Melody/Improv

Improvisation With 4th and 2nd Interval Stacks

Improvisation With 4th and 2nd Interval Stacks This is a continuation of last week’s free lesson blog, where we talked about stacking 2nd and 4th intervals. Improvisation with 2nd and 4th interval stacks Check that blog because it tells you how to practice what we are about to cover today. Today we are going to Improvisation With 4th and 2nd Interval Stacks

Facebooktwittermail



Improvisation With 2nd and 4th Interval Stacks

Improvisation With 2nd and 4th Interval Stacks When from any note, you play a note up a 2nd and then up a 4 from there, you get an inversion of a quartal harmony chord. Quartal harmony is what you get when you stack two 4th intervals on top of one another. You can learn more Improvisation With 2nd and 4th Interval Stacks

Facebooktwittermail



Improve your Guitar Solos Improvising with Triads

Improvising with Triads If you don’t know your 3-string triad fingerings yet, you can learn them here: Major Triads In C Once you know these triads, you can solo with them. Most beginner and intermediate guitar players, ever only use triads for rhythm guitar. It doesn’t occur to them that you can also play guitar Improve your Guitar Solos Improvising with Triads

Facebooktwittermail



Advanced Improvisation Masterclass: Improvising Over Emaj7 | B7alt

Improvising Over Emaj7 | B7alt Before moving on, you want to learn the melodic minor scale first. Learn the fingerings for the melodic minor scale here: Learn The Melodic Minor Scale Fingerings If you’re still a bit shaky on the major scale fingerings, you would want to get these down as well. The 7 In-Position Advanced Improvisation Masterclass: Improvising Over Emaj7 | B7alt

Facebooktwittermail



Fun Musician Drills, Cool Guitars and Some Humor

Fun Musician Drills, Cool Guitars and Some Humor Cool Improvisation Trick This is something I strongly encourage you to try out. Solo over one of your favorite songs or over a backing track, with an in position (7-note or pentatonic) scale, consistently leaving one string out. For example, solo with the root position A minor Fun Musician Drills, Cool Guitars and Some Humor

Facebooktwittermail





error: Content is protected !!