QUOTE (cunels @ May 2 2008, 07:38 AM)
hello firstly i would like to say that you are one of the best guitarists iv heard and i would very much love to see you do a tour of the uk
but my problem is that when im learning a new scale i alway forget it when i try to the play the next day.
i was wondering how you approch this problem
it the mment iv just been playing the scales in exercises i was wondering wither some backig tracks might help
thanks cunels
Sorry for breaking in on your turf Muris.
But my advice is, learn the fretboard notes! At first, learn the C-major scale so that you don't have to think about it at all! When you've memorised the notes and found them all over the fretboard, you have all the root notes. Which means that you can easily move either one fret higher or lower to make it sharp or flat. "As long as you know you roots".
Then when you learn for instance the harmonic minor scale, say we in A-minor harmonic, you'll probably already know that the C-major and A-minor scales are relative scales, IE they consist of the same notes (all the whites on a piano) but the thing about the harmonic minor scale is that it has a sharp 7th in the scales steps. In A, the 7th step is G, meaning that the scale will have the notes: A B C D E F G# A
Hope this explains it. At least this is MY approach when learning scales: Memorising the notes instead of only the patterns.
Again, sorry Muris but I have a class off in school and am really bored.
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