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The Minor Pentatonic Scale

Lesson 2/65 | Study Time: 5 Min
Course: Blues Guitar
The Minor Pentatonic Scale

The Minor Pentatonic Scale

Not all Blues rhythm guitar parts use chords, many songs sound great with single note riffs instead, often doubling or complementing the bass line. To create good riffs, it is necessary to know several scales and arpeggios.

Probably the most common scale in Blues is the minor pentatonic scale. As the name suggests, this scale contains five different notes. Its degrees compared to a major scale are 1, b3, 4, 5, and b7. Here is a common fingering for the minor pentatonic scale in the key of A.

A Minor Pentatonic

Try running up and down the scale a few times until you have the sound and the fingering memorized. Here are two examples showing the scale ascending and descending.

Most single note riffs which follow the 12 Bar Blues progression begin on degrees 1, 4 and 5 of whichever scale they are using. The more familiar you are with these scale degrees, the easier it will be to learn new riffs. This exercise should help you become familiar with the positioning of degrees 1, 4 and 5 within the minor pentatonic scale.

In many riffs, the fingering for the 5th degree of the scale is on the same strings as the 4th degree, but moved up two frets. This ends up more practical than changing to a different set of strings. The new fingering is demonstrated in bars 9 and 12 of this example. The picking here should be alternating down and upstrokes.

Here is a riff in the key of A which is derived from the minor pentatonic scale. In the final bar, there is an extra note which comes from the Blues scale, which is the subject of the following lesson.

Peter Gelling

Peter Gelling

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