If you think that you might ever need (or, heaven help us, want ) to play your whistle in some kind of jazz blues jam, then you could do a lot worse than to first have a listen to kwela pioneer Willard Cele. This style of playing *isn't* very typical of the kwela that followed, and I think it sounds similar to a clarinet playing USA boogie.
Sounds can be found here:
http://learning2share.blogspot.com/2007 ... penny.html
And I've a short post on The Kwela Project that links to a PDF of the music:
http://www.kwela.co.uk/pennywhistle-boogie/
Has anyone else heard tin whistle blues?
Chris
12 bar blues
- kwela
- Posts: 16
- Joined: Thu Aug 02, 2007 4:37 am
- Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
- Location: Cambridge UK
- Contact:
12 bar blues
The Kwela Project
Pennywhistle Jive from South Africa
http://www.kwela.co.uk/
http://www.kwela.co.uk/feed/
Pennywhistle Jive from South Africa
http://www.kwela.co.uk/
http://www.kwela.co.uk/feed/
- JackFeeney
- Posts: 42
- Joined: Thu Feb 23, 2006 4:07 pm
Using a D whistle, the G Blues Scale has a few advantages:
1) The higher notes on the top of a D whistle pierce through an amplified blues band more effectively.
2) The G Blues Scale is favored by harmonica players, playing cross harp on the ubiquitous C harmonica.
3) The G Blues Scale is much easier to finger than the D Blues Scale -- G, Bb, C, C#, D, F. And the C-C#-D combo allows the following tidy blues riff on a D whistle:
o o o
x o x
x o x
o x x
o x x
o x x
1) The higher notes on the top of a D whistle pierce through an amplified blues band more effectively.
2) The G Blues Scale is favored by harmonica players, playing cross harp on the ubiquitous C harmonica.
3) The G Blues Scale is much easier to finger than the D Blues Scale -- G, Bb, C, C#, D, F. And the C-C#-D combo allows the following tidy blues riff on a D whistle:
o o o
x o x
x o x
o x x
o x x
o x x
Jack Feeney
- JackFeeney
- Posts: 42
- Joined: Thu Feb 23, 2006 4:07 pm
Here's an easier blues key on the D whistle -- jamming in the blues scale of F#:
E, F#, A, B, C, C#, e, f#.
Here's what's great about this scale: 1) the low E let's you dip beneath the tonic for a very bluesy add-on, 2) the slide from B to C has that quintessentially blues sound, 3) the upper notes of C#, e, f# -- when played together -- nicely frame the riffs at the bottom of the scale.
(Play the notes slowly and use plenty of tonguing.)
E, F#, A, B, C, C#, e, f#.
Here's what's great about this scale: 1) the low E let's you dip beneath the tonic for a very bluesy add-on, 2) the slide from B to C has that quintessentially blues sound, 3) the upper notes of C#, e, f# -- when played together -- nicely frame the riffs at the bottom of the scale.
(Play the notes slowly and use plenty of tonguing.)
Jack Feeney
- HampshireWhistler
- Posts: 166
- Joined: Sat Feb 11, 2006 8:19 am
- Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
- Location: New Hampshire