Hi Folks,
This week we start on a new tune and I have chosen John Lee Hooker's "Little Wheel." On this tune, as on most JLH songs, there is a lot of 12 1/2 and 13 or 14 bar verses. The Hook didn't really make changes but subtlety held tight on the one chord making his own very special sound. This style, although primitive in some ways, is also highly developed and tough to make sound effective if you are trying to copy his style. It's a case of simple being much harder than following a repeated pattern that doesn't stray from the changes. Notice that the band on the original recording stays pretty close to the 12 bar format. I prefer to be a bit more free form about it. Our first lesson is getting down the basic feel and believe me, it take a lot of work to get the groove to sound correct. Good luck with it and you should listen to as much John Lee as you can to get the nuts and bolts of his sound engrained in your head while you are working on this.
Enjoy!
Duke
Topics and/or subjects covered in this lesson:
Chicago Blues
Loop 0:00 Run-Through of Little Wheel
Loop 2:53 Breakdown of Little Wheel Rhythm
Loop 14:04 Closing Thoughts
Comments
Log in to leave a comment
Serendipity.
I just finished John Lee's bio.
Boogie Man: The Adventures of John Lee Hooker in the American Twentieth Century, by Charles Shaar Murray.
Steve
real nice groove - blues hypnosis
Hey Duke! Great tune, and as Stephen said, great to hear you singing it. So here's my first attempt at this style. I hope it's mostly sloppy in a good way. ;-) And a great excuse to pull out my 1960-ish Harmony Stratotone! Hope all is going well with the tour and recording, but nice to have you back! Thanks, Duke. I'd love to hear what you think of this. Bruce