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"Pentatonic Concepts (volume 1)"

By David M. McLean

 

Part 1:

The Shred Academy exclusive DVD "Pentatonic Concepts (volume 1)" is the first of a 2 DVD set and covers some beginner through intermediate concepts for the pentatonic scale, and then gives a brief overview of some of the more advanced concepts that we'll include in volume 2.

The pentatonic scale is, as the name implies, a 5 note scale. In A, the notes are A, C, D, E, & G. When arranged in a logical 2-notes-per-string (2NPS) pattern, the scale yields 5 "box shapes". Most guitar players know at least the first box, and many also know box 5. But too few know all 5, and of those who do, only a few can put them to good use.

Experiment with each box individually, and then experiment by just jamming over an Am progression (like Am, F, G or Am, Dm, Em, Am) or even just a droning Am chord, going from on box shape to the next. OK, here are the 5 boxes:

BOX 1

BOX 2

BOX 3

BOX 4

BOX 5

Once you are comfortable with these shapes, set your metronome to something ridiculously slow (40bpm) and play each box with alternate picking, then all down strokes, then all up-strokes, and end with alternate picking again. If you make any mistakes, go through them all again. Once it's perfect, notch it up a few clicks on the metronome and do it again. On the DVD we do this in the "work-out" sections beginning at 40bpm and climbing to 80bpm (volume 2 will feature faster speeds), though we're actually tapping & counting as if we're playing 8th notes at 80bpm rather than 16ths at 40bpm.

Once you can do this, everything on the DVD is within your technical range. 80bpm is a fairly comfortable pace, so this shouldn't take too long to master. Once mastered, you can concentrate on the concepts presented in "Pentatonic Concepts (volume 1)" rather than on any physical limitations. To prep for volume 2, be sure to have these up to about 120bpm or faster.

Part 2:

The DVD assumes several things about you. First, it assumes you are at least somewhat familiar with the minor pentatonic scale & improvising with said scale. Second, it assumes that you know the shapes of the MINOR pentatonic scale are the same as the shapes for the MAJOR pentatonic scale. Third, it assumes you understand that C major and A minor are relative keys (if you think purely in terms of minor pentatonics, as many guitarists do, this means you know that you can play the Am pentatonic over a song in the key of C, or the Em pentatonic with a song in the key of G, for another example).

Part 3:

Finally, be sure you know a few basic progressions from major styles, as you'll see/hear these demonstrated during the guest soloist sections. The guests kept all their licks under the 100bpm mark, so there is no "shredding" (by shredder standards, anyway), allowing you to hear the usage of the scale over specific progressions. Ultimately, you'll want to ignore the soloists and instead focus on experimenting with the progressions first, then your own improvisations over those progressions.

Here are some simple progressions to get you started (all in the key of Am or C major, except for the ambiguous blues progression #1). Be sure to use appropriate strum/rhythm patterms to sound more stylistically authentic:

Folk:
1) C / / / G / / / F / / / Dm / / /
2) Am / / / C / / / Dm / / / Dm / / / Am / / / F / / / G / / / G / / /

Country:
1) C / / / C / / / Dm / / / Dm / / / G7 / / / G7 / / / C / / / C / / /
2) Am / / / Am / / / Dm / / / Dm / / / C / / / G / / / Am / / / Am 7 / / /

Rock (use 1-5 dyads):
1) (fast punk feel) C / G / D / A / C / G / F / / / C / G / D / A / F / G / C / / /
2) (slow metal ballad feel) A / / / F / / / G / / / A / / /

Jazz:
1) (lively) Cmj7 / / / Cmj7 / / / D9 / / / D9 / / / F6 / / F#6 G6 / G13 /
2) Dm7 / G7 / Cmj7 / Am7 / Dm7 / G13 / Cmj7 / / /

Blues:
1) A7 / / / D7 / / / A7 / / / A7 / / / D7 / / / D7 / / / A7 / / / A7 / / / E7 / / / D7 / / /A7 / / / A7 /E7 /
2) Am / / / Dm / / / Am / / / Am7 / / / Dm / / / Dm7 / / / Am / / / Am7 / / / F / / / E / / / Am / / / D7 Eb7 E7 /

 

 


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