Piano Guidance
Photo by Consuelo Borroni Pexels Logo Photo: Consuelo Borroni

What are 3 characteristics of the blues?

The main features of blues include: specific chord progressions, a walking bass, call and response, dissonant harmonies, syncopation, melisma and flattened 'blue' notes. Blues is known for being microtonal, using pitches between the semitones defined by a piano keyboard.

Is piano a male instrument?
Is piano a male instrument?

Piano instruments were considered the feminine musical instrument “par excellence” in the nineteenth century. So much so, in fact, that during the...

Read More »
What is the 3 3 1 sleep rule?
What is the 3 3 1 sleep rule?

3 hours before bed: No more food or alcohol. 2 hours before bed: No more work. 1 hour before bed: No more screen time (shut off all phones, TVs and...

Read More »

What is blues music and why is it called blues music?

Blues is both a musical form and a musical genre. Blues gets its name from its original association with melancholy subjects and sounds: when we have ‘the blues’, we’re feeling sad. However, blues has since developed to address other subjects and emotions, adopting a wider purpose of ‘chasing the blues away’ with music. The main features of blues include: specific chord progressions, a walking bass, call and response, dissonant harmonies, syncopation, melisma and flattened ‘blue’ notes. Blues is known for being microtonal, using pitches between the semitones defined by a piano keyboard. This is often achieved on electric guitar using a metal slide for a whining effect. As a result, blues can be heavily chromatic.

What is a blues scale?

The blues scale – from which most of the melody, harmony and improvisations are composed – is a six-note scale that consists of the minor pentatonic scale plus an extra flattened fifth note. There are also longer variations of the blues scale that use further chromaticism, most notably flattening the third, fifth and seventh notes. The most common blues form is the twelve-bar blues, though musicians will sometimes favour the eight or 16-bar blues forms. The twelve-bar blues uses a basic chord progression of: I I I I - IV IV I I - V IV I I. This is normally accompanied by an AAB structure for its lyrics, utilising the popular call-and-response element that blues originated from. As blues has developed over the years, it has encouraged a number of subgenres to flourish, often including hybrids with other genres, including blues rock and country blues. Other subgenres are defined by their development within a certain place, such as Chicago blues and Delta blues.

When and how did blues music originate?

Blues originated in the Deep South after the US Civil War in the 19th century, evolving from the oral tradition of African American work songs and spirituals, which featured the call-and-response patterns that are still prominent in blues today. It came into mainstream popularity in the 1920s when it also developed its common AAB lyric pattern. Blues songs were centred around the pain of loss and injustice but also expressed the victory in outlasting these painful experiences. The music also originated with a slow tempo that has since become faster with its increase in popularity.

What’s the difference between blues and jazz?

Does music sound better in the dark?
Does music sound better in the dark?

Listening in the dark stops your brain doing what it naturally wants to do, interact with your other senses, and focuses your attention on just the...

Read More »
What is the most emotional chord progression?
What is the most emotional chord progression?

9 Sad Chords Progressions That'll Stir Listener's Emotions I – V – vi – IV. I – vi – IV – V. IV – V – vi – I. IV – V – iii – IV. I/3 – VIsus2 – V –...

Read More »

Blues is a predecessor to and foundation of jazz. While there are some elements that overlap, jazz and blues use similar features in different ways. Both styles of music use improvisation but in blues this is reserved for a soloist in a set number of bars and over a strict chord progression, whereas jazz ensembles often improvise together and for an unlimited amount of time. Generally, jazz is less strict and more polyphonic than blues, using a wide variety of chord progressions. It is also more likely to be purely instrumental, while blues most often centres a vocalist who leads call-and-response and articulates the music’s subject matter. There is also significant overlap in the instruments typically used in both genres, though again jazz tends to create more diverse ensembles.

What instruments are played in a blues band?

More often than not, blues bands feature the following instruments: guitar (usually electric), drums, double bass (pizzicato), piano, saxophone and brass instruments (often with mutes). This ensemble usually accompanies a leading vocalist, but they also have the opportunity for instrumental solos.

10 most famous blues musicians

Discover and listen to more blues legends by streaming The Origins of the Blues on Apple Music

What is a Requiem in music?

What is the difference between a musical and an opera?

Top image shows American blues musician and singer Muddy Waters (1913 - 1983) in concert, circa 1970. (Photo by Val Wilmer/Redferns/Getty Images)

What voice type is Billie Eilish?
What voice type is Billie Eilish?

mezzo-soprano Billie Eilish's voice is roughly around the mezzo-soprano range. Using 'COPYCAT' as an example again, she does go right into the top...

Read More »
Will all animals go to heaven?
Will all animals go to heaven?

So if all animals praise the Lord—and thus believe in Him—and if “whoever believes in Him should not perish but have eternal life,” it stands to...

Read More »
Join almost HALF A MILLION Happy Students Worldwide
Join almost HALF A MILLION Happy Students Worldwide

Pianoforall is one of the most popular online piano courses online and has helped over 450,000 students around the world achieve their dream of playing beautiful piano for over a decade.

Learn More »
Did Jimi Hendrix use chords?
Did Jimi Hendrix use chords?

The chord shape is colloquially called the Hendrix chord because guitarist Jimi Hendrix frequently used it in a number of his songs like “Purple...

Read More »
Join almost HALF A MILLION Happy Students Worldwide
Join almost HALF A MILLION Happy Students Worldwide

Pianoforall is one of the most popular online piano courses online and has helped over 450,000 students around the world achieve their dream of playing beautiful piano for over a decade.

Learn More »
Why do pros use 60 keyboards?
Why do pros use 60 keyboards?

The big benefit of 60% keyboards is its diminutive width, leaving more room for the mouse and generally creating a better ergonomic posture for...

Read More »