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Analyzing What You Play

Lesson 2/151 | Study Time: 5 Min
Analyzing What You Play

Analyzing What You Play

With any scale you learn, it is important to know how each note of the scale relates to the root note or key note, in order to make sense of licks within the key you are in. This can be achieved by learning to identify scale degrees by ear, and analyzing them. It is worth comparing the notes of the minor pentatonic scale with those of the major scale. The following text shows the note names and the scale degrees of both scales in the key of C.

Notice that the minor pentatonic scale does not contain the degrees 2 or 6, and that the 3rd and 7th degrees are flattened. Play through the C minor pentatonic scale several times, naming the scale degrees as you play each one. When you can do this from memory, transpose it to other keys by moving it up or down the fretboard. Notice that the scale degrees remain the same regardless of what key you are playing in.

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

It is a good idea to analyze many licks using a particular scale. This will help you become thoroughly familiar with the sounds available from that scale so 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 you are playing, the more control you have over what you play, and the more you can interact with other musicians. Stick with it, 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, this time in the key of G. Learn to play it and then analyze it using the method described previously.

Peter Gelling

Peter Gelling

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Class Sessions

1- INTRODUCTION 2- Tuning Up 3- Rhythm Notation 4- Understanding Chords 5- Eighth Note Rhythms 6- Identifying Eighth Note Rhythms 7- Playing Single Notes (Picking) 8- Notes on the 4th String 9- Notes on the 6th String 10- Learning all the Notes 11- The Triplet 12- The Minor Pentatonic Scale 13- The Blues Scale 14- The Mixolydian Scale 15- Boogie Rhythms 16- Bar Chords 17- 7th Bar Chords 18- Learning the Whole Fretboard 19- Movable Shuffle Patterns 20- Turnarounds 21- Ninth Chords 22- LESSON TWENTY ONE 23- Movable Chord Shapes in Five Forms 24- Picking Technique 25- Slurs 26- The Slide 27- Bending Notes 28- The Release Bend 29- Vibrato 30- The Trail-off 31- Moving to Different Keys 32- Analyzing What You Play 33- Five Forms of the Pentatonic Scale 34- Moving Between Forms 35- More About the Blues Scale 36- Twelve Eight Time 37- Arpeggios 38- Common 16th Note Rhythms 39- The Trill 40- Swinging Sixteenth Notes 41- R&B Rhythms 42- Minor Key Sounds 43- New Orleans Rhumba 44- Eight Bar Blues 45- Swamp Sounds 46- Quarter Note Triplets 47- Intros 48- Double Guitar Effects 49- Right Hand Fingerpicking 50- Picking Notes Together 51- The Shuffle Bass 52- How to Tune Your Guitar 53- GLOSSARY OF MUSICAL TERMS 54- Tuning Your Guitar 55- The G Major Chord 56- Blues Chords 57- The 12 Bar Blues Progression 58- Alternate Strumming 59- Ties 60- Notes on the 3rd String 61- Blues in Minor Keys 62- Playing Chords Staccato 63- Sharps 64- Strumming Triplets 65- Open Position Minor Pentatonic 66- Open Position A Blues Scale 67- Open String Mixolydian Riffs 68- Notes on the Sixth String 69- Minor Bar Chords 70- Notes on the Guitar Fretboard 71- Shuffle Variations 72- Movable 7th Chord Forms 73- The Whip 74- Open String Sounds 75- Combining Scales and Arpeggios 76- The Symbol 8va 77- The Rake 78- The Seven Sharp Nine Chord 79- More New Chords 80- Slow Blues in Minor Keys 81- Sliding Ninth Chords 82- Chicago Blues Sounds 83- Jazz Style Blues 84- Endings 85- Combining Rhythm and Lead 86- Picking With Your Thumb 87- Constant Bass Style 88- Adding Extra Bass Notes 89- Acoustic Guitars 90- Strumming 91- Keys 92- Chords I IV and V in all Keys 93- Syncopation 94- Notes on the 2nd String 95- Notes on the 5th String 96- The Lead-in 97- The Chromatic Scale 98- Swing Rhythms 99- Blues Licks 100- Open Position E Blues Scale 101- Experimenting With Sounds 102- Percussive Strumming 103- The Half Bar 104- Notes in More Than One Place 105- Voicings 106- Lost in the Blues 107- Classic Blues Rhythm Patterns 108- Augmented and Diminished Chords 109- One Chord Grooves 110- Putting it all Together 111- Electric Guitars 112- The Seventh Chord 113- I IV and V as 7th Chords 114- Note and Rest Values 115- Riffs 116- Flats 117- The Shuffle 118- E Minor Pentatonic Scale 119- Root 5 Bar Chords 120- Position Playing 121- Super-imposing Chord Forms 122- Summary of Blues Scales 123- The Charleston Rhythm 124- Amplifiers 125- Slide Finger 126- Alternate Picking 127- Power Chords 128- Notes on the Fifth String 129- Unison Notes 130- Jam Along Progressions 131- Summary of Dominant 7th 132- Understanding the Control Knobs 133- Chord Progressions 134- Notes on the 1st String 135- Right Hand Damping 136- Changing Between Shapes 137- Higher and Lower Octaves of Notes 138- Listening 139- Strings 140- The C Major Chord 141- Tablature Size and Style 142- Chord Diagrams 143- The Pivot 144- Rhythm Notation 145- Scale Diagrams 146- Tablature 147- Tablature Symbols 148- How to Hold the Guitar 149- Technique 150- How to Read Music 151- Music Notation

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