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http://lessons.mikedodge.com/lessons/AdvPent/AdvPentIntrodu...
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3/19/14, 12:17 AM
http://lessons.mikedodge.com/lessons/AdvPent/AdvPentIntrodu...
was a note contained in the Major chord I was playing the b3 againstit only make sense why I was doing the little bend. I was making the scale t the chord. And, it made sense why Chuck Berry, Keith Richards, Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck and others were doing the same thing. So, with this I realized that the b3 was a passing-tone to the Major 3rd to resolve the note back into the chord. Since the b3 and M3 are a half-step from each other you end up with a half-step clash of notes just wanting to resolve. With this dilemma I also wondered why...if playing a major chord why does it make sense to play the Minor Pentatonic, as opposed to the Major Pentatonic? The Major Pentatonic also sounded good, but it was more of a Do re mi type sound. But, it t over the Major chord just ne also. The Major Pentatonic scale consists of: root M2 M3 P5 M6 root So I wrote out both of the scales on a piece of paper over a fretboard diagram, individually and on top of each other, or super-imposed them, onto one fretboard. Written this way I saw these intervals in relation to the root: Root M2 m3 M3 P4 P5 M6 m7 Root in relation to the root of the Major chord I was playing. What opened my eyes even further was when I took the Blues and Major Pentatonic scales and superimposed them. This gave a bunch of chromatic possibilities. I ended up with these intervals: Root M2 m3 M3 P4 b5 P5 M6 m7 Root I realized that there were common notes between the two scales. They were: root and P5. So, this gave me some sense of a common between the two scales. But, the big thing I realized was the chromatic notes I could now see with the M2 m3 M3 P4 b5 P5. But I also noticed that if I play those chromatic notes in order ascending and descending they really did nothing for my playing or my musical vocabulary. Neither did playing the whole super-imposed scale straight up and down. It just didnt sound musical OR riff based. So, I had to gure out how to mesh this bigger super-imposed scale into my playing. It had to mean something. What I did was I started playing each of the scales individually listening to what each scale was saying to me and the chord. What I found was the Blues scale gave me the gritty digging-in sound against the chord, almost rebellious. But, the Major Pentatonic catered to the chord better. It seemed to outline the chord better. More Do Ra Mi than rebellion. Two completely different textures, against the same chord.
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3/19/14, 12:17 AM
http://lessons.mikedodge.com/lessons/AdvPent/AdvPentIntrodu...
So, now I would consciously try playing solos that jumped between the two scales and see if I could talk in both scales simultaneously. It didnt sound great at rst but both scales did t the chord...no question. The question was, how do I intermingle the scales and use them as one scale as opposed to two. The key lied in the chromatic notes. These notes were so close to each other that I should try using them to shift between the two scales without it sounding like I was playing one scale and THEN the other. As I did this I tried applying it to solos I was trying to learn by my guitar heroes. I found The Allman Brothers, Skynyrd, Page, Beck, Clapton, Berry, Richards, Van Halen, Ronson, Morse, and just about everyone I listened to was playing not one scalebut two or more scales. Sweet! Now I could learn on my own AND have some guidance from the Masters. Now I was ready to dig in even deeper. I found that with this super-imposed scale that it not only contained the Minor and Major Pentatonic scales and the Blues scalebut it also contained the Dorian and Mixolydian modes. Bingo. All the articles I read up to this point now made sense when guitarist said they would play Pentatonics, Blues, Dorian, and Mixolydianthey were actually playing the super-imposed scale that I had discovered for myself. Maybe they thought of them as individual scales...but, by this time was I thinking of them as one scale. Heres the break down of the scale intervals contained in this superimposed scale:
Super-Imposed Scale: R M2 b3 M3 4 b5 5 M6 b7 R
I also realized that the Super-Imposed scale was almost a complete chromatic scale, minus the b2 b6 and M7 intervals. I have since discovered a way to think of the complete chromatic scale when
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3/19/14, 12:17 AM
http://lessons.mikedodge.com/lessons/AdvPent/AdvPentIntrodu...
playing everything, but thats a whole other lesson further down the road. But, I will be throwing in comparisons to the different modes through out the tutorial so Im sure well touch on it. Ok, now you have everything thrown at you at you should be able to master this on your ownyeah right! As with anything we need to step back, look at these scales individually, across the fretboard, learn to use them, then take the next step into fusing things together. Above all, to play in this "mind frame" you will really need to be listening to whats going onwe are going to try and make the leap from patterns to music. ________________________________________________________
I dont know everything about music and thats a fact but I have successfully taught this to advanced students, and students who advanced into this. So, I am going to take a slow approach to explaining it since Im going to take the time doing it. Its proven you can do so many things with the Pentatonic scales, and that comes from everyone thinking about them differently. This is whats made them survive for so long. These little scales in the right hands can make centuries of music. Man, that was a lot of writing for a couple of ve note scales!!!!
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3/19/14, 12:17 AM