The Best Way to Practice Scales - Part 4

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  • Опубликовано: 30 июн 2024
  • Troy Stetina demonstrates the best way to practice scales on guitar. Part 4 of 4. Chords are just scales played skipping every other note. Explanation and examples. This is the beginning of being able to use scales melodically as well as play over chord changes.
    0:00 Intro
    0:24 Chords are scales with skips
    1:41 The Two Kinds of Notes
    2:17 Gravitation points
    4:00 Improvised melody in scales
    4:52 Integrating modes and 7ths
    6:53 The benefits
    8:07 Extended arpeggios
    10:40 The big picture
    12:03 Outro
  • ВидеоклипыВидеоклипы

Комментарии • 20

  • @lizaltman1200
    @lizaltman1200 6 месяцев назад +1

    Troy is my first virtual teacher. Back in the 90s. He made a decent player

  • @MrPageplayer
    @MrPageplayer 11 месяцев назад +1

    About 25 years ago, I had one of Troy's lesson books I bought at a music store ..
    He was teaching way before RUclips.
    🤜🤛

  • @Carlos-cx2nv
    @Carlos-cx2nv 2 года назад +3

    I'm praying for you and your wife full recovery. All the best. Stay safe

  • @hamsterdogcat
    @hamsterdogcat 2 года назад +2

    Thank you very much for all free lessions, i feel very honored to been one of those who watch this! I do appreciate you and your music a lot. Greetings from Sweden.

  • @the_releaser
    @the_releaser 2 года назад +3

    I have 5 guitar teachers.
    I'm learning a bit of everything from all of them.
    Basic music theory from Jake Lizzio, and Ben Eller.
    Inspiration on life philosophy from Michael Angelo Batio. No way on earth any mortal like me could ever hope to play like him, so I just learn life philosophy from him.
    From Kiko Loureiro, I'm learning to undo years of bad habits and poor finger control and sloppy unsyncopated playing.
    And from my one true guitar master, I'm learning to play the guitar and learning that even me, without any talent, I can still learn to play the guitar, even if it's only just strumming chords.
    I truly don't understand how you have so few subs to your channel.
    You are an amazing guitar teacher. One of the best and most inspiring ones.
    I call you master, like the Jedi padawans call the Jedi masters master.
    There is a whole generation of guitarists out there, playing and even teaching a second generation of guitarists and it's all thanks to the seeds of guitar that you planted.
    Thank you for your inspirational teaching. You are a living legend.

    • @TroyStetinaMusic
      @TroyStetinaMusic  2 года назад +3

      Thank you for those very kind words. I kinda missed the boat on youtube. I mean, I started the channel many years ago but only put up a few videos and basically it just sat there as I was preoccupied with other things. But just this year I finally made it a priority to start uploading content. And it's growing now! To that end, please watch/rate my vids and share them! 😃 much appreciated!

  • @darkfeder7715
    @darkfeder7715 2 года назад +4

    Thank you Troy, this is true gold, I really don't know why you got so few credit for what you do. That's a shame.

  • @DS-dm7el
    @DS-dm7el 2 года назад +1

    Good day! I thank you very much for your work! Thanks to your materials, I learned to play the guitar. The book "Rhythm guitar in heavy metal style" helped a lot. thank you very much! And I also wish you success and good health!

  • @notregistereduser
    @notregistereduser 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for the lessons.

  •  2 года назад +1

    Nice explanation Troy.

  • @balajibala6606
    @balajibala6606 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for the nice guidance sir...

  • @beaglegod1
    @beaglegod1 2 года назад

    I have a question. I'm at the last solo of Lead Primer and the last song of Rythm 1. I've been spending about 45-60 minutes a day practicing the major/minor chord shapes (CAGED) along with their respective scale shapes across the fretboard. Are these concepts or something similar covered later in the method, where I'd be better off focusing that time on making further progress through the method? I have a tendency to look up information which leads me to adding more and more things to practice. I'm wondering if being a little more Lazer focused on the method would be best.

    • @TroyStetinaMusic
      @TroyStetinaMusic  2 года назад +1

      MLG 2 does include a number of scales, modes and theory, and the pentatonic boxes are laid out in chapter 11. And there is a bit of seeing arpeggios within scales, but not specifically the CAGED chords. That’s covered more fully in Fretboard Mastery. So I’d suggest you continue to review the major/minor shapes on the neck. But I think 45 minutes of that is overkill. Maybe 10 minutes a day and more of your time in application