Friday, April 3, 2009

The Guitar Scale Patterns



On the next pages you will see various patterns which will enable you to play the guitar, using the
complete fretboard, without ever hitting a wrong note. Well, after practicing a little... ;)
I placed the patterns below each other in such a way that you can clearly see where they overlap,
which notes they share. Above the first and below the last I placed the last and first pattern once
more (in grey) so you can see how they relate too. This is because all patterns are repeated in the
exact same order over and over until your fretboard has ended... I also haven’t added fretnumbers
because the position you play the pattern depends on the key you play in!
If you don’t know what I’m talking about, just follow the links I’ve added on the last page, which
shows some information about the C-A-G-E-D system (which I heard about after making these
patterns, so it’s become the E-D-C-A-G system here...) and the various modes (in case you want
to go real deep...).
The main 5 patterns are on the next page, the major scale patterns. All others are based on these.
When you’ve mastered these 5 , you’ve (almost) mastered the others too.
The pentatonic scale is a simpler version of the major scale: it only has 5 notes (penta =5, tonic = tones):
2 notes are left out. This scale is used a lot for solo’s in popular music.
The minor scales are exactly the same as the major scale: the only difference is the root note.
You could also look at the root note in the major scale and go two places backwards on the pattern to
determine the right spot of the minor root note. I just added these patterns for your convenience.
I also added the blues scale patterns, which is the minor pentatonic with a sharp 4th note added.
To give you that bluesy feeling.

No comments:

Post a Comment