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Written by Administrator
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Monday, 27 October 2008 15:00 |
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When you learn to improvise you have most likely come across various guitar scales. But, how do you practice guitar scales in order to use them in your playing? In this lesson you will learn how to make music of scales!
What is a
pentatonic scale?
A common major scale consists of seven notes. A C-major scale for example have
these seven notes:
C D E F G A B
The note after the B is a C and the scale starts over again in another octave.
A pentatonic scale consists of five notes. In a pentatonic C-major scale the
notes F and B are omitted. This makes for less collisions between scale notes
and notes in the chords used. In other words, you can use a pentatonic scale
together with more chords.
The A-minor pentatonic scale
This scale consists of the five notes A C D E G
If we play these notes in the first position on the guitar you will have the
following sequence of notes:
05 35 04 24 03 23
The first number tells you which fret to press down. The second number
indicates which string to play. 05 means that you play the open fifth string,
that is, without pressing down a fret. The first string is the bottom string
when you play.
We will now play the A-minor pentatonic scale in the first position of your
guitar. The whole scale from the sixth to the first string will look like this:
06 36 05 35 04 24 03 23 12 31 01 31
In this scale sequence you will find the note A in two positions. That is, on
the fifth open string and on the second fret third string.
What can you do with this scale?
1. First I suggest that you commit this scale to memory and that you practice
playing it from the lowest note to the highest and then back again.
2. Use correct left hand fingerings. That means that you play the notes on the
first fret with your left hand index finger, the notes on the second fret with
your middle finger and the notes on the third fret with your ring finger.
3. Play small sequences using only a few of the notes in the scale. For
example:
05 35 04 24 04 35 05 or:
23 12 32 01 31 12 23
4. Work on creating melodies using the scale. This will help you understand
where the notes you hear in your head are on the fretboard and also make your
pentatonic improvisations more musical and enjoyable for yourself and your
prospective audience.
5. Improvise together with chords. As you work with the A-minor pentatonic
scale you can use chords to make the guitar solo improvisations more
interesting. Here are two chords that you can use together with the notes:
A-minor: 05 24 23 12 01
D-major: 04 23 32 21
As your probably remember, the first number indicates the fret and the second
number the string to play. When you play the chords you can strum them from the
lowest sounding string to the first string. For example, strum the A-minor
chord and improvise a few notes using the pentatonic scale. Then play the
D-major chord and continue to improvise. Play the A-minor chord again and
continue in this way.
Improvisation is a form of composition and the musical value depends on how
well we know where the notes are on the fret, how focused we are in the
creative process, how well we have mastered patterns and licks that are
building blocks that can be used to create music, our feelings and many more
elements in the musical process. Article Source: http://www.myarticlemall.com
Peter Edvinsson
is a guitarist, composer and music teacher. He invites you to download your free
guitar tablature sheet music at www.capotastomusic.com
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