INTERVALS explained by GUITAR GENIUS Tom Quayle! 🧠🎸

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  • Опубликовано: 1 фев 2025
  • Ibanez Signature TQM1-NTF Tom Quayle AZ 👉 gtrgtr.uk/TQM1...
    Tom Quayle Online 👉 www.tomquayle....
    Not too long ago, we had the absolute genius guitarist Tom Quayle visit our Birmingham store for an in-store clinic along with his amazing signature Ibanez guitar. We learnt tons of amazing tips from Tom, and we made sure to document some of them!
    In this excerpt, Tom explains how to nail your intervals in a way that isn't overwhelming or fatiguing. Thanks Tom!
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Комментарии • 160

  • @ForrestWest
    @ForrestWest 11 месяцев назад +16

    Learning these intervallic functions in one octave is exactly the thing to do along with learning Triads and moving around on the neck. Wonderful lesson and very helpful.

  • @TheCrazyCartModChannel
    @TheCrazyCartModChannel 5 месяцев назад +14

    This is EXACTLY how I taught guitar to my students many years ago. I think anything in life should be broken down and distilled into its most simple concept to best understand it.

  • @JohnSmith-in1tt
    @JohnSmith-in1tt 2 месяца назад +1

    As someone trying to learn jazz and complex chord voicings, this method is INCREDIBLY helpful for figuring out chords without having to google chord diagrams. Really strengthens music theory knowledge too

  • @DiogenesNephew
    @DiogenesNephew 2 года назад +37

    This is exactly how I've been approaching my understanding of the fretboard over the last several months, and it's insanely useful.

    • @lps.444
      @lps.444 Год назад +1

      Where did you learn all the different interval shapes?

    • @DiogenesNephew
      @DiogenesNephew Год назад

      @lps.444 So how I answer this will depend on what you already know. Are you familiar with the intervals that make up the major scale?

    • @lps.444
      @lps.444 Год назад

      ⁠@@DiogenesNephewyes. whole whole half whole whole whole half

    • @DiogenesNephew
      @DiogenesNephew Год назад

      @lps.444 I mean the intervals between the root and each other note in the scale. E.g. Unison, M2, M3, P4, etc.

    • @lps.444
      @lps.444 Год назад

      Oh sorry then no I don’t

  • @Danilo8208SS
    @Danilo8208SS 2 года назад +12

    This is the single most important concept for getting good at guitar for players that have made it beyond struggling with getting your hands to move right.

  • @kagenotatsumaki
    @kagenotatsumaki Год назад +21

    I'm not always the biggest fan of Tom's style of playing, sometimes he plays something mind blowingly awesome, but most of the time what he plays is usually pretty neutral for me, BUT his explanation of Intervals is literally THE key concept that took me from floundering around the first Pentatonic scale shape, power chords and the 5 cowboy chords, to actually being able to look at the Guitar and figure out how all the seemingly overwhelming scales and chords in a way that let me get most of them down anywwhere within a few days to a week or 2 of practice.
    Without Tom Quyale, I wouldn't be the Guitarist I am today, which is still a pretty crap one, but people compliment my playing more than they criticize so I'll take it! XD and for that I say thank you for everything Tom! ❤️

    • @guitarguitaruk
      @guitarguitaruk  Год назад

      Great insight into your playing journey there! It can be such a liberating feeling when you find something, or someone (Tom in this case) that can really level up your playing. We got loads from this video too and glad to hear you got something too! Big thanks to Tom for sure :)

    • @lps.444
      @lps.444 Год назад

      Can you please explain to me where I can find all of the interval shapes? I've tried google but there's too much inaccurate stuff to filter through. Thanks!

    • @DiogenesNephew
      @DiogenesNephew Год назад

      @lps.444 Google "fretjam intervals." They have a comprehensive explanation and visuals.

    • @JohnSmith-in1tt
      @JohnSmith-in1tt 2 месяца назад

      @@lps.444I know this is a year late, but if you haven’t found anything yet, first learn what an interval is and how they’re used to make the major scale.
      Then learn to play the C major scale well (one position is fine) and map out the position of the root (C) to all of the other scale degrees. If you can remember their positions in one key, then you’re good to go and can just move those positions around to play other keys.
      Ex: C major scale is: C D E F G A B C. Learn where the D is on the fretboard compared to the root (C) and that’s your second. Learn where the E is on your fretboard compared to the root (C) and that’s your third, keep going until you do the whole scale and you’re good!

  • @cravertom
    @cravertom 2 года назад +10

    best 12 minutes ive spent on youtube in a very long time..thanks for making us all better.

  • @coffeecupman
    @coffeecupman 2 года назад +8

    One day the light will come on. Until then I will never know how it is that I can be so smart with everything else and yet so instantly thick when it's music theory time...

    • @mckeifus
      @mckeifus 10 месяцев назад +1

      Ya I have no clue what this dude is talking about

    • @mrelmoresmusiclab
      @mrelmoresmusiclab 6 месяцев назад +1

      Don't even stress it. I tried to make a video on my channel about the circle of fifths and there's so much information to break down. Just connect little chunks at a time.

    • @smoothcriminal011
      @smoothcriminal011 2 месяца назад

      @@mckeifus yea these videos seem to make it way more confusing ngl

  • @tlkshowhst
    @tlkshowhst Год назад +2

    This is like the greatest lesson ever.

  • @otterhopper
    @otterhopper 2 года назад +2

    Oh my gosh. This is such a better way to approach melodic harmony!

  • @mikemcsween1847
    @mikemcsween1847 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for sharing. One big stumbling block; did I miss where you said what an interval is? Is a 1 to 2 one fret apart, and so on? Feel like strong understanding of theory is prerequisite. Thanks!

  • @lawrencetaylor4101
    @lawrencetaylor4101 Год назад

    I just got my baritone ukulele and have to learn the fretboard. What a lifesaver.

  • @kevinh4042
    @kevinh4042 2 года назад +3

    Very interesting approach to studying music...I'm not sure how to start practicing this approach though.

  • @paullapointe
    @paullapointe 6 месяцев назад

    glad to know all the chord forms ive been learning with roots and function will some day pay off i legit just learned all the 7th in nat minor and was like whaaaaat thats exactly the stuff i like lol love when you think ya have to be super creative then ya just learn some stuff and it clicks and your like sweet

  • @ThuceeRolls
    @ThuceeRolls 2 года назад +17

    There's an app called Solo that Tom made for this exact purpose. I use it daily as an exercise, highly recommend to help with visualization of the guitar through intervallic functions!

    • @bentenpeterson
      @bentenpeterson 2 года назад

      Thanks for that info.!

    • @jankowalski6338
      @jankowalski6338 2 года назад +3

      15 pounds? No, thanks.

    • @smalldog1
      @smalldog1 2 года назад +7

      @@jankowalski6338 15 dollars is probably the absolute least you could invest in any piece of material to get you better at guitar. Not plugging the app he's involved with (although I have tried it) - but please. 15 dollars is dirt cheap in the world of music and music materials (barring everything out there which is free).

    • @manasdas9461
      @manasdas9461 Год назад

      ​@@smalldog1I have an acoustic guitar ..does the app recognise the sound of an acoustic guitar??

    • @smalldog1
      @smalldog1 Год назад

      Hey I'm sorry, I just saw this. Yeah, it just uses your phones microphone - you can use any instrument. You can even sing into it. @@manasdas9461

  • @tommyredline6432
    @tommyredline6432 4 месяца назад

    This is a phenomenal piece of insight. Wow

  • @wurzlgaming
    @wurzlgaming 2 месяца назад

    he forgot to say that alot arpeggios are of course different to play - i would say that the standard tuning makes sweep picking much more easier. there is a reason why the guitar is tuned not like a 6 string bass-guitar. ive been playing P4ths for one year and i figured out that standard tuning offers more variety because of the halfstep between the 4th and 5th string. i dont want to move two frets up or down to get the sound i need. one fret is faster

    • @DF-de8ib
      @DF-de8ib Месяц назад

      Exactly. 100%.

  • @markslist1542
    @markslist1542 2 года назад +1

    Tom is a legend.

  • @Hi-Z_Lo-Z
    @Hi-Z_Lo-Z 2 года назад +4

    Learn the same melody in diff octaves to learn the fret board. Then do it again and again with other melodies. Have fun learning all!!!

    • @DreamPurpleFloyd
      @DreamPurpleFloyd 2 года назад +3

      Yeah it's a good tip. I started doing it with the themes of simple jazz standards and it works great. if you know how to play the theme all over the neck it's way easier to paraphrase it!

  • @chrisvantassel8867
    @chrisvantassel8867 2 года назад +7

    Nice job Tom, love the way you delivery the message, great teaching!

  • @danbromberg
    @danbromberg 2 года назад +1

    At 2:32 when Tom refers to 4ths Tuning by tuning the top 2 strings higher, is he saying that string 2 (B) should match string 3's fret 5 instead of fret 4 (and similarly for string 1)?

    • @javierfoo993
      @javierfoo993 2 года назад

      Yes, so essentially your B is tuned to C and your high E is tuned to an F

    • @wmc128
      @wmc128 Год назад

      Circle of Fifths FCGDAEB in reverse is the circle of fouths BEADGCF.

    • @fastilafuska
      @fastilafuska 4 месяца назад

      How to do it without breaking my string?

    • @danbromberg
      @danbromberg 3 месяца назад

      @@javierfoo993 Thanks for verifying!

    • @brianmorris2643
      @brianmorris2643 9 дней назад

      If you are focused on all things jazz 4th tuning is the way to go for many of us...​@@danbromberg

  • @nedim_guitar
    @nedim_guitar 2 года назад

    Tom Quayle is a master of guitar!

  • @jgianan
    @jgianan 11 месяцев назад +1

    Probably more useful if the camera is angled straight on so the frets and fingers are visible. Either that or supplement with some visual. I know - unsolicited suggestion but hopefully something to consider. Thanks much!

  • @andres.igmendez
    @andres.igmendez 2 года назад +1

    been following Tom for a while and this method is amazing once you understand it. it opens the fretboard so much! Are you going to post the rest of the clinic?

  • @eduintulcan
    @eduintulcan 8 месяцев назад

    muchas gracias por la informacion! puedo encontrar este material en idioma español?

  • @robdixson196
    @robdixson196 6 дней назад

    I often fall asleep to ear training exercise:))

  • @andyw6026
    @andyw6026 2 года назад

    Oh god, how awesome Tom....

  • @billbeggs1905
    @billbeggs1905 4 месяца назад

    I listened carefully. What do I do with this information? Think I don't know enough yet for this info to be useful to me. Maybe, I'll stick to writing pop songs. I glad the other comments say the light. Best wishes.

  • @handleOfThy
    @handleOfThy 2 года назад +2

    didnt fall a sleep but half way throught I was lost in my thoughts

  •  Год назад

    This guy's always exuded intelligence. Big fan of his.

  • @ellic.trudel866
    @ellic.trudel866 Год назад

    thanks man and you have a really cool guitar

  • @TomSounds
    @TomSounds 2 года назад +8

    He is a master in playing but also a grandmaster in tuition!

  • @Betterthantelly
    @Betterthantelly 2 года назад

    Great lesson.

  • @kevinriveraguitar
    @kevinriveraguitar Год назад

    If you want to develop a deep understanding of the fretboard and start visualizing harmony learn this. Learn it the hard way. Go through all the 11 intervals one by one through all permutations. You will evolve as a player.

  • @BlackonBlack-
    @BlackonBlack- 2 года назад +4

    Okay, but the question is in what order should we learn them? Chromatic? R,b2,2,b3,3,4 etc or you do major-minor arpegios? or like in this lesson 1,2,3,4 probably a major scale, and after that learn other intervals? 🤔

    • @sacredgeometry
      @sacredgeometry 2 года назад +3

      It doesn't matter, you are going to get through all of them anyway.
      Personally I would do it chromatically because it would force you to learn the function of each note irrespective of functional priority but for most people I would probably recommend do it in the order of chord tones.
      root then 3rds then 5th then 7ths then 9ths etc.
      And their variants, minor major, perfect, diminished and augmented.

    • @BlackonBlack-
      @BlackonBlack- 2 года назад +3

      @@sacredgeometry okay, thank you :)
      The difficulty is in keeping this routine. I tired learning chromatically couple of times before, and i fail to continue memorizing, because to be able to immediately recognize these intervals without a millisecond of doubt ascending/descending on all strings you have to sit with them for a while.. All the scale patterns we know by memory is just sooo much easier hahaha... so i tried doing only octaves for a week, only b2 for a week , only M2 for a week, m3 for a week all over the neck.. and then i just got lazy and dropped this technique..
      Man.. i should try focusing on it again :)

    • @DreamPurpleFloyd
      @DreamPurpleFloyd 2 года назад +3

      @@BlackonBlack- Quick advice from an experienced player: you don't have to keep practicing a concept until you've totaly mastered it. If you practiced the chromatic scale for a while and you're getting tired of it, you can just stop practicing it and focus on something more exciting instead. You'll come back to it eventually anyway, it's just a matter of time.

  • @FretboardMaestro
    @FretboardMaestro Год назад +2

    One thing he's missing, is the person learning scales/ intervals, would have to know all the formulas for said scales if he/she would reproduce them based on intervallic knowledge

    • @yakzivz1104
      @yakzivz1104 Год назад +1

      exactly

    • @ItsJustRyan89
      @ItsJustRyan89 Год назад +1

      You can learn it whatever way round you want.
      Knowing the intervals, means you can apply it to the scale formula.
      I’d say it easier to learn intervals first, than the formula.

  • @alanwhite4809
    @alanwhite4809 2 года назад

    Bruh started dipping his toes into the Mandalorian theme song for a second there.

  • @undriftedpop788
    @undriftedpop788 8 месяцев назад

    So I have learned the definition of Intervals and each one like a thousand times, but i have no idea how to use them and I cant find any video that explains, its all just telling me what each interval is and the note gaps

  • @kangcendolla
    @kangcendolla 2 года назад +3

    Part two .please

  • @Joe_Grant_music
    @Joe_Grant_music 2 года назад

    Where can we get access to the full video

  • @unislayer50
    @unislayer50 10 месяцев назад

    here i am waiting for a lesson on my favorite band Intervals...

  • @guitar9310
    @guitar9310 11 месяцев назад

    I feel like perfect 4th is more monophonic and standard is polyphonic!

  • @DavidETrotman
    @DavidETrotman 2 года назад

    Nice break down

  • @danielhenneberry7445
    @danielhenneberry7445 2 года назад

    I literally fell asleep while watching this 😇

  • @nahkubnah
    @nahkubnah 2 года назад

    superb

  • @xwhite2020
    @xwhite2020 2 года назад +1

    I'm just going to make a cup of tea.

  • @j.p.7708
    @j.p.7708 2 года назад +2

    You’re miss a few zeros from the views, this is absolute gold👍👍👍👍

  • @CRP2426
    @CRP2426 2 года назад

    Great simple concept. Really useful for playing the changes. Thanks for Sharing.

  • @wanton_chips3638
    @wanton_chips3638 2 года назад

    BEAUTIFUL QUESTION at the end, man asked exactly what I was needing clarification on

  • @Crema59
    @Crema59 Год назад

    I fell asleep before it ended zZzz

  • @SkepticalLlama
    @SkepticalLlama 2 года назад

    Serious question: is it Tom-brah? Tambour? I don’t know!

  • @kc8923
    @kc8923 2 года назад +4

    Would be helpful to have a view of the fretboard and his fingers as he's explaining this.

  • @Steve-wz5pz
    @Steve-wz5pz 4 месяца назад

    Just do this.

  • @Reimua
    @Reimua Год назад

    God guitarist and god teacher. I will be seeking out as much tom quayle lessons as google can provide me.

  • @mohitrahaman
    @mohitrahaman 2 года назад

    ggwp mr quayle

  • @georgecaplan11
    @georgecaplan11 Год назад

    Would have been better if the camera angle focused on the notes he was actually playing - it’s a talk about intervals .

  • @PopovSB
    @PopovSB 3 месяца назад

    I don't understand why Tom is contrasting intervals and boxes/CAGED? After all, the same intervals or degrees work in boxes, CAGED or 3NPS, they just need to be understood.
    He talks about intervals and degrees like it's some kind of discovery. In fact, his fingers move through all the same patterns of scales and arpeggios plus passing chromatic notes.
    Any box is a graphic representation of intervals and steps. You are not going to find the steps of the R M2 M3 P4 etc. in real time every time.
    Boxes, CAGED, 3NPS give you a ready made chart of intervals.
    The ingenious trick is to sell something long known as a unique invention.

  • @Kyrelel
    @Kyrelel 2 года назад

    The subtitles could do with a couple of tweaks

  • @TimotheeLee
    @TimotheeLee Год назад

    Why does every "lesson" on musical theory have to be dumbed down for guitarists? Intervals are the basic building blocks for all of music. What do we we get in this? This is a C and two frets up I the next note?

  • @yakzivz1104
    @yakzivz1104 Год назад

    actually the way that he is explaining it, is more difficult to understand than the way I learned. Most of the time, the 1st and 2nd note are 2 frets apart- whole step. Intervals are not hard to understand- it's just how people explain it

  • @anthonyjohnson4734
    @anthonyjohnson4734 2 года назад +13

    Just remember the 5 is never major or minor but always above the root. The 6th note of any major scale is the root of the glorious nasty pentatonic scale that you should know all 5 positions.

  • @Dodzee.44
    @Dodzee.44 9 месяцев назад

    ive come a long way on guitar over the last 30 years but just don't understand theory for the life of me
    absolutely no clue

  • @tubingforever
    @tubingforever 2 года назад

    My brain hurts.

  • @anthonykinrade8642
    @anthonykinrade8642 Год назад

    With a name like Quayle, is there a Manx connection?

  • @quantmajor
    @quantmajor Год назад +1

    great video,
    bad camera placement

  • @ronswary
    @ronswary 2 года назад

    Tuned to 4ths on a guitar is awful , works great for a bass bc of single notes . Like he said all chords are gone tho .. don’t tune to 4ths save yourself the headache

  • @screamingjimmy
    @screamingjimmy 2 года назад

    well done

  • @Free_Falastin2024
    @Free_Falastin2024 2 года назад +2

    TL;DW use the number system

  • @vizzlybear3691
    @vizzlybear3691 2 года назад

    Great guitarist and teacher, shame about the camera angle.

  • @ngc-ho1xd
    @ngc-ho1xd 2 года назад +2

    It's 3:16 in and I still don't know where he's going this. His guitar isn't even in standard tuning. Before anyone says it, It's not that I don't have the attention span to watch the whole thing, it's just that the nature of the RUclips algorithm, there's millions of basically what amounts to spam videos by so called geniuses. If you really are good, give your audience a reason to stick around.

    • @G_Demolished
      @G_Demolished 2 года назад +5

      It’s funny because you couldn’t be bothered to watch the video but found the time to type out a complaint.

    • @valebliz
      @valebliz 2 года назад

      Eh, being superficial isn’t anything particularly novel, don’t flatter yourself.

    • @emersonherrmann6106
      @emersonherrmann6106 2 года назад +2

      Wasn't sure if I was crazy but I feel you. I learned how to move up one tone and I'm 5 minutes in 🙄

    • @ChristopCo
      @ChristopCo Год назад

      He's obviously very skilled and very intelligent, but this is easily one of the most confusing videos I've seen on the subject. This would have been infinitely easier if he had just mentioned that the intervals are different note relationships between the root and other notes in a major scale. What I got out of it is that he's emphasizing using your ear and knowledge of notes on the fretboard to pick up the note intervals rather than memorizing scale patterns, but I'm just not seeing anything groundbreaking about this concept and it's terrible as an introduction to anyone new to learning the concept of intervals.

  • @markauckland666
    @markauckland666 2 года назад +1

    Genius is a bold claim

  • @ElTravis
    @ElTravis 2 года назад

    I’m good.

  • @juan3268
    @juan3268 Год назад

    This could have been an e-mail. Guitar frets, 1/2 step. Learn how to count fast and you know all the scales

  • @gregorydorrell5543
    @gregorydorrell5543 Год назад

    If you understood any of that then you’re cleverer than I am😂

  • @gitarbangsatchanel8036
    @gitarbangsatchanel8036 2 года назад

    Genius

  • @curtisnewton895
    @curtisnewton895 2 года назад

    ok but how's this gonna help me play that song
    where is the rest of the video for god sake

  • @sacredgeometry
    @sacredgeometry 2 года назад +6

    There is an easier way to teach this but it would be less useful in the grand scheme of things.
    Learn your major scale everywhere and then work relative to the major scale.
    That way you only have to learn one scale (and its modes or rather its other positions). Then you can work relative to it. i.e. he used dorian as an example, you could look at that as a major scale but moving two notes (the 3rd and 7th notes down a semitone/ fret), although you could also think of it like a major scale where the 2nd is now the root.
    The only problem that, whilst it will make learning any scale or chord easier you will still need to learn your intervals to improve in any sophisticated way.
    Invariably you are going to learn both methods eventually *shrugs*.

  • @aljoschahunger
    @aljoschahunger 2 года назад

    ..well, i literally fell asleep after 5 minutes..

  • @BalticBuffalo
    @BalticBuffalo 2 года назад

    Who is the guitar genius?

  • @michaelwallace1189
    @michaelwallace1189 2 года назад +1

    Is there a lesson with tabs? You know, visual...

  • @Mikkeyboyy
    @Mikkeyboyy 2 года назад

    who you looking at

  • @jarfrobinksss
    @jarfrobinksss 22 дня назад

    the guitar "genius" we've never heard of

  • @morrisbartlett5513
    @morrisbartlett5513 Год назад

    I would have liked this a little better if I could see his fingers better.

  • @moxeboy
    @moxeboy 4 месяца назад +1

    Am i the only one who thinks this guy is a terrible teacher?

  • @vtatai
    @vtatai 2 года назад +1

    Not sure how this makes it easier to know "all" scales, you still need to have a rote memorization of all the intervals in each scale. The argument there sounds a bit disingenuous.

  • @ninamarqueznelson9174
    @ninamarqueznelson9174 2 года назад

    y cuando tu disco pues tom solo hay enseñanzas nomas no mames jajajaj

  • @zachjohnson9512
    @zachjohnson9512 7 месяцев назад

    I just took 2 melatonin. Is this a promise?

  • @wretch1
    @wretch1 2 года назад +5

    If this is aimed at beginners, why does he go on to jazz comping?
    If it's aimed at advanced players, why is he explaining intervals?
    Also, why is he teaching using that tuning?
    This was a train wreck.

  • @anthonybochichio4548
    @anthonybochichio4548 Год назад

    DO YOU KNOW WE CANT SEE YOUR HANDS?? BE NICE TO SIT IN FRONT OF THE CAMARA!!

  • @Mike-pv3hg
    @Mike-pv3hg Год назад

    Lol remember the guitar grimoire books? Esoteric, overcomplicated, unmemorizable blocks of dogshit. This type of approach is so much better

  • @kevinmcfarlane5182
    @kevinmcfarlane5182 Месяц назад

    Fell asleep 🙄

  • @waytospergtherebro
    @waytospergtherebro 2 года назад

    You really can't trust people who sit like this.

  • @latedriver9019
    @latedriver9019 2 года назад

    Great video, horrible captions.

  • @konjfful2963
    @konjfful2963 2 года назад +36

    "without falling asleep" ironically they got the most boring guitarist to do this

    • @Betterthantelly
      @Betterthantelly 2 года назад +10

      Ok cloth ears.

    • @Tstdycgyr
      @Tstdycgyr 2 года назад +1

      What

    • @billyarsenault1970
      @billyarsenault1970 2 года назад +1

      Lol. Your a total joke.
      Did you really come here to be entertained or learn about intervals.
      Whatever- anyone who can hate on TQ clearly has significant issues.

    • @Hadri_ART
      @Hadri_ART 2 года назад +1

      Boring?

    • @georgeapostolakos1234
      @georgeapostolakos1234 2 года назад +17

      Lol. In the unlikely event you're not just trolling around, please do humanity a favor and give up your rights to express unintelligible opinions.

  • @bunnytracks55
    @bunnytracks55 2 года назад +1

    what a mess.

  • @johnp.johnson1541
    @johnp.johnson1541 Год назад

    *Genius?! Say what?!*
    Yes, every guitarist ought to learn how to express intervals on two adjacent strings. Thus,
    R1, m2, M2, m3, M3, P4, A4 / D5, P5, A5 / m6, M6, m7, M7, P8
    Yes, every guitarist ought to learn that in nearly all scales, adjacent tones are either Major 2nds (M2) or minor 2nds (m2) most often.
    Yet, this far easier and deserves the label of genius far before the waste-of-time 12 plus minute video of babbling above.
    Behold!
    Nearly all seven tone scales (i.e., hexatonic) fall into two families: Major 3rd (M3) scales and Minor 3rd (m3) scales.
    All anyone needs to do is learn Ionian, a M3 scale, and Aeolian, a m3 scale, and then derive from either one the rest.
    Ionian is the natural major scale with these intervals: R1, M2, M3, P4, P5, M6, M7
    Mixolydian = Ionian m7
    Lydian = Ionian Aug4
    Ionian #5 = Ionian Aug5
    and so on
    Aeolian is the natural minor scale with these intervals: R1, M2, m3, P4, P5, m6, m7
    Dorian = Aeolian M6
    Dorian #4= Aeolian Aug4 M6 or Dorian Aug4
    Harmonic minor = Aeolian M7
    Phrygian =Aeolian m2
    Locrian = Aeolian m2 dim5
    G Hungarian = Aeolian Aug 4 or Harmonic minor Aug 4
    and so on.

  • @jawneetest
    @jawneetest Год назад +1

    this is a horrible way to teach intervals. the Root to the fifth the ROOT to the maj and mnor 3rd the ROOT To flat seven.... the octive..... In that order. the 2 as you call it, the snd degree os the scale,Its better to visual this way because if you now where your root your 3rd and your 6th are is i say to wheres the 4, will its betweem the 3rd and the 5th as opposed to having to look at it in a linear fashion

    • @Zastrophysics
      @Zastrophysics Год назад

      So, just to be clear, you're recommending:
      Learn in order:
      1. The root to the fifth
      2. the root to the maj 3rd
      3. the root to the minor 3rd
      4. the root to flat seven
      5. the octave
      For each scale memorize the intervalic pattern of that scale and then you'll know all the scales in all the keys?

  • @abgroovy
    @abgroovy 2 года назад

    Guitar genius jaaaajaaa... What a joke!!

    • @jan_07
      @jan_07 2 года назад +1

      This guy has taught a lot of great modern day guitar players including Jack Gardiner. If you didn’t get what he just said in this video, then you need get your brain checked, it lacks comprehension skills. Do that before even continuing with your guitar playing😂

    • @abgroovy
      @abgroovy 2 года назад

      @@jan_07 come on little Perseus!! Tom is a good guitarist and a nice teacher no doubt! But it does not make him a genius!! Sorry Perseus!!

    • @jan_07
      @jan_07 2 года назад

      @@abgroovy oh don’t tell me sh*t about geniuses, grasshopper - I work with many geniuses with high amounts of IQ every f**king day of the week. there’s levels to being genius, if you don’t know that already. The fact that he’s in that musical level and technical ability right now makes him one of them. Even if it’s not the level of “genius” that rocks your boat.

    • @abgroovy
      @abgroovy 2 года назад

      @@jan_07 again little Perseus!! Genius are known for change the order of History!! Stay with your Genius!! Baby Perseus

  • @rocker8692
    @rocker8692 6 месяцев назад

    This guy is annoying 😂

  • @robertloggins8253
    @robertloggins8253 2 года назад

    You have a buzz in your frets