A COMPLETELY FREE TUITION RESOURCE LIBRARY FOR GUITARISTS & GUITAR TEACHERS - BY CHRIS PEARCE BA (Hons)

Thursday, 4 September 2008

The Minor Pentatonic Scale - Part 1 - Novice/Intermediate


The A Minor Pentatonic Scale (5 Positions) - Part 1

The A Minor Pentatonic Scale is an incredibly common scale used in many styles of music (blues, rock, metal, funk, jazz, pop, classical etc.) and can prove to be very versatile, and useful, once it has been thoroughly studied and practiced.

Pentatonic literally means “5 notes”. Pent means five (as in pentangle or pentagon) and tonic means tone or note. The key that we are playing in (for the moment) is the key of A Minor. A key is simply explained as a group of notes that work really well with a certain group of chords. The reason we are using the key of A Minor is because it does not contain any #s (sharps) or bs (flats). This makes it easier to understand when we look at the scale in detail. It also means that the chords we will use to accompany the scale are going to be much more familiar to you, which in turn means they will be easier to play (we'll move onto the chords in a future lesson).

So why learn scales anyhow? They suck right? You just want to be playing the cool stuff and not wasting your time practicing boring scales? Well, here’s the bad news... If you want to get good on the guitar (or any instrument), you need to know your scales (or at least some). Here’s the good news... Scales allow you to play those crazy solos you’ve been listening to and have been dreaming of one day being able to play. Scales get your fingers strong. Scales make you faster. Scales get both your left and right hands coordinated and working well together which makes all of your playing improve. Many incredibly famous riffs are made up of scales and single notes – practice your scales and you’ll be playing these riffs easily and hopefully making up your own. Best of all, scales allow you to create! Soon you’ll be making up your own solos and have the freedom and knowledge to be able to jam with other musicians. You never know, you might just start to find they become great fun!

Take a look at the two sheets below. First of all, please don’t be terrified by what you see here! It looks ever-so-confusing but in fact it's pretty simple once you know what you are looking at. If you look at the first sheet, you will see that the page is divided into three vertical columns labelled – Fingering – Notes – Formula. For now I’d like you to ignore the formula column (that’s the science/maths bit that we’re not interested in right now!). The note column is useful so we can check out the five notes that are contained in the scale (A, C, D, E and G - the note in the square "A" is the note the scale is named after and is called the Root Note), but once again, don't worry too much about this column either for the moment.




Now look at Shape 1 in the Fingering column (the column we are interested in for this lesson). This is a diagram of the fretboard viewed upside down. The low E (fat string) is at the bottom of the page, the high E (thin string) at the top. The numbers in circles are which fingers you use to play the scale (1 = index/pointing, 2 = middle, 3 = annular/ring, 4 = little/pinkie). The frets are marked in as vertical lines. The scale begins on fret number 5 as there is a number 5 written below the first fret of the diagram.

Starting on the low (fat) string, play the 1st finger note on fret 5, followed by the 4th finger note on fret 8. Then move to the next string (the A string) and play the 1st finger note on fret 5 followed by the 3rd finger note on fret7. Continue this process until you reach the final note (4th finger on fret 8, thinnest string). You have now played the entire scale shape ascending (going up in pitch). Now play the scale descending (going down in pitch). Simply start on the highest note (the 8th fret, high string) and then go backwards to the previous note (5th fret, high string). Continue this until you reach the final note (5th fret, lowest/fat string).

You will also need to practice the scale with down/up (alternate) picking once you have mastered the shape. Start with a down stroke on the first note (towards the floor with the plectrum), followed by an up stroke on the second note (towards the ceiling with the plectrum). Repeat on each string of the scale.

Also practice with Hammers. This is where you play the first note of each pair on a string with the plectrum, and then you make the second note of the pair sound by hitting the string hard with the correct finger for that note. For example; Pick the 1st finger, 5th fret low string note with the plectrum. Now hit the 8th fret note forcefully with your little finger to make it sound. Repeat this process until you reach the highest/final note of the scale (8th fret, thin string).

The reverse of the Hammer is the Pull-Off. This is when you play the highest note of a pair on a string with the plectrum. Have the lowest note fretted ready. Then drag the highest note finger off the string in a downward motion. This will make the lowest note sound. For example; Pick the 4th finger note on the 8th fret, highest string. Make sure your first finger is already fretting the 5th fret note on the same string. Pull the 4th finger note off the string, downwards towards the floor. This will make the 5th fret note sound. Continue this process until you finish with the lowest note of the scale (5th fret, low E string).

Try to practice daily with these techniques. Eventually you will need to learn all five scale shapes (which snake their way up the neck, before repeating themselves), but for now Shape 1 will be fine. This will then allow you to move on to the really fun bit – learning some licks so that you can jam! I’ll be posting 50 licks shortly so get practicing!!! :)



NOTE: VIDEO COMING SOON...

Wednesday, 3 September 2008

Jazz (Lead) - Advanced


Improvising With Arpeggios – 12 Bar Jazz Blues


Here we have the same chord progression as with the previous exercise (see "Jazz Rhythm" below this post), but this time the chords are strummed with a plectrum rather than fingerpicked. For the solo I have used the arpeggio (literally the individual notes that make up the chord) that fits with the chord being played at that point in time. For example, if the chord being played by the rhythm guitar is Bb7, I’ll improvise over it with a Bb7 arpeggio. If it’s a Cm7 chord, I’ll use a Cm7 arpeggio.

To be able to use scales, chords and arpeggios well on the guitar, you need to learn your notes on the fingerboard extremely well. Guitarists are notoriously slack in learning the names of each of the fretted notes on the neck. Learn the notes “cold” taking one string at a time. Leave out the #’s and b’s until you have a strong grasp of where the “natural” notes are (i.e.; A, B, C, D, E, F, G). You can easily find the # and b notes once you have the natural ones fully committed to memory. Learn the notes ascending and descending alphabetically (you need to think backwards down the musical alphabet too!). This doesn’t happen overnight, but it will give you a greater understanding of music once you can do this, and it will also open up avenues for your playing which would have been impossible to perform before. Exciting? No. Essential? Yes!!

This exercise is also accompanied by a backing track for you to try playing along to (this will be uploaded shortly - please check out http://www.chrispearcemusic.com/ if you are feeling impatient!). If you can’t fit all of the notes in at first, just play some of them to get a feel for what is happening in the music. Don’t ignore the chords either. Playing guitar isn’t all about taking solos. Playing rhythm is something you’ll be doing 90% of the time in most bands. Practice the rhythm guitar part and learn as many shapes/voicings/inversions for each chord as possible.





NOTE: Soundfiles for this piece will be uploaded shortly. Please click on the URL link below to hear the piece (make sure pop-ups are enabled on your browser or press "shift" when clicking on the link). When the new window has opened, click the triangular play button in the right hand corner of the screen to hear the music (you will need Flash installed to hear/view the music).


http://chrispearcemusic.com/downloads/12barjazzblues.php

Jazz (Rhythm) - Advanced


Walking Bass Jazz Blues

This exercise is based around the same 12 bar chord pattern used in the Jazz Blues Lead improvisation exercise above. The basic idea here is to sound like two instruments, namely a guitarist “comping” (the tri-tones/3rds/4ths played with index and middle fingers) with a bassist playing the walking bass line (thumb). The chord tones should be played short and choppy (staccato) whereas the bass line should flow smoothly and effortlessly throughout. The bass line employs a great deal of chromatic/passing notes. Try to work out what is going on with the harmony in this exercise to get a greater understanding of how you could use this technique yourself. Find a chord progression in The Real Book (jazz standards book) and try to walk the bass. Good luck!




NOTE: Soundfiles for this piece will be uploaded shortly. Please click on the URL link below to hear the piece (make sure pop-ups are enabled on your browser or press "shift" when clicking on the link). When the new window has opened, click the triangular play button in the right hand corner of the screen to hear the music (you will need Flash installed to hear/view the music).


http://chrispearcemusic.com/downloads/walkingbassjazzblues.php

Blues (Fingerstyle) - Intermediate


Fingerstyle Blues – Chris Pearce

This is a 16 bar blues (not the regular 12) that works well on either the acoustic or electric guitar. The trickiest thing about this tune is getting the rhythmic feel right. Old school blues oozes a raw and loose vibe that is more difficult to recreate than you might first imagine. Landing your picking fingers on the strings over the sound-hole/pickups of the guitar produces the rhythmic clicks (the x’s in the TAB). Try to keep the fingers ready to re-pick the strings as they land (1st, 2nd & 3rd fingers should land on the high G, B & E strings whilst the thumb lands on the next bass string to be picked). Experiment and make up your own fills/licks (I used the E Minor pentatonic scale (F# Minor when the Capo is on fret 2)).





NOTE: Soundfiles for this piece will be uploaded shortly. Please click on the URL link below to hear the piece (make sure pop-ups are enabled on your browser or press "shift" when clicking on the link). When the new window has opened, click the triangular play button in the right hand corner of the screen to hear the music (you will need Flash installed to view/hear the music).


http://chrispearcemusic.com/downloads/fingerstyleblues.php

Classical Guitar (Romanza) - Novice/Intermediate


Romanza – Anon


This is a very famous and beautiful classical guitar piece with a simple yet flowing melody and arpeggio accompaniment. The first page is of grade 3 standard, the second page elevates it to grade 5. Although the piece may initially appear easy, the real skill in playing this is the use of expression. Without putting feeling and emotion into the music, Romanza will remain merely an exercise. By using dynamics (volume, both loud and soft), tone (produced by the flesh and fingernail picking the string in “sweet spots”), and through the use of rubato (literally meaning “robbed time” – slowing down at a point in the music but then speeding up to make up for lost time before returning to the original tempo) you will produce music with soul and depth. That is the real skill in playing this tune.

Use the thumb of the picking hand to play all of the bass notes. The three high strings should be plucked with the index (G string), middle (B string) and annular (E string) fingers. The picking hand should be poised over the appropriate strings at all times.

D.C. al Fine = Go back to the start (D.C. is short for “Da Capo”, which translates as “The Head”) until you reach the Fine marking which is where the piece ends (end of page 1).





NOTE: Soundfiles for this piece will be uploaded shortly. Please click on the URL link below to hear the piece (make sure pop-ups are enabled on your browser or press "shift" when clicking on the link). When the new window has opened, click the triangular play button in the right hand corner of the screen to hear the music (you will need Flash installed to hear/view the music).


http://chrispearcemusic.com/downloads/romanza.php

Classical Guitar (El Testemen De N’Amelia) - Intermediate


El Testemen De N’Amelia – Miguel Llobet


Here is another haunting and beautifully melancholic piece for the nylon string guitar. This is of about grade 6/7 standard due to the awkward artificial harmonic section. To produce the artificial harmonic, place the index (1st) finger of your picking hand 12 frets above the tabbed note directly over the metal fret (as if you were going to play a “natural” harmonic). Pick the string with your annular (3rd) finger of the picking hand whilst keeping your index finger of the same hand in place over the metal fret. This should result in an artificial harmonic. This action will take some practice. Matters are made even more difficult when it comes to picking a bass string with your thumb whilst you pick the harmonic with the 1st and 3rd fingers. Once again, this piece requires much expression to bring it alive.

NH = Natural Harmonic
AH = Artificial Harmonic



NOTE: Soundfiles for this piece will be uploaded shortly. Please click on the URL link below to hear the piece (make sure pop-ups are enabled on your browser or press "shift" when clicking on the link). When the new window has opened, click the triangular play button in the right hand corner of the screen to hear the music (you will need Flash installed to see/hear the music).


http://chrispearcemusic.com/downloads/amelia.php


Welcome!


Welcome to this free guitar tuition blog page!


The page is still under construction but hopefully you will find that this blog will soon become an important resource for students of the guitar and guitar teachers alike as the months roll on. The creases will be ironed out as I become more savey with the ins and outs of blogging (I hope!) and more and more material will be added as quickly as I can post it.

The purpose of this site is to provide material that will supplement the education of both the novice and seasoned guitarist, presenting material, songs, ideas, techniques, exercises and tips on how to become a well-rounded and professional musician. The blog is also intended to be a support for guitar tutors looking for new ideas, tips and material to use when teaching. The page is not designed to replace one-on-one guitar tuition. Having a knowledgable guitar tutor/mentor is an essential part of any serious student's training. Learning from an internet site such as this is just one small part of an entire package of opportunities available to develop as a well-rounded and proficient guitar player and musician.

If you haven't got a qualified and experienced tutor, please go and get one! Then absorb as much music as you can - go to gigs, watch DVDs, listen to the radio, CDs, MP3s, your Mum and Dad's LP collection, MTV, anywhere you possibly can get it. Read about music. Listen to musicans talk about music and how they became musicians. Have an open mind. Just because you listen to one style of music all the time doesn't mean you can't learn from another. Music is a language. It's the same thing whether it be funk, classical, jazz, blues, metal, indie or whatever. It's all music.

Now, I'm not trying to convert anyone to any particular type of music here in this blog (I play everything from classical through to death metal!). The plan is to upload a bit of everything and then build upon it over time. If you like it great! If you don't, well, don't worry, there will be other stuff coming soon that I'm sure you'll get something out of. At the end of the day, I love music. And I'm sure you do too or you wouldn't be reading this. I also love teaching and helping people learn about the guitar and musicianship. It gives me a buzz (honest!). Music has helped me so much in my life that I can't quite imagine where I'd be now without the six string. So now I'm hopefully giving something back.

Well, that's all I'll say for now but thanks for dropping by and I hope you'll visit often. There will be videos and MP3s uploaded asap. I'm doing this blog in my spare time and I'm usually working 6 days a week, 12 hours a day with teaching, gigging and sessions so please be patient! :)

Cheers!

Chris

ps: Please feel free to get in touch and check out some acoustic demos via MySpace...

http://www.myspace.com/chrispearceacoustic

or my main site...

http://chrispearcemusic.com/

:)