QUOTE
i can give you some insight on how it works
scales are just notes arranged in a manner that suits the "key", as it is it means nothing, to use a scale you need to know the key of a song, lets use a very simple example "knocking on heavens door - GnR"
due to the first chord, the key of the song is in G and if you look at the chords G, D ,C, AM , so you can use a G major scale ( we know the song is in G major because the first chord is a G major, if its in minor the "root' chord needs to be in a minor.
before we go ahead, here is the first thing you need to learn
i) Keys
keys to me in its basic construct is what scale the song is in, if the song is in G maj then you can expect the notes of the G maj scale to appear in the song.of which it goes like this
i - ii -iii -iv- v- vi- v
G- A- B- C- D -E- F#
you notice i put numbers on the song? well there are special names for those, (its called degrees) but to not complicate things lets just go by numbers. but you will notice that this is just a scale, the song is with a progression of
i - v - iv
there after
i - v- ii
now youd be wondering what the heck im talking about, we call this chord progression. based on the first example of G major scale, and teh key we notice that if we were to use the scale and turn into chords the chords used in the scale are as follows
i - ii- iii- iv - v - vi - v
G -Am - Bm - C- D - Em - (F#) , now if you note that i bracket (F#)? thats because the traditional F# is a lead note, so we cant put a major or minor chord to this note. (not to me knowledge at least.)
so now we have what makes the key and the progression, which comes to the ssecond thing you need to learn,
ii) chord progression.
If you are to use a G maj on this progression it will sound rather happy (i wnot go into modes) but lets just stick to that for now
why are keys and chord progressions important? well heres the thing
i) keys tell you which scale to play, to play in major or minor, if you dont know the key and play a D maj over a C maj, youd sound liek crap.
ii) chord progressions tell you the chord choice of the song, notes sound different with C behind than G behind. try this out, play an e with your friend playing a G chord, then play a E with your friend playing a C chord, sounds different? thats the idea.
so to use a scale, you must understand the "key" & "the progression" as this sets the base of your scale application.
so before i confuse you even more, i shall stop here as i think there are a lot of thinks to crack your head with, but this is the basic, we have not looked into rhythm, modes, chord/ apprgio utilization, voicing and intonation yet.
its a long road to learn how to solo, but welcome to the journey. smile.gif
scales are just notes arranged in a manner that suits the "key", as it is it means nothing, to use a scale you need to know the key of a song, lets use a very simple example "knocking on heavens door - GnR"
due to the first chord, the key of the song is in G and if you look at the chords G, D ,C, AM , so you can use a G major scale ( we know the song is in G major because the first chord is a G major, if its in minor the "root' chord needs to be in a minor.
before we go ahead, here is the first thing you need to learn
i) Keys
keys to me in its basic construct is what scale the song is in, if the song is in G maj then you can expect the notes of the G maj scale to appear in the song.of which it goes like this
i - ii -iii -iv- v- vi- v
G- A- B- C- D -E- F#
you notice i put numbers on the song? well there are special names for those, (its called degrees) but to not complicate things lets just go by numbers. but you will notice that this is just a scale, the song is with a progression of
i - v - iv
there after
i - v- ii
now youd be wondering what the heck im talking about, we call this chord progression. based on the first example of G major scale, and teh key we notice that if we were to use the scale and turn into chords the chords used in the scale are as follows
i - ii- iii- iv - v - vi - v
G -Am - Bm - C- D - Em - (F#) , now if you note that i bracket (F#)? thats because the traditional F# is a lead note, so we cant put a major or minor chord to this note. (not to me knowledge at least.)
so now we have what makes the key and the progression, which comes to the ssecond thing you need to learn,
ii) chord progression.
If you are to use a G maj on this progression it will sound rather happy (i wnot go into modes) but lets just stick to that for now
why are keys and chord progressions important? well heres the thing
i) keys tell you which scale to play, to play in major or minor, if you dont know the key and play a D maj over a C maj, youd sound liek crap.
ii) chord progressions tell you the chord choice of the song, notes sound different with C behind than G behind. try this out, play an e with your friend playing a G chord, then play a E with your friend playing a C chord, sounds different? thats the idea.
so to use a scale, you must understand the "key" & "the progression" as this sets the base of your scale application.
so before i confuse you even more, i shall stop here as i think there are a lot of thinks to crack your head with, but this is the basic, we have not looked into rhythm, modes, chord/ apprgio utilization, voicing and intonation yet.
its a long road to learn how to solo, but welcome to the journey. smile.gif
The Thread
My Other stuff
Guitar Guides
Distortion and tubes (part 1)
Distortion and Tubes (part 2)
the going oversea with axe guide
The Axe Buying Guide
The Tube Tone
Guitar Tone
Legenday Amps Part 1
Legenday Amps Part 2
Tips for beginner guitarist on teachers
This post has been edited by +3kk!: Jan 4 2013, 09:20 AM
Dec 31 2012, 11:27 PM, updated 13y ago
Quote
0.0145sec
0.56
5 queries
GZIP Disabled