Show learners how to improvise over a simple diatonic chord sequence:
Simple chord patterns in a major key include I III IV V and I VI II V. The accompaniment can be provided by guitar, piano, or a recording. There are many backing tracks freely available online, as well as apps that will generate a backing track if you enter a sequence of chords, such as iReal Pro.
Show learners how to play a 12-bar blues:
All these activities are open-ended. To start with they could be explored at the simplest level, e.g. repeating a two- or three-note riff in the 12-bar blues. Turning riffs into non-identical phrases or improvising with more than five notes over more than four chords can wait until Programme of Study 3.
It is important to realise that effective improvisation depends more on rhythm and phrasing, i.e. where the notes fall, than how many notes are played or which ones they are. Using a limited number of notes to begin with encourages learners to leave spaces for the music to breathe, to make a creative virtue out of repetition and to explore more fully the harmonic relationships of the notes in question.
Explore the progression of this Learning Objective
Continue exploring the current Programme of Study