The Ultimate Acoustic Blues | Guitar Control https://guitarcontrol.com Wed, 20 Oct 2021 16:14:13 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.4 https://guitarcontrol.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/GC_Image_rev-100x100.png The Ultimate Acoustic Blues | Guitar Control https://guitarcontrol.com 32 32 Jimmy Dillon Blues Interview https://guitarcontrol.com/blues/jimmy-dillon-blues-interview/ https://guitarcontrol.com/blues/jimmy-dillon-blues-interview/#comments Fri, 18 Oct 2013 14:32:52 +0000 https://guitarcontrol.wpmudev.host/blog/?p=3840 Hey check out this interview that Virtuwul did with Jimmy Dillon…
Great stuff to listen to…

[audio:https://guitarcontrol.com/blog/audio/jd-interview-oct-2013.mp3]


CHECK OUT JIMMY’S LATEST COURSE
ULTIMATE ACOUSTIC BLUES

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Ultimate Acoustic Blues is available NOW! https://guitarcontrol.com/the-ultimate-acoustic-blues/ultimate-acoustic-blues-available-tomorrow/ https://guitarcontrol.com/the-ultimate-acoustic-blues/ultimate-acoustic-blues-available-tomorrow/#comments Tue, 15 Oct 2013 13:38:28 +0000 https://guitarcontrol.wpmudev.host/blog/?p=3806 Go here!

https://guitarcontrol.com/ultimateacousticblues/

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Greeting from the beaches of San Francisco! https://guitarcontrol.com/the-ultimate-acoustic-blues/greeting-from-the-beaches-of-san-francisco/ https://guitarcontrol.com/the-ultimate-acoustic-blues/greeting-from-the-beaches-of-san-francisco/#comments Tue, 15 Oct 2013 13:31:18 +0000 https://guitarcontrol.wpmudev.host/blog/?p=3802 Very important message from best-selling guitar teacher: Jimmy Dillon.

Greeting from the beaches of San Francisco!

Hey. Jimmy Dillon reaching out to you from San Francisco, California.

You know, I’ve been requested by a lot of different players
over the years for one product in particular and that product
is Ultimate Acoustic Blues Guitar. There’s a lot of blues
lovers and a lot of really, really fanatically loyal acoustic
players out there. So this one is for you. You guys
requested it; you got it at guitarcontrol.com.

It drops October 16th. Please check-in with Claude Johnson
and myself, Jimmy Dillon, on the web and we look forward
to seeing you. Also, there will be all kinds of giveaways
and fun stuff. So Ultimate Acoustic Blues Guitar
coming out October 16th.

Greetings from California. I’m going to give you a shot
of the ocean here. Check it out. It’s one of those days.
There’s a surfer dude. All right. Peace out from California.

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How An Inspirational Acoustic Blues is Played On Guitar https://guitarcontrol.com/blues/acoustic-blues-inspiration/ https://guitarcontrol.com/blues/acoustic-blues-inspiration/#comments Sat, 12 Oct 2013 14:36:07 +0000 https://guitarcontrol.wpmudev.host/blog/?p=3792 This is from Jimmy’s upcoming “Ultimate Acoustic Blues” – available on Oct 16th!

Blues Guitar Lesson – Acoustic Blues Inspiration
[Guitar playing].

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Please vote today on your favorite DVD artwork https://guitarcontrol.com/the-ultimate-acoustic-blues/please-vote-today-on-your-favorite-dvd-artwork/ https://guitarcontrol.com/the-ultimate-acoustic-blues/please-vote-today-on-your-favorite-dvd-artwork/#comments Thu, 10 Oct 2013 14:24:11 +0000 https://guitarcontrol.wpmudev.host/blog/?p=3779 Which do you like better, design #1 or #2 ?

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Build Your Blues Vocabulary https://guitarcontrol.com/blues/build-your-blues-vocabulary/ https://guitarcontrol.com/blues/build-your-blues-vocabulary/#comments Thu, 10 Oct 2013 14:15:33 +0000 https://guitarcontrol.wpmudev.host/blog/?p=3775
This is from Jimmy’s upcoming “Ultimate Acoustic Blues” – available on Oct 16th! Build Your Blues Guitar Vocabulary I really want to build-up, help you build-up a vocabulary of licks. As I mentioned before, when I’ve gotten comments back from my acoustic products, various acoustic products, and everybody says, oh, give me some more acoustic blues. A couple of ways you can approach an A shuffle like that. One is the little — had a little bit more of a driving wheel kind of… Now here you’ve got various places you could go. You could keep that thing going… Sounds good. That’s one approach. Another approach to this same sort of — this is still an A shuffle, but if you wanted to go more of an inside feel, something like keeping your thumb going, like, I know we’ve been talking about the dead thumb. There’s that. So that’s a little more subtle finger style. Same groove though. Here I went to a D7th. I love this move. It’s still a D7th. Back to your A7th; E7th. That’s the same walkdown I did earlier. Remember the E one? But I did it in A. There are several ways you could do that. Or you could go — here’s a cool folk one. Almost jazzy, isn’t it? That’s just an A7th and then a D major, D minor, A major, A7th and then you go sharp 5. Then the other one was the… Similar to… Slightly different voicing though. This is a chromatic 7th walkdown. Or… That’s also common. You don’t have to put the 7th in there. So these are all little — I’m trying to basically give you a vocabulary of your own. Because what I want to encourage you to do is go ahead and play with your friends or use this. I’m going to find a way to send you guys my backing tracks. Actually, I’m going to do that. I haven’t told these guys yet, but we’re going to do it. We’re going to make that happen for you. So what I’m going to do is take all the tracks that I’ve recorded here during this course and I’m going to make it available to you through Guitar Control and that way you’ll have them and you can take my lessons that you just learned from watching me. You’ll have your own version of loops. You can make your own, too. But I want to make sure you have yours because I’ve got to ask for that and I just remembered I think I need to make that available to you. So, I will. So lastly, as I mentioned before, I was kind of playing around in A during my loop thing. I did a thing where I actually made the change of the D chord, little 7th riff. Now you’ll notice I’m doing a lot of hammering-on. That seems to be a common technique that seems to work well on the blues, whether it’s a rhythm thing… See that hammer-on? All those little half-step moves seem to work well in the blues. Very — kind of motorize the thing, you know?

10 Blues Guitar Lessons and Songs

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How to Do The Sweet Side of the Blues on Guitar by Jimmy Dillon https://guitarcontrol.com/blues/sweet-side-of-the-blues/ https://guitarcontrol.com/blues/sweet-side-of-the-blues/#comments Sun, 06 Oct 2013 14:41:40 +0000 https://guitarcontrol.wpmudev.host/blog/?p=3752 Hey guys,

Here´s another short sample from `The Ultimate Acoustic Blues´,
which is coming out in October 16th!

Blues Guitar Lesson – Sweet Side of the Blues by Jimmy Dillon

All right, right now we’re going to go into a different style
of blues. This is one that’s near and dear to me. We’re
talking about the blues of more of a sweet side. Now, that
includes people like Mississippi John Hurt and there’s been
some modern players, too, that explore that side. What it
really, to me, means it’s finger-picking good is what I’m
trying to say.

This is something that is really a side of the blues that’s
maybe not quite as well known or well identified to the blues,
as sort of a… That’s more of a low down kind of dirty blues.
There ain’t nothing wrong with that. We’ve got plenty of that
going on here and that’s great and we will continue to explore
that. But I don’t want to leave out some of the more sweeter,
beautiful parts of the blues because the blues isn’t always
a sad, morose kind of thing. It’s really not.

John Lee Hooker once said the blues is the healer and I think
music is the healer. I think music heals things medicine can’t
and I think — that’s just why music is so loved around the world.
Acoustic blues is certainly a big part of that.

What I wanted to show on this is a couple of things. The right
hand and left hand are doing very different things. The left hand
is kind of doing a simple C pattern, trying to tell a little story
there, right? So you’ve got the C and the G as almost like a little
bass line. And then you’ve got my finger picking thing going on
down here, my sweet picking I’m calling it because it’s the sweeter
side of the blues. So you’ve got a steady rolling thing going here.
And then what I’ll do is I’ll pick-up a melody. My F to a G, back
to a C.

Now the songs that come to mind is “My Creole Belle” by John Hurt,
also… So I’m basically mixing a little Mississippi John Hurt with
a little Elizabeth Cotton, who was a wonderful picker. But picking
the blues, finger picking goes way forward, even go into a guy like
Keb Mo or Taj Mahal, all that kind of stuff. We’re going to touch
on Taj’s stuff because he’s just a master of the blues, still is,
a grand master of the blues.

To further take you into this, you can watch what my fingers are
doing and we’re going to tab this thing out. Just slow it down
and it really doesn’t matter what the melody is on top, you still
need that, what I call a dead thumb, thing going. We were talking
about some of the up and coming young bands like Mumford & Sons
and Avett Brothers and what they do with this sort of particular,
almost Appalachian flavor of the blues, or in this case, it’s
still Delta Blues, but in more of a folk main, I think.
And I just love it.

It’s really fun to sing along to, too, whether you’re singing
along with your melody, which is a great technique.

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BluesMatters Magazine featuring Jimmy Dillon! https://guitarcontrol.com/blues/bluesmatters-magazine-featuring-jimmy-dillon/ https://guitarcontrol.com/blues/bluesmatters-magazine-featuring-jimmy-dillon/#comments Sat, 05 Oct 2013 14:52:26 +0000 https://guitarcontrol.wpmudev.host/blog/?p=3745 check out this article from BluesMatters magazine featuring Jimmy Dillon!


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How to Play Minor Acoustic Blues Guitar https://guitarcontrol.com/blues/minor-blues-guitar-lesson/ https://guitarcontrol.com/blues/minor-blues-guitar-lesson/#comments Thu, 03 Oct 2013 15:05:47 +0000 https://guitarcontrol.wpmudev.host/blog/?p=3734

Hey guys,

Here´s another short sample from `The Ultimate Acoustic Blues´,
the upcoming guitar course from Jimmy Dillon.

More info soon…

Minor Acoustic Blues Guitar Lesson
Well, all right. Here we go. This is a little A minor
jam that I came up with.

Now, what I like about this particular thing is we haven’t
really addressed anything in A or anything in a straight-up
minor. We did a little drop-D stuff. The blues can be a very,
very dark thing. It can be a minor; quite often it is. Sometimes
it can be a major, you know, a happy, kind of up, yeah, I just
got paid. I’m going out on a Saturday night, kind of blues.
And then you’ve got your forlorn, sort of my baby done me
wrong kind of blues.

In this case, this is something a little bit different. I hope
this is something fresh for you. I like to use, incorporate
open strings, as you know, because I love the sound of that.
It’s sort of — it’s almost like dangling kind of sound that —
where the notes just sort of ring-out and cascade. And even
though I’m moving my chords I have something else in common
that just stay there. The A root is obviously there. Almost
like a… We’ve got into that sort of thing before.

I go to a D minor. There are several ways you can do that.
Or this first position. I kind of like this one up here. Second
position D minor, because the sound of that against where
you are, a lot of open strings there. Then you kind of close
it down to… A little chop on it. Then you get back
to your open.

Then I go to an F. Sometimes I’ll do a major 7th. It kind of
has a nice ring-out to it. So you’ve got your high E on the —
creating an F major 7th for your V. And then I’ll usually go
to a E7th here. There are lots of voicings you can — if you
want to make it bluesier.

And again, there’s that silence — silence is golden kind
of thing, where we really like that drama that happens when
you close it down and let it set up and then go in. That’s
what I call a setup. When you’re doing a song like this that
as a lot of mood to it.

Right there I’m using a harmonic to kind of mark that A minor.
I do it in such a way where I rake my fingers. That’s another
technique that I think in the blues is really effective. Now
you’ve heard it done probably a lot of different ways. One of
the ways this gets done, also, and I’m going to stay in A minor
for this, was when you kind of do what I call a chew stroke,
and we’ve touched on this a little bit on a couple of my
acoustic things. That’s more of a shuffle.

So that’s a technique you can utilize in a song like this
where you’ve got your open A string and you want to get
a little bit aggressive with it. And then again. I’m
going to take that apart for you because that might
be a little deceiving.

What I’m doing is I’m coming down and I’m raking across
the strings like this. Once again, it’s that flamenco
stroke. It’s almost like the flamenco incorporated into
the acoustic blues, which I like. I use that percussive
nature of the fingers against the strings a lot.

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Acoustic Blues Tree https://guitarcontrol.com/blues/acoustic-blues-tree/ https://guitarcontrol.com/blues/acoustic-blues-tree/#comments Wed, 02 Oct 2013 14:59:08 +0000 https://guitarcontrol.wpmudev.host/blog/?p=3723 Ultimate Acoustic Blues comes out in 2 weeks!

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