 Okay, so I want to show you how we can play a walking bass line over a tune that's written in a minor key using the initial walking bass notes that we used back in the major key. Those notes, if you'll remember, were the root, the fifth, the octave, and the dominant seven, okay, of the scale. If we do that with minor or major, it works. So we'll show you how this works. And for this particular example, we're going to be in the key of C. So we've got C as our root, and when we go to the F, that's the four chord, rather than going up to this F, I'm going to shift down to this F as we've discussed before. See how those two Fs are octaves. So C is our root for the C chord. F is our root for the F chord. And eventually we'll have an Ab7 chord, which is a major chord, Abmaj7, and a G7. For those, we're still going to use root, fifth, octave, dominant seventh, and root fifth, octave, dominant seventh. And it'll sound great. And it won't matter whether they're major or minor chords. So let me show you how it all works. Top of the tune. As you can see, we can incorporate that very basic walking bassline into both major and minor chord changes. Give it a try on Mr. PC or try another tune that's got minor tonality, and you'll see how it works really easily. Give it a try.