Let’s face it.
You don’t just play blues songs on guitar.
You become the song.

It’s in the bends. The spaces. The stories in-between the notes. And if you’re like most guitarists, you’ve probably run scales, mimicked licks, and chased that elusive “blues tone”… but still felt stuck.

This post is your un-stucker. A full-on guide to mastering blues songs on guitar—not by learning more songs, but by playing the right way.


🎸 The 5-Lick Method: Learn Blues by Repetition, Not Repertoire

Before you flood your setlist with 50 blues classics, I want you to do this:

Pick five licks from your favorite blues song.
Then play them every day for a week.

One of my favorite players once told me:

“A hundred songs won’t make you a better player. But five licks, internalized—will.”

This is what separates the dabblers from the deep players. Learn phrasing, bends, and micro-timing from each lick. Not just the notes—but the how.

Kickstarter Bonus: Inside FretDeck, we show you how to turn five licks into full-blown improvisations. Think flashcards for the blues.


🧠 Stop Memorizing, Start Mapping

You’re not “bad at the blues.”
You’re just stuck thinking horizontally.

Most guitarists memorize tabs of blues songs—but never learn how the fretboard connects vertically. That’s like trying to write poetry by memorizing the dictionary.

Try this:
Start on the 6th string, 5th fret (A note). Now walk the A minor pentatonic scale across each string. Do this with your eyes closed. Say each note.

Then play it backwards. Feel the strings vibrate. Make mistakes. Laugh.

This is how you go from copying licks to owning the neck.

minor pentatonic scale on guitar

❌ Stop Guessing. Start Shredding.

If you’re still fumbling through scale patterns and box shapes… it’s costing you progress.

FretDeck™ is the no-fluff system that shows you exactly how to master the fretboard—fast. Early access.

⚡️ This isn’t for dabblers. It’s for players who want results.

👉 Click here to join the pre-launch now

Early access. Limited rewards. Don’t wait.


⚡ Top 7 Blues Songs on Guitar Every Player Should Study

Let’s cut through the noise. Here are 7 blues songs on guitar that give you more than riffs—they give you wisdom:

1. “The Thrill is Gone” – B.B. King

  • Key Takeaway: Learn vibrato. Not just how—but when.
  • Try mimicking B.B.’s long, vocal-like bends over a looped B minor jam.

2. “Texas Flood” – Stevie Ray Vaughan

  • Key Takeaway: Dynamics.
  • Play soft, then smash the amp. Volume knob = emotion controller.

3. “Pride and Joy” – Stevie Ray Vaughan

  • Key Takeaway: Shuffle rhythm is a whole body thing. Your feet should groove.

4. “Red House” – Jimi Hendrix

  • Key Takeaway: Don’t fear the open string.
  • Jimi dances around the blues with raw, percussive power.

5. “Sweet Home Chicago” – Robert Johnson

  • Key Takeaway: The fingerstyle shuffle is eternal.
  • Your thumb is the drummer, your fingers the horn section.

6. “I’m Tore Down” – Freddie King

  • Key Takeaway: Triplet phrasing = swing authority.

7. “Born Under A Bad Sign” – Albert King

  • Key Takeaway: Break the rules.
  • Albert tuned down a half step and bent like a madman. You can too.

Want the tabs and breakdowns? Join us in the Guitar Freaks Discord for lick-of-the-week breakdowns.


🧭 Learn Like You’re Lost—On Purpose

There’s something holy about not knowing what comes next.

Put down your phone. Turn off the backing track.
Now, just noodle. Slowly. With intention.

Pick a key. Let’s say G minor.

Now ask:

  • Can you play one note and make it sing?
  • Can you bend it a quarter-step sharp and pull back?
  • Can you leave space?

The best blues guitarists don’t fill up space. They let it breathe.

This kind of practice rewires your playing. You’re not just “learning blues songs on guitar”—you’re speaking.


📌 Copycat Practice (Yes, It Works)

Here’s a radical idea: Copy exactly what your hero plays—down to the ghost notes and pick attack.

But don’t stop there.

Then record yourself.
Compare. Listen like a producer. What’s missing?

Tone? Timing? Touch?

That’s where the gold is.

🎯 CTA: This is exactly what we practice inside SoloCraft, my ebook for building real-world solos. Join FretDeck’s Kickstarter to get the SoloCraft bonus pack.


🎯 Learn the 3 Zones of the Neck

Want to break free from the “box” syndrome?

Start thinking in zones:

  • Zone 1: Frets 1–5 – The open position playground
  • Zone 2: Frets 5–12 – Pentatonic city
  • Zone 3: Frets 12+ – The secret land of sustain and solos

Blues masters glide between zones. They aren’t thinking, “Am I in pattern 2?” They’re asking, “Where’s my story going?”

📍 Try this:

  1. Play a lick in Zone 1.
  2. Play it again in Zone 2.
  3. Translate it to Zone 3.
  4. Now slide between all three.

Boom. You’re not just learning songs. You’re building freedom.

blues songs on guitar

❌ Stop Guessing. Start Shredding.

If you’re still fumbling through scale patterns and box shapes… it’s costing you progress.

FretDeck™ is the no-fluff system that shows you exactly how to master the fretboard—fast. Early access.

⚡️ This isn’t for dabblers. It’s for players who want results.

👉 Click here to join the pre-launch now

Early access. Limited rewards. Don’t wait.


🛠 3 Tools You Need (That You Already Have)

You don’t need new gear. You need better habits.

Here’s what you do need:

1. Your Ears

  • Sing what you play.
  • If you can’t sing it, you probably don’t understand it yet.

2. Your Voice

  • Record yourself humming solos, then match it on guitar.

3. Your Metronome

  • Put it on 2 and 4. That’s the groove.

Want my full daily warm-up? It’s free in our Discord. Join us.


🎥 What I Wish I Knew Before Learning Blues Songs

“I thought the goal was to get it right.
Turns out, the goal was to make it mine.”

When I was 15, I learned “Crossroads” by Cream. Note for note. Perfectly.

But it didn’t sound like Clapton.

It sounded like… an anxious teenager.

Because the blues isn’t about precision.
It’s about presence.

Once I stopped chasing perfection and started feeling the groove, everything changed.

Mastering Guitar Scales (Minor)


🎤 Real Players. Real Breakthroughs.

A few players from our Guitar Freaks community share their lightbulb moments:

Jack (age 40): “I finally understood blues phrasing when I stopped playing for the metronome and started playing for the room.

Jennifer (age 27): “Blues always intimidated me. But learning the five zones and connecting pentatonics finally clicked.”

Darren (age 32): “Practicing one lick a day, every day, made me sound like me—not like someone trying to be Stevie Ray.”

blues songs on guitar

Join Guitar Freaks Hangout on Discord! 🎸

Get Fret Logic FREE!

Join the Guitar Freaks Hangout Discord and get exclusive access to my entire e-book, Fret Logic! Master the fretboard and elevate your solos with this comprehensive guide.

👉 Don’t miss out—join now and download your free copy!


🚀 Your 7-Day Blues Song Practice Plan

Want a quick-start blueprint?

Day 1: Learn 1 full lick from B.B. King
Day 2: Play it slow over a backing track
Day 3: Transpose it into 2 other keys
Day 4: Add bends and slides
Day 5: Write your own version of the lick
Day 6: Play that version in 3 neck zones
Day 7: Improvise a solo using only that lick

Now multiply that with five songs. Watch your confidence explode.


🔥 CTA: Ready to Play the Blues Like You Mean It?

You don’t need 100 songs.
You need a system.

That’s what we built with FretDeck—a visual way to see the fretboard, own every blues scale, and make music that’s yours.

🎁 Back us on Kickstarter today and get:

  • The FretDeck Pentatonic System
  • My SoloCraft ebook
  • Instant invite to our Discord mastermind
  • Access to bonus blues training and jam loops

📣 Click here to join the launch → Join the FretDeck Kickstarter


💬 Final Word: The Blues Isn’t About Being Sad. It’s About Being Free.

Blues is a mirror.
You don’t play at it. You play through it.

So next time someone says, “What blues songs should I learn on guitar?”
You’ll know what to say:

“Learn one. But make it sound like ten.”

And if you ever feel stuck, just remember—
You’re one bend away from a breakthrough.