In this lesson we introduce you to the Holy Grail of rock soloing – the Pentatonic scale.
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JOIN THE DISCORD VIEW THREADI discovered you can play Jurassic Park using the Major scale introduced some Lessons beforeOkay seriously guys this might not sound cool but my girl was playing “if I was your man” Bruno Mars and this scale was perfect to play on it to have fun!
Gonna be trying this next lol!!!I discovered you can play Jurassic Park using the Major scale introduced some Lessons before
I didn't really understand this lesson. Can someone explain it really broken down? Not sure why how we went from playing a C Major scale to the 5th fret for example?
I would say keep going up speed. 1 note per beat at 60 is good. Go up 10 bpm and if that is comfortable keep going up!I'm practicing the scale with a metronome right now, and it's going alright. What tempo would you recommend before moving to the next lesson? I can play the scale quite comfortably on 60 bpm right now
Awesome, thanks for the advice! I'll keep on improving!I would say keep going up speed. 1 note per beat at 60 is good. Go up 10 bpm and if that is comfortable keep going up!
I'm practicing the scale with a metronome right now, and it's going alright. What tempo would you recommend before moving to the next lesson? I can play the scale quite comfortably on 60 bpm right now
That is actually really solid advice. I'm following the lessons and it's going quite alright, but sometimes I'm not sure if I'm ready to move on yet. This helps a lot! Thank you very much.Honestly I think it’s perfectly fine to move to the next lesson before 100% nailing everything in it. just remember to not forget about it.
Just like in school you don’t only go to the next lesson when you’ve mastered one lecture or chapter, you move on but review your notes (or in this case practice the previous lessons).
plus some things come together and make more sense as you move on. or while you are learning and absorbing the new lessons you’ve already unintentionally improved for the previous one
Such a good advice! I totally agreeHonestly I think it’s perfectly fine to move to the next lesson before 100% nailing everything in it. just remember to not forget about it.
Just like in school you don’t only go to the next lesson when you’ve mastered one lecture or chapter, you move on but review your notes (or in this case practice the previous lessons).
plus some things come together and make more sense as you move on. or while you are learning and absorbing the new lessons you’ve already unintentionally improved for the previous one
Yup, you got that right.So is the relative minor always the 6th note of the scale? For example if I play G major scale (starting from A string 10th fret), would the relative minor be Em?
Or am I utterly lost?
Am is the relative minor of C so effectively they hold the same notes. If your root note is A it is an Am pentatonic, if it is C it is C major pentatonic.Hey guys, I got kinda confused with this lesson. What I understand at first was that the C major scale without the 4th and 7th note is called a pentatonic scale and because it's created from the C major it's the C pentatonic. But someone in the discussion here someone said that because the root note is A it's called Am Pentatonic. Is it the same thing because A it's the minor relative of C or something? Can someone explain it please?
Okay that makes sense. Thanks a lot!Am is the relative minor of C so effectively they hold the same notes. If your root note is A it is an Am pentatonic, if it is C it is C major pentatonic.