Play 100s of songs with this same chord progression - 12 bar blues

An embedded YouTube video is missing from here because you have video cookies disabled.
Accept Free Trial

In this video

Here we’re learning the same blues riff as Marty and Chuck played in Johnny B. Goode, but we’re learning it for the 3 open power chords we covered in Level 2 05. It’s the same riff for each chord, and feels the same when you play it, we just move down the strings as to change chord. Here is the riff for each chord

(Similar to Johnny Be Goode by Chuck Berry and Keep Your Hands To Yourself by Georgia Satellites, listen to these songs to get a feel for what we’re going for!)

So not a blues riff ‘in B’ as Marty said, here we’re in A. This mean we use the 3 riffs we’ve just covered in the order written below.

HELP! A ‘12 bar’ what now?

This is the most common chord sequence in Blues and Rock n Roll songs. It uses all the chords we know so far in a longer sequence, known as a 12 bar blues (Its 12 bars long and used a lot in blues music as well as other genres such as rock and pop.

12 bar blues in A with Easy Blues Riff

To make this as easy as possible, play the riff in E, A and D SEPARATELY FIRST, then follow this as a guide so you know how many of each section to do

Screen Shot 2015-12-30 at 11.22.20

The most common Blues shuffle riff

(See a video on How to Read TAB)

Screen Shot 2015-12-30 at 11.24.36

Your choice regarding cookies on this site
We use video cookies to embed videos, audio cookies to embed music players, analytical cookies to improve our website, marketing cookies to improve the relevancy of advertising campaigns you receive, payment cookies to process payments, and necessary cookies to enable core functionality.