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Lesson time: (6min 22sec)
Paddy Milner construye líneas de bajo de boogie-woogie desde cero: empezando con la fundamental y la quinta en Do, añadiendo swing y luego incorporando la tercera mayor y menor.
This lesson is part of the course Toca boogie-woogie auténtico al piano
Watch this lesson for free below.
Lesson transcript:
Let's start off with something really basic, and we'll move up through all kinds of different bass lines up to more complicated ones.
Essentially, we're looking at things in the key of C here, kind of rooted around the octave and the fifth as strong intervals. A very simple boogie bass line could be something like this:
One thing we can do is add a kind of swing rhythm to it. Very simply, it instantly becomes more identifiable.
Let's extend that rather than just playing it straight. Makes it a bit more interesting.
In fact, Meadlux Lewis uses something quite similar in one of his tunes, which I'll show you in a bit.
Another way we could do this is to use the third. So we still have that fundamental bass line, but we can add the third as well.
If that tempo were sped up, it would sound a bit more like the boogie, you know, that kind of thing. However, that might mean it's too quick to consistently play triplets over the top, which I think takes it away from that blues feel.
So, we've looked at those bass techniques so far. Why not combine the two? Something like this:
Encouragement to Explore: I'm trying to encourage you to explore your own ways of creating new bass lines. Look at combining different techniques.
People like Albert Ammons and Pete Johnson took this bass line and did something which gave it a different quality. They might play it like this:
In context, we could do something like this, which is based on a boogie woogie stomp by Albert Allen.
You'll notice that the left hand has a bit more gravity to it. What you could do is add a third to that part of the bass, which gives you something like this:
I kind of like it because it has that dissonant quality, which you can really snap onto as if it's a snare drum on beats two and four.
So you get a rhythm that sounds like this:
Conclusion: So there you have it! Explore these techniques, and don't hesitate to experiment with your own style as you create new bass lines.

Paddy Milner está reconocido como uno de los mejores pianistas de blues del mundo: actualmente es el teclista de confianza de Sir Tom Jones, tras varios años con el gran y ya desaparecido Jack Bruce, pero también es un magnífico compositor original y un cantante con personalidad propia. ¡Basta con leer los elogios de figuras como Dave Brubeck que aparecen más abajo! Su forma de tocar apareció en la banda sonora de la exitosa película de 2019 'Rocketman'. Ha ganado dos veces el premio al Mejor teclista en los British Blues Awards, y mantiene una residencia de larga trayectoria como miembro fundador de la Ronnie Scott's Blues Explosion en el mundialmente famoso club Ronnie Scott's. Su grupo actual LONDONOLA toca música británica de cosecha propia con una buena dosis de espíritu de Nueva Orleans, y su grupo colaborativo JAWBONE va de fuerza en fuerza tras la publicación de su álbum de debut homónimo. "Me encanta... hay un tipo que sabe tocar de verdad el piano" - Dave Brubeck "Lo recomiendo encarecidamente. ¡De algún modo las cosas empiezan a sentirse mucho mejor!" - Jack Bruce "El mejor pianista de blues de Europa..." - Blues Access, EE. UU. "Impresionante y original" - The Times "Deslumbrante" - The Independent A lo largo de sus cursos, Paddy desglosa el auténtico shuffle de blues, el slow blues, el boogie-woogie, el rock 'n' roll y el piano de Nueva Orleans -incluidas tres canciones clásicas de boogie-woogie- para que aprendas estos estilos de uno de los mejores del oficio. read more