Tritone substitution jazz guitar lick # 2 | Pentatonic scales


Published on 25 July 2018
In this easy jazz guitar lick lesson we will use three pentatonic scales while applying a tritone substitution over a II-V-I chord progression in C major.The tritone substitution is one of the most common substitutions found in jazz music. The basic application of a tritone substitution is to take any 7th chord and play another 7th chord that occurs a tritone away from that initial chord. In the following exemple the G7 chord is replaced by the Db7 chord. Subscribe https://www.youtube.com/user/jazzguitarlicks Follow us on facebook https://www.facebook.com/jazzguitarlicks 5 tritone jazz guitar licks eBooks available here https://gumroad.com/l/jNFl ( explanations, tabs/notation, video & backing track link included ) Here is 4 other tritone substitution jazz guitar line lesson https://youtu.be/w8YrxXQvcvg https://youtu.be/YtnsSCoLigQ https://youtu.be/Lz4zoIfzvu0 https://youtu.be/6OGmCqJdXvg and a Grant Green jazz guitare lines lesson https://youtu.be/sF_Z-oqsX9c Full House guitar cover | Wes Montgomery https://youtu.be/zTPtCGmyV3w Jimmy Raney jazz guitar solo transcription on "Have you met miss Jones" https://youtu.be/Loo-VFO_jgA John Scofield guitar lines https://youtu.be/BBIGmA8oumA Charlie Christian jazz guitar lessons https://youtu.be/DjmYNSj24To https://youtu.be/7LFOi2xV0GE https://youtu.be/b5o_ULpllEo https://youtu.be/U0QR9JMyvHs Wes Montgomery - Solo transcriptions https://youtu.be/Bc4JWlxVDjo https://youtu.be/NKPeT9wKctI