Cool Way to Learn Guitar

De OVH_MediaWiki
Saltar a: navegación, buscar

Knowing guitar scales and modes is very important if you really want to advance your guitar skills. Learning the 7 modes of the major scale, the basis of Western music, and becoming confident with the different scale patterns will allow you to make up your own riffs and solos across the entire fretboard, which is what separates a beginner from a professional player. Learning scales will also create understanding chord much easier, so have a tendency hesitate.

The most important step you can take in learning scales is learning the major scale and its note intervals. Why? Because the 7 modes all start off of the given note of the original main scale, which makes remembering their take note patterns much easier.

First of all, we need to establish what a scale actually is. A size is a series of notes with predefined intervals, starting off of a root take note, and ending on the same note one octave higher. As you know, music is able to impact our emotions and disposition. The interval pattern of weighing scales will define its mood plus style, ranging from happy and positive (Ionian mode), to sad (Aeolian mode), to sinister (Locrian mode).

Now that we know what scales are usually, lets have a look at the 7 any guitar modes which are most used in Western music. Note: "W" means two semitones, "H" means 1 semitone between each scale note.

Ionian Mode (the Major Scale itself)

Note intervals: W-W-H-W-W-W-H
Disposition: Happy
Musical styles: country, punk, rock

Dorian Mode (roots on the second note of the major scale)

Notice intervals: W-H-W-W-W-H-W
Mood: Jazzy
Musical styles: rock, nation, jazz

Phrygian Mode (roots on the third note of the mirielle. scale)

Note periods: H-W-W-W-H-W-W
Mood: Spanish
Musical styles: flamenco, Spanish guitar

Lydian Mode (roots on the 4th note of the m. scale)

Note intervals: W-W-W-H-W-W-H
Mood: mesmerizing, dreamy
Musical styles: jazz, country, rock

Mixolydian Mode (roots in the fifth note of the m. scale)

Note time periods: W-W-H-W-W-H-W
Mood: Blues
Musical styles: blues, rockabilly, country

Aeolian Mode (also known as the minor scale, it root base on the sixth note of the meters. scale)

Note intervals: W-H-W-W-H-W-W
Mood: depressing
Musical styles: pop, blues, metallic, rock, country

Locrian Mode (roots on the second note of the m. scale)

Notice intervals: H-W-W-H-W-W-W
Mood: sinister, horrifying
Musical styles: jazz, blend

Modal theory is actually pretty simple, when you understand the relationship between the different size modes. Once you learn the scale designs and the notes on the fretboard, you'll be able to play solos and make up your own personal riffs all over the neck of the guitar, which feels great and will really impress Vibratos others.