretical explanation for this, or is the reason just an old man's bad hearing in this case? I hope my question isn't totally stupid Have a nice evening and thank you! Excellent catch! admin, Randy and medikon 2 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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