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Analyzing What You Play

Lesson 3/97 | Study Time: 5 Min
Analyzing What You Play

Analyzing What You Play

Here is a lick created from the C minor pentatonic scale. Notice the scale degrees written above the notes. This is a useful way of analyzing a lick to see what notes were used to create it.

Once you know the degrees of a scale you are using, it is a good idea to analyze many licks using that scale so you become thoroughly familiar with the sounds available from that scale and you can re-create those sounds at will. Let’s look at the previous example. It begins with the b7 degree being bent up to the root note (1). The root note is then played again, followed by the b7. A pull-off is then used to get to the 5th degree which is then followed by the 4th degree being bent up to the 5th degree. This is followed by the 4th and b3rd degrees, and in the last bar the 4th degree is followed by the root (1) an octave lower than at the beginning of the lick.

Analyzing licks in this manner may seem dull at first, but the more you know about exactly what it is you are playing, the more control you have over what you play, and the more you can interact with other musicians, so stick with it, and in time you will instantly know what you or anyone else is playing as soon as you hear it. In fact, to be a good player it is important to be able to hear in your head what you want to play and then produce that sound with your hands. A good way to practice this is to sing a lick and then play what you sang. The following example is also derived from the minor pentatonic scale, but is in the key of G. Learn to play it and then analyze it using the method just described.

Peter Gelling

Peter Gelling

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Class Sessions

1- Using the Whole Fretboard 2- Notes on the First String 3- The 12-Bar Blues 4- The Eighth Note 5- The Triplet 6- Notes on the Fourth String 7- Sixteenth Notes 8- Playing Two Strings Together 9- The Minor Pentatonic Scale 10- Chords 11- INTRODUCTION 12- The Half Bar 13- Rests 14- Ties And Syncopation 15- Using the Guitar Pickups 16- Minor Chords 17- The Major Scale 18- Arpeggios 19- Learning All the Notes 20- Using Guitar Effects 21- Vibrato 22- How to Read Music 23- Scale Degrees 24- Moving to Different Keys 25- Slurs 26- The Trail Off 27- Five Forms of the Pentatonic 28- The Release Bend 29- Moving Between Forms 30- Getting Your Hands Moving 31- Bending Notes 32- The Slide 33- The Trill 34- Analyzing What You Play 35- Reverb 36- C Major Scale in Open Position 37- Sliding Pattern 2 38- Electric Guitars 39- Identifying Scale Patterns 40- The Lead-in 41- The Full Bar 42- Notes on the Sixth String 43- Vibrato With Bent Notes 44- Sixteenth Note Groupings 45- Slight Bends 46- Swing Rhythms 47- Chords I IV and V in all Keys 48- Tones and Semitones 49- Right Hand Technique 50- Overdrive and Distortion 51- Alternate Picking 52- Notes on the Fifth String 53- Power Chords 54- Chord Symbols 55- Tablature 56- Rests With Chord Playing 57- Playing Two Strings With the First Finger 58- Pickup Selector Switches 59- Visualizing 60- The G Major Scale 61- Picking the Open Strings 62- Pentatonic Blues Solo 63- Notes on the Second String 64- The Shuffle 65- The Chromatic Scale 66- Delay 67- Notes on the Sixth String 68- The Symbols 8va and loco 69- Music Notation 70- Harmonizing Scales With Power Chords 71- Movable Power Chords 72- Left Hand Technique 73- Rhythm Notation 74- Riffs 75- Electric Guitar Pickups 76- Learning the Notes on the Staff 77- Jam Along Progressions 78- Amplifiers 79- Notes on the Third String 80- Left Hand Technique 81- Chorus 82- Learning the Whole Fretboard 83- Strumming 84- Keys and Key Signatures 85- The Open Position 86- Listening 87- The Open Strings of the Guitar 88- Notes on the Guitar Fretboard 89- Flanger 90- Types of Amplifiers 91- Major Chord Formations 92- More titles by LearnToPlayMusic.com 93- Understanding the Control Knobs 94- Bar Lines 95- Strings 96- Time Signatures 97- Chord Symbols

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