OWooowowowowowww
royal speedway? DOH!
Writer are you familiar with 1-4-5?
Usually your first note will provide you with the TONIC or 1 chord. The tonic is usually your key.
if A is your first note
ex. a=1, b=2, c=3, d=4, e=5, f=6, g=7 and last step or a=8, the octave.
if b is your first note or root. ETC.
ex. b=1, c=2, d=3, e=4, f=5, g=6, a=7 and octave b=8.
Then you want to consider how many bar progression you are playing in. 8 bar/12 bar/16 bar and there's a standard progression and time for each of those using a base of 1-4-5. You might find some other changes, but that is the meat and potatoes of it. Get ready for the 7.. LOL
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/16_bar_blues
tonic = the 1 chord
subdominant = 4 chord
dominant = the 5 chord
Once you know this structure, you can fill during most blues tunes. AS you know blues is part of most music, it gives you insight as to what is played next and where depending.
The music/rhythm/fill part of what you played on Defying the Odds is most definitely 1-4-5 based.
Now if you intended to play jazz, fusion etc. just ignore this.
If not, memorize the patterns of the 8, 12 and 16 bar and practice playing them in whatever keys you like. Augment at will and then post something revised, unless you actually like jazz. (tastes like grapefruit soda with no sugar) lol
I like my music, like I like my women, BLUE and preferably not from this solar system.... LOL