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Mustang Sally Guitar Lesson (Wilson Pickett)

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Hotney
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рдкрд░ рдкреНрд░рдХрд╛рд╢рд┐рдд 11/14/23 / рдореЗрдВ

ЁЯСЙDiscover the 5 MUST-KNOW chords and scales to play in ANY style anywhere on the neck FREE PDF GUIDE тЖТ https://www.jonmaclennan.com/fretboardguide

How to Play Mustang Sally on Guitar

THIS is a song that I struggled with learning for a while. It wasnтАЩt the chords that I struggled with or the song form, those are both very common patterns. Where I got stuck was with the actual guitar part to play from the recording.

It sounded like one guitar but I couldnтАЩt quite get my part to sound like the recording. So for years, I played this song on gigs with just a common rhythm accompaniment that wasnтАЩt like the guitar part on the recording. It wasnтАЩt until later I finally went back and figured it out from the recording. ItтАЩs actually TWO guitars.

In this тАЬMustang SallyтАЭ guitar lesson, I want to share with you the chords, rhythms, and scales to start jamming it with ease today! IтАЩll break down the guitar parts from the recording and share how you can combine them to play a great pattern for this song on one guitar.

Also, itтАЩs a valuable song to know because it comes up at many jam sessions and parties. A lot of people play it!

So with that said make sure youтАЩre tuned up and letтАЩs dive in!

What is the meaning behind Mustang Sally?
тАЬMustang SallyтАЭ was originally written and first recorded by Mack Rice. Rice recorded it in 1965 and it was released under the artist name тАЬSir Mack RiceтАЭ.

The legend is that Rice had originally written the song as a joke for a fellow gospel singer he knew from Della ReeseтАЩs band who wanted a new Ford Mustang car.

Apparently, the original title of the song was тАЬMustang MamaтАЭ, but was later changed to тАЬMustang SallyтАЭ at the suggestion of Aretha Franklin.

I think that actually deserves songwriting credit if itтАЩs true. ThatтАЩs a nice contribution and makes the song pull more because itтАЩs more specific. Unfortunately, from my research, it looks like she didnтАЩt get credit.

The song later became more popular after Wilson Pickett covered it the following year. It was first released as a single, and then later included on his album The Wicked Pickett released in 1966.

Plus in 1966, John Lee Hooker also recorded an entirely different song with a very similar title тАЬMustang Sally & GTOтАЭ

Mustang Sally Chords
тАЬMustang SallyтАЭ only uses 3 chords. The song is in the key of C major and uses the I, IV, and V chords, C, F, and G.

ЁЯСЙRead the full blog here: https://www.jonmaclennan.com/b....log/mustang-sally-gu

ЁЯСЙNever get lost on the fretboard again with my FREE Fretboard Guide PDF тЖТ https://www.jonmaclennan.com/fretboardguide

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