Premium Only Content
Guitar Theory - Using 4 Fingers To Fret 4 Adjacent Notes On One String - 3 Half-Steps
In this exercise, we use all 4 fingers to fret 4 adjacent notes on 1 string, at the 12th fret
Before moving to the adjacent string...
This exercise is a good intermediate point in your guitar lessons.
From a beginners view, if we can do this exercise LEGATO, meaning even and smooth, from beginning to end,
That means our picking hand is able to pick out 4 notes on a string before moving on to another string.
That means each of our fingers has been trained, and exercised, and abused, and blistered, and calloused, strengthened, and grip calibrated, and toned down, and brought under control, and open, and loose, and relaxed, and working effortlessly, and comfortably, and...
From the moment you master this relatively simple exercise, you will be ready to start taking away notes from it, stripping it down, analyzing the notes that we use, and don’t use...
There is not a single scale that is not contained within the outline of these notes, in any hand position.
So from this point forward, as an intermediate student, your job is to chip away at this exercise, to play every possible combination of notes, from any starting note...
To learn all of the scales
starting with the chromatic. “Chrome” like a mirror, reflects all colors.
So a chromatic scale is all notes, usually thought of as 12 half-steps within an octave,
But in truth the chromatic scale is like a number line 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12
But then also all the infinite space between 1 and 2, etc.
Think slide guitar...
Next learn where the Root, Perfect 4th, Perfect 5th, Perfect Octave 8va are.
These anchor points will be used more often than others during normal guitar playing, and will give you the foundational reference point - anchors you can use to build more upon later.
Next, learn the minor and major pentatonic scales,
And use these pentatonic scales as a frame work upon which to learn the natural minor and major scales...
Next, practice each of these scales, but use each different scale degree note as the root note. This is mode.
-
1:23
Beginner Guitar
1 year agoStar Spangled Banner On Acoustic Guitar
3003 -
0:30
Beginner Guitar
3 years agoGuitar Theory - Using 2 Adjacent Fingers To Fret 2 Adjacent Notes Per String
97 -
0:31
Beginner Guitar
3 years agoGuitar Theory - Using 3 Fingers To Fret 3 Notes Per String
139 -
0:31
Beginner Guitar
3 years agoGuitar Theory - Using Pointer and Ring Fingers To Fret 2 Notes Per String - 2 Half-Steps
196 -
0:50
Beginner Guitar
3 years agoGuitar Theory - Using Adjacent Fingers To Fret Adjacent Notes On One String, And Adjacent Strings
43 -
0:31
Beginner Guitar
3 years agoGuitar Theory - Using Pointer And Pinky Fingers Across 3 Half-Steps
83 -
0:47
Beginner Guitar
3 years agoGuitar Theory - The Perfect 4th - using pinky and ring fingers on adjacent strings
33 -
0:32
Beginner Guitar
3 years agoGuitar Theory - Using Middle And Pinky Fingers - 2 Half Steps - 5 Half Steps
33 -
0:52
Beginner Guitar
3 years agoGuitar Theory - Anchoring 3 Root Notes In One Shape
98 -
1:06
Beginner Guitar
3 years agoGuitar Theory - Box Shape - Root Notes
30