Gus - Phrygian Dominant "10 lessons in 1" SI Lesson

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Gus
Gus

Introduction


Welcome

Hello, GMC - My name is Gustavo Costa. So it is Gus C ( not a Gus G yet user posted image)


I also added a silly welcome video (Main video comes later in the post) : Welcome.avi ( 16.86MB )


I live in Aalborg, Denmark, where I am studying mobile communication. I was born and lived almost all my life in Brasília, capital of Brazil. Really good city but it was good to move. It is such a good experience to live abroad for some period. user posted image I am 26 years old and played acoustic since I was 8. But I stopped several times, I was lazy to practice user posted image and played basically chords.
3 years ago me and some close friends decided to form a band (named Rotação 355) and then I started learning electric guitar and lead. user posted image Currently, I am playing acoustic style with one band and electric with another. user posted image


I just love music. Not only hearing and playing, but also dancing. About rock I like pretty much every genre, from ballads to metal. My favorite guitarists are Jimmy Page, Slash, Kirk Hammett and Augusto Licks (brazilian guitarist of the golden era of Engenheiros do Hawaii). But there are so many more (Joe Satriani, Gus G, David Gilmour, Mark Knopfler, ... )


Still, I will give you one example of song from each, to make you understand one kind of song I just love: songs that build up emotions all the way to the top. From slow clean melodies to shredding at bulky distortion: Stairway to Heaven, November Rain , Fade to Black, O exército de um Homem Só (Parte 1) . That's also I believe the best construction for a solo: use full speed only in the climax.


That said, I hope you like the dynamics of feeling of this lesson, and can learn something user posted image


I try to give advices about execution, as well as insight on how I composed that. I believe it can be useful indepedently of the level you play. I classificated each part according to level. Remember also that even beginners can play advanced stuff, if you start practicing slowly. Off course advanced students are encouraged to play all of it until full speed user posted image


The Lesson


One video worths more than 1000 words, so just put it through your best sound system and hopefully you enjoy user posted image:
Main.avi ( 25.33MB )


If that's too big for your download, check the version in my YouTube channel:



Years ago I learned the intro of "Come out and Play", from The Offspring. The sound is so amazing. user posted image It is exotic and at the same time cativating. Kind of "egyptian" or "middle-eastern".
But at that time I did not know anyhthing about scales. When I started learning major and minor scales I realized it did not fit any of them. Then, I learned the harmonic minor and I though my quest was over. When learning modes, I didn't revise the concept, but finally in GMC I came accross the modes of harmonic minor, and amongst them the phyrigian dominant scale. Well, that definetely is it: that exotic/cativating sound comes from Phrygian Dominant mode. I was instantly passioned for this scale.


This lesson starts with a Dm pentatonic feel. It has lots of slow and fast parts, building up until full blast usage of D Phrygian Dominant. user posted image
But don't be afraid of fast parts! Just learn it slowly. user posted image
The bass line on backing track is just D, which gives full room to change the modes.


Each part of this lesson has an aspect I am highlighting on the explanation and that's the way I am naming the section. So, if for example you liked the frenzy pick tapping you may want to check part 07 directly. Actually, as this part is a little bit trickier I did a 101 video. The class is a little long (cause I like detailed explanations user posted image), but if it's too much for you try at least checking the sessions you are more interested into and/or according to your level:


01 - Vibrato
02 - Bending
03 - Pentatonic licks
04 - Changing the mode
05 - Fast pull off
06 - Wild Pinky(little finger)
07 - Pick tapping mixed with normal legato
08 - Staccato
09 - Bridge
10 - Tremolo picking


Here are the scales used in the lesson, (reused and adapted with Muris/Kris permission):


D minor pentatonic
D F G A C


Image:gussi1.jpg


The "aliens" notes here are 2 notes that don't belong to D minor pentatonic but I am using occaionally: G# and Eb. Though I called them "Aliens", they are not choosen by chance. The first one is the blues note. And the minor pentatonic added of blues note is the blues scale. The other one is the main characteristic of Phrygian mode.


D dominant phrygian (in the diagram there are some repetitions. I just included the notes used in the lesson).
D Eb F# G A Bb C


Image:gussi2.jpg


Here are the full tabs for the lesson. You can see the notation on the text file:
PhrygianDominant.gp5 ( 6.56K )
Phrygiandominant.txt ( 14.64K )


I did not include all the tabs in the explanation, otherwise it would make it hard to read. One important thing to notice about tabs: they are tabbed to normal E tuning, but my guitar was actually on Eb tuning in the video. I hope this does not become a problem to learn from the lesson. I apologize for the confusion, but who owns guitar with floating bridge knows we don't want to change the tuning every day...


Part 01 - Vibrato






https://www.guitarmasterclass.net/guitar_forum/index.php?showtopic=14991