Lesson 8 |
Am Pentatonic and Tablature In our last lesson you were asked to circle all of the notes of the Am pentatonic scale. The notes of the Am pentatonic scale are A C D E and G notes. This is a good exercise to become familiar with each note and placement. I took it one step further and have colored in each position of the Am pentatonic scale. We will eventually learn all of the Am pentatonic positions, but the root note fret in the yellow position and the blue position is what we will continue to work on. Look at the illustration above and notice how the notes repeat after 12 frets. You can count from any note and notice 12 frets away on the same string, the note is the same. This means that the scale patterns also repeat after 12 frets. Look at the root note fret in yellow. The notes are the same on the 5th fret as they are on the 17th fret. The root note fret at the 17th fret is exactly the same as the 5th fret. You can play a lead at the 5th fret and play a lead at the 17th fret using the same fingering. That is true for all of the positions. Look above at the C note on the 8th fret, it's the same as the C note at the 20th. Check out all of the notes and try to comprehend this as I'm sure you have. In the last lesson you were asked to fill in the next position of the Am pentatonic. This position starts on the C note 8th fret.
Tablature is a way of reading music other than the traditional way. You don't read notes, but you read numbers that represent the frets and strings being played. Each number is on the particular string and fret being played. Have you ever bought a guitar music book, brought it home an wondered how anyone could learn from it? If so, join the crowd. Tablature offers everyone the opportunity to learn how to play music without going crazy. You must learn this material before moving any further.
Compare the illustration above to the one below. The illustration below should look familiar to you. It is that famous Am pentatonic scale at the root note fret. You should practice this scale every day.
It is very important that you memorize the illustrations above. The Am pentatonic scale root note fret fingering is always 1-4 1-3 1-3 1-3 1-4 1-4. If you memorize this fingering pattern, you won't have any problem playing it when written in tablature. You will automatically know which fingers to use on that particular fret and string. Now everyone needs to go review the tablature chapter. Assignment:
In our last lesson you were asked to listen to the song I've begun to write. Slow3.wav. The tab for this song can be found below. Practice this song until you can play it smoothly, it may take time though.
Good Luck, From the Jam Room |