Making Boxes In Scales, help me |
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Making Boxes In Scales, help me |
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Jan 25 2008, 01:54 AM |
Try 3 notes per string,that's most common way,not the only one tho.
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Jan 25 2008, 02:02 AM |
basically stick to 3 notes for things like a major scale and 2 for scales with only 5 or 6 notes? to be honest, i thought i would have to learn a big formula lol but thanks this will help Yeah,just like that. Main things is to have "logical" movement while playing and since most of us humans have 4 fingers to play with ,3 notes per string is quite reasonable. Or 2nps as you said if scale has 5-6 notes. This post has been edited by Muris: Jan 25 2008, 02:03 AM -------------------- Youtube
MySpace Website Album "Let It Out" on iTunes and CD Baby Check out my video lessons and instructor board! The Pianist tune is progress,check it out! "ok.. it is great.. :P have you myspace? Can i to personalize this for you guy?" |
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Jan 25 2008, 02:22 AM |
thx just adding this, did anyone know that the egyptian scale in D is an A minor Pentatonic REPLICA just with different root notes? Exact same notes in the exact same place...weird... No idea really... You can "make" scale from every scale nonetheless. Per example this D Egyptian. Same as D minor scale,D Dorian or D Mixolidian without 3rd and 6th degree. Not sure if we can call it a scale but I'm not here to judge. -------------------- Youtube
MySpace Website Album "Let It Out" on iTunes and CD Baby Check out my video lessons and instructor board! The Pianist tune is progress,check it out! "ok.. it is great.. :P have you myspace? Can i to personalize this for you guy?" |
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Jan 25 2008, 02:14 PM |
Also, remember that boxes (patterns) are just a way of mapping the real scale onto a guitar for playing (on piano for instance you don't need to do this as you can only play each note in one place - on guitar we have many more options).
There are a couple of different strategies to build patterns: 1. Start on the E string on any note of the scale. Mark that fret in your mind as the home position. Move up that string playing notes from the scale until the next note would be more than 4 frets from home position (counting the home position as fret 1), and place that next not on a higher string. Keep going until you run out of strings. This approach gives you regular scale boxes - boxes are good because they keep your hand in the same position throughout the scale. 2. Start on the E string on any note of the scale. For each string, add notes until you have played exactly 3 notes on that string then swap strings. This approach gives you 3 note per string scales - these are good because they have an even number of notes on each string which really helps with speed runs. These patterns are tailor made for triplets. Change the number from 3 to 2 or 4 and you get 2 note per string scales, or even 4 note per string scales (possible, but very hard to play, a favourite of Alan Holdsworth I believe). 2 notes per string are especially suitable for pentatonic. (In fact for pentatonic it turns out that 2 notes per string and boxes are the same). 3. Whole neck approach - treat each string in isolation, and play entire scales by moving up 1 string. Understand that there will be huge overlap between strings, and figure out all the possible ways of playing an individual note or run on all strings (very hard to do in practice but this is how really top nothch performers see things) That's all there is to patterns really - and as a point of terminology, I would call boxes a special case of patterns that are constructed using rule 1, patterns is a more general term that realtes to all possible ways to map a scale to the guitar neck. -------------------- Check out my Instructor profile
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Jan 25 2008, 02:59 PM |
THere are a lot of different names for the same scales. Do not worry too much about this, just focus on learning the scales on the fretboard. PLay the positions night and day, and learn to connect the positions for starters. Work scale by scale, so you don't get mixed up
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Jan 26 2008, 01:41 AM |
Hisham,if I got it right,another word for quarter tone is Maqam or something?
Or is that just name for place in the scale,not relation between 2 notes? This post has been edited by Muris: Jan 26 2008, 01:41 AM -------------------- Youtube
MySpace Website Album "Let It Out" on iTunes and CD Baby Check out my video lessons and instructor board! The Pianist tune is progress,check it out! "ok.. it is great.. :P have you myspace? Can i to personalize this for you guy?" |
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Jan 27 2008, 07:37 PM |
Ahh,I see,Maqam is name for arabic scale that contains some 1/4 intervals,thanks Hisham.
-------------------- Youtube
MySpace Website Album "Let It Out" on iTunes and CD Baby Check out my video lessons and instructor board! The Pianist tune is progress,check it out! "ok.. it is great.. :P have you myspace? Can i to personalize this for you guy?" |
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Jan 27 2008, 10:54 PM |
you welcome muris
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Jan 28 2008, 01:31 AM |
I've seen some musician having his strat modified in such a way that he has some added frets between 3rd and 4th fret I think. This way he can play quarter notes. I saw once a band playing that music and that guy with a strat and I was amazed with his style Great music I love it!
This post has been edited by Milenkovic Ivan: Jan 28 2008, 01:32 AM -------------------- - Ivan's Video Chat Lesson Notes HERE
- Check out my GMC Profile and Lessons - (Please subscribe to my) YouTube Official Channel - Let's be connected through ! Facebook! :) |
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