G Blues Chords and Progression
C harmonica played in second position is used for Blues in G. Let's learn the chords and progression.
Difficulty: Challenging to switch quickly between chords
Lesson Length: 6:57
Instructor: George Goodman
* Dominant 7th chords
* Three new chords – G7, C7, D7
* 12 Bar Blues progression
* Singing root notes of each chord
* Switching chords
G Blues
Blues Chords In G
In this lesson, let's learn the chords for Blues in G - G7, C7 and D7.
G is the Blues key when playing a C harmonica in second position.
These Blues chords take the form of dominant seventh chords which is accomplished by taking a major triad and adding a flatted seventh to the chord.
Starting with G7, the notes of the chord are G, B, D, and F.
In the key of G, the seventh note is F#. To make the dominant 7th chord, we flat the 7th to F.
C7 is made up of the notes C, E, G, and Bb.
B is the 7th note in the key of C. We flat it to Bb to form C7.
D7 is made up of the notes D, F#, A, and C.
C# is the 7th note in the key of D. Flat it to C to form D7.
Learn each of these chords and practice switching between them. Play the notes of each chord individually so that they're clean.
12 Bar Blues In G
Here is a basic 12 Bar Blues progression in the key of G.
First 4 bars: All G7
Next 4 bars: C7 for 2 bars, G7 for 2 bars
Last 4 bars: 1 bar each of D7, C7, G7, D7
Then repeat
G7 | G7 | G7 | G7 |
C7 | C7 | G7 | G7 |
D7 | C7 | G7 | D7 |
Now let's play these chords to a 12 Bar Blues progression. Sing the roots of the chords as you go.
Listen to the new quality of the dominant 7th chord
Leave a Reply