The bends, part 4

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Targeting chord tones with string bends

MELODIC MUSE by Andy Timmons

SIMONE CECHETTI

STRING BENDING OFFERS us guitarists a highly effective way to evoke a wide range of sounds and emotions from our instrument and emulate some of the qualities of the human voice, such as adding vibrato to a note, or seamlessly sliding, or gliding, from one pitch up or down to another, what is known as glissando. All of our favorite players use bending as an essential expressive tool when soloing. In this fourth installment examining this highly effective and useful technique, I’ll play through a 24-bar minor blues progression in the key of C# minor, touching on as many different approaches to string bending as I can (see FIGURE 1).

Structurally, the 24-bar progression doubles the number of bars spent on each chord in a standard 12-bar form. Specifically, the i (one minor) chord, C#m, is played for eight bars, followed by four bars on the iv (four minor) chord, F#m, then four bars back on the i, C#m. At this point, I add a slight variation, or twist, on the basic i - iv - v minor blues progression; instead of going to the v (five minor) chord, Gm, I go to the bVI (flat 6) chord, A7, for two bars, followed by a major version of the V (five) chord, G#7, for two bars. The progression then concludes with four bars on the i, C#m.

For the solo, I’m primarily utilizing notes from the C# Dorian mode (C#, D#, E, F#, G#, A#, B) as a basic framework for my lines. But when the progression moves to F#m, I substitute an A note for A#, as A is the minor 3rd of that chord. This switch puts us in the C# Aeolian mode (C#, D#, E, F#, G#, A, B), which may also be thought of as F# Dorian (F#, G#, A, B, C#, D#, E). When we get to A7, I again substitute A for A#, as A is that chord’s root.

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