***** Blues Jam Tracks for Guitar ***** --------------------------------------FEATURES:● 15 seperate professionally recorded blues jam tracks in a variety of blues styles. ● Each track can be adjusted to play in all 12 keys.● Tempo of each track can be adjusted allowing a wide range of speeds.● For each track there are scales diagrams for the pentatonic scales and arpeggios needed to jam along with the track.● No ads or in app purchasing!--------------------------------------TRACK BY TRACK BREAK
DOWN:● Track 1: Driving Blues. 71bpm, swing rhythm. A classic blues shuffle riff with bass, guitar and drums.● Track 2: Leslie Blues. 38bpm swing. Jazzy chords played by guitar through a leslie speaker cabinet. A really slow track, great for soulful blues playing.● Track 3: Texas Shuffle. 125bpm swing. A raunchy Texas blues shuffle in the style of Stevie Ray Vaughan. Sounds great with classic minor pentatonic blues licks.● Track 4: Rocky Blues. 170bpm straight. Fast rock n roll guitar riffs with hammond organ, bass and drums. Classic Chuck Berry licks sound great here.● Track 5: Uptempo Blues. 168bpm swing. This uptempo jam sounds great mixed with some BB King licks.● Track 6: Slow Blues. 57bpm swing. This moody jam track combines B3 organ with guitar, bass and drums.● Track 7: Rock Riff Blues 120 straight. An agressive rocky blues track.● Track 8: ZZ Blues 140 swing. This backing track is similar to the king of thing Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top may play.● Track 9: Bo Dee Blues. 110bpm straight. The classic Bo Diddly riff!● Track 10: Organ Blues. 68bpm swing. Classic Hammond organ blues.● Track 11: Blues Stomp. 130bpm straight. Driving blues riffs.● Track 12: Slow Rock Blues. 68bpm straight. Bluesy rock riffs.● Track 13: Jazzy Blues. 100bpm swing. Old school jazzy blues.● Track 14: Fast Change Texas. 125bpm swing. Texas blues, this times with a quick change in bar 2.● Track 15: CDAC Riff Blues. 170bpm straight. Aussie riffin' blues!These tracks can a great way for beginners to start with blues guitar improvising. More advanced players can use the scales and arpeggios for following the chords when playing solos that hit chord tones.
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