The Major Pentatonic Scale
Blues Guitar & Beyond
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7m 49s
The great thing about the Major Pentatonic Scale is that you actually already learned it–it is made up of the same exact positions as the Minor Pentatonic Scale. The patterns of Major and Minor Pentatonic Scales are the same, i.e. the 'boxes' look the same, as you can see in the downloadable Pentatonic Scale Positions PDF. But the important difference is the location of the root note, which will depend on the key you’re playing in.
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The Blue Note
The “blue” note is a note outside the Pentatonic Scale that allows for the most authentic tension and release available in the blues sound. The blue note, in between the fourth and fifth interval of the Pentatonic Scale, is technically referred to as the flat 5 note, as it’s found by flattening t...
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11 Minor Pentatonic Scale Improvisation
In this lesson, you’ll find a backing track you can easily play along to for hours on end if you want to (trust me, I’ve done it before). With a bit of a modern edge, this minor blues progression in G minor will be a great tool for you to use the knowledge you’ve gained up to this point to begin ...
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Major Pentatonic Blues Improvisation ...
You’ll learn methods to blend seamlessly between both Minor and Major Pentatonic tonalities as you become more comfortable with the scale positions and your ear training continues to develop. In a situation like this, you’ll see when I choose to dive out of the Major color and dip into the Minor ...