12 bar blues in F major is a blues pattern of 12 bars in the key of F major. A basic blues progression uses 3 chords - the tonic (I) the dominant (V), and the subdominant (IV). For the key of F major the Tonic is F, the Dominant is C, and the subdominant is B-flat.
A basic 12 bar blues pattern in F major is:
F -- 3 bars
F7 -- 1 bar
B flat 7 -- 2 bars
F -- 2 bars
C7 -- 1 bar
B flat 7 -- 1 bar
F -- 2 bars
The 12 bar blues are a set of 12 chords, C, C, C, C, F, F, C, C, G, F, C, C or G.For each chord there is 4 beats.The walking bass an the 12 bar blues can be played together (i tried it at school and it sounds really rubbish because i tried it and it all went wrong so never try it again and foollow dooger jam's advice bye:)
because you can play 12 bar blues as if each chord refers to the relative blues scale, for example, blues in C, you can play the C Blues scale during the C chord, and an F blues scale during the F chord and so on. it sounds minor and ultimately makes it sound more bluesy, so to speak
Thinking blues is a 12 bar song. 12 bar is always made up from 3 chords such as A D and E or G C and D (depending on the key sang in)
In C its C C C C F F C C G F C C u can transpose 2 any key
you mean guitar solos, or rythmn? a solo blues guitar (the cooler kind) uses the blues scale, a modification of the pentatonic scale and LOTS of string bends. rythmn blues guitar varies, but always plays chords I,IV, V (so in the key of C: C, F, G) in variations. the most common blues progression is the 12-bar: (in C) C/C/C/C/F/F/C/C/G/F/C/C/ it uses a rock-swing rythmn.
The 12 bar blues are a set of 12 chords, C, C, C, C, F, F, C, C, G, F, C, C or G.For each chord there is 4 beats.The walking bass an the 12 bar blues can be played together (i tried it at school and it sounds really rubbish because i tried it and it all went wrong so never try it again and foollow dooger jam's advice bye:)
because you can play 12 bar blues as if each chord refers to the relative blues scale, for example, blues in C, you can play the C Blues scale during the C chord, and an F blues scale during the F chord and so on. it sounds minor and ultimately makes it sound more bluesy, so to speak
The most common blues progression in the key of C is the 12-bar blues progression, which follows a pattern of chords C7, F7, and G7.
Thinking blues is a 12 bar song. 12 bar is always made up from 3 chords such as A D and E or G C and D (depending on the key sang in)
In C its C C C C F F C C G F C C u can transpose 2 any key
From a theoretical standpoint, a 12-bar blues progression is an arrangement of a I IV V chord progression. It follows this form ( / are bar lines) I/I/I/I IV/IV/I/I V/IV/I/I So in any key, say C, you would use the 1st, 4th and 5th chord of the scale like this: C/C/C/C F/F/C/C G/F/C/C its very common, tons of pieces are based off of 12-bar progressions. Think of Elvis' rendition of Hound Dog, or the Beatles' Why Dont We Do It In the Road In addition, the beat can vary from song to song, as long as the pattern of chords does not change. You can also use: I/I/I/I IV/IV I/I V/V/I/I
Some common C harmonica chords used in blues music are C major, F major, G major, and D minor.
From a theoretical standpoint, a 12-bar blues progression is an arrangement of a I IV V chord progression. It follows this form ( / are bar lines) I/I/I/I IV/IV/I/I V/IV/I/I So in any key, say C, you would use the 1st, 4th and 5th chord of the scale like this: C/C/C/C F/F/C/C G/F/C/C its very common, tons of pieces are based off of 12-bar progressions. Think of Elvis' rendition of Hound Dog, or The Beatles' Why Dont We Do It In the Road In addition, the beat can vary from song to song, as long as the pattern of chords does not change. You can also use: I/I/I/I IV/IV I/I V/V/I/I
you mean guitar solos, or rythmn? a solo blues guitar (the cooler kind) uses the blues scale, a modification of the pentatonic scale and LOTS of string bends. rythmn blues guitar varies, but always plays chords I,IV, V (so in the key of C: C, F, G) in variations. the most common blues progression is the 12-bar: (in C) C/C/C/C/F/F/C/C/G/F/C/C/ it uses a rock-swing rythmn.
"Jus' Plain Blues" is typically based on a 12-bar blues structure, primarily using the I, IV, and V chords. In the key of C, the notes would be C (I), F (IV), and G (V). The melody often incorporates the blues scale, which includes the notes C, Eb, F, F#, G, and Bb for improvisation. The specific notes can vary based on the arrangement and style of performance.
A 12 bar blues is a song with "12 Bars". It starts with the 1 chord in any given key. Typically the 1 chord is kept for 4 measures. Then the 4 chord for 2 measures. Then back to the 1 chord for 2 more. Then end with 5 chord, 4 chord, then the 1 chord for the last two measures. You can subsitute the second chord for the 4 and the last for 5 if you are going to a turn around.
C major is enharmonic with B♯ Major with 12 sharps and Dbb Major with 12 flats (both alternatives are impractical though), so let's just call it C major!