From Pentatonics to Poetry: How Jack Ruch Elevates Blues Guitar
PodcastLevel 1: Learning to Walk
Jack starts exactly where everyone starts — cowboy chords, the 12-bar form, and the pentatonic shapes.
But he emphasizes something most players miss: this stage is about sound, not scale diagrams.
Getting one phrase to truly feel good is the whole job.
Level 2: Seeing the Map Behind the Licks
This is where the room lights up.
Mapping chord tones across G7, C7, and D7 turns guesswork into intention.
Suddenly pentatonic vocabulary stops floating over the form and begins to lock into the harmony underneath.
Level 3: Adding Tension with Diminished Shapes
Blues harmony may be simple, but the transitions are expressive gold.
Jack uses diminished arpeggios before chord changes to create that subtle “pull” you hear in the playing of more seasoned blues musicians.
It’s the first moment where “outside” still feels entirely inside the style.
Level 4: Borrowing from Jazz Vocabulary
The phrasing stretches.
The lines connect across barlines.
And the ear starts enjoying curiosity again.
Jack introduces the II–V–I gesture into the IV chord — a jazz move that fits effortlessly into blues when phrased with taste.
Level 5: The Real Secret — Touch
By the time you reach altered tones or melodic minor colors, the truth becomes obvious: tone lives in the hands.
Jack shapes notes through pick angle, volume balance, finger-and-pick blends, and subtle shifts in where he plays on the string.
It’s less about technique and more about telling a story.
The Takeaway
Jack’s five levels aren’t strict steps — they’re colors you can combine in endless ways.
Some moments call for pentatonic purity; others for tension and release. Most live somewhere in between.
That awareness is what makes conversations like this powerful, and it’s exactly the kind of musical understanding we aim to foster inside the Sonora community — growth driven by curiosity, clarity, and real musicianship.


