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Advanced Scale and Arpeggio Exercise | 2 

Garret's Guitar Lessons
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Garret's Guitar Lessons
This is a long exercise but a great way to really get some arpeggios and scale shapes under our fingers. If I only have time for one exercise this is one of my go to's!
The basic principle of it is to ascend 6 scale degrees then on the 7th scale degree, descend the diatonic 7th arpeggio. Then start from the 2nd note of the scale, ascend 6 scale degrees and descend on the 7th note the diatonic 7th arpeggio. You repeat the process.
I go through each CAGED Shape in the Key of D Major. You can move it to plenty of other modes (Mixolydian, Dorian, etc.) but be sure to stick within the CAGED Shape!
If this one seems a bit too tough at first be sure to look at the related lessons for a few exercises that may make this one easier. Dig!
Related Lessons
:42 - Advanced Scale and Arpeggio Exercise - • Advanced Scale and Arp...
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:52 - Scale Exercise | Diatonic 7th Arpeggios - • Scale Exercise | Diato...
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16 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 2   
@kaisiigeorge8958
@kaisiigeorge8958 2 года назад
Does it mean the diatonic 7th is dominant arpeggio's or major 7 & minor 7 or min7b5 arpeggio?
@garretsguitarlessons
@garretsguitarlessons 2 года назад
Depends on which note you're starting from. Diatonic means which notes are naturally in the scale. Let's take C for example: C Scale: C-D-E-F-G-A-B I chord (Cmaj7): Major 7 - 1-3-5-7 (C-E-G-B) ii chord (Dm7): Minor 7 - 2-4-6-1 (D-F-A-C) iii chord (Em7): Minor 7 - 3-5-7-2 (E-G-B-D) IV chord (Fmaj7): Major 7 - 4-6-1-3 (F-A-C-E) V chord (G7): Dominant 7 - 5-7-2-4 (G-B-D-F) vi chord (Am7): Minor 7 - 6-1-3-5 (A-C-E-G) vii chord (Bm7b5): m7b5 - 7-2-4-6 (B-D-F-A) It can be quite a lot at first. I gave you the numbers of the scale so you can see how it lines up diatonically (using the just the C scale). Here's a Play Along of this exercise: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-KZAXlmyNL3A.html Here's a page of a ton of related exercises: garretsguitarlessons.com/exercises-play-alongs/ Here's a lesson on building 7th chords (but it's part of a series so go back earlier in the series if this is a bit too much): garretsguitarlessons.com/lessons/extended-chords/ Thanks!