EASY String skipping scale patterns that will IMPROVE your GUITAR SOUND!
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- Опубликовано: 16 июл 2024
- These easy string skipping scale patterns will improve you guitar sound drastically. This guitar lesson is all about easy wide interval and string skipping scale patterns, that are created by the string skipping guitar technique. It’s applicable for all scales, like the major scale and minor scale, modes of the major scale, harmonic minor scale and melodic minor scale for instance. In the guitar lesson you'll find musical examples and workouts for this scale string skipping guitar technique.
Tabs, examples & backing tracks for this guitar lesson:
/ wide-interval-82547759
SUBJECTS IN THIS GUITAR LESSON:
- String skipping scale patterns.
- String skipping technique.
- How to string skip.
- String skipping exercise.
- String skipping workout.
- Wide interval scale patterns.
- String skipping licks.
- String skipping arpeggios.
- 3-3 patterns.
- Modes of the major scale.
- String skipping in the harmonic minor scale.
- String skipping in the melodic minor scale.
- Music theory for guitar.
0:00 Introduction
0:56 What means wide interval?
2:21 Major scale string skipping patterns
5:17 string skipping with modes of the major scale
8:44 Chaining wide interval patterns
9:54 Other wide interval patterns
11:47 Conclusion
Social Media/contact:
www.patreon.com/QJamTracks
QJamTracks
QJamTracks
/ qjamtracks
Crystal Clear E-BOOKS with audio files:
qjamtracks.myshopify.com/
Artwork: (c) 2021, Rob van Hal
(c)2023 Rob van Hal, Netherlands
Just what I needed. This man has the best teaching material
Indeed he is the best teacher on the web that I've seen.
The most popular guy, you know him, I only understand if I already know what he's talking about.
Great lesson didn't expect to see a Malmsteen lick.
The thing I like about this guy is that while he teaches very cool and hip contemporary guitar in his lessons, he comes at it with a traditional music theory perspective. For me, it makes his lessons easy to understand. Kudos!
Thanks!
What a great lesson.
Nice I heard the yngwie lick. great video
I have been wondering about this topic. I'm a huge Periphery fan and they seem to use this a lot! I've been trying to write more progressive metal stuff that sounds like Periphery but been struggling. I find their use of wide interval scale patterns and arpeggios very interesting. I wish they would do a song breakdown of each of the guitar parts for a song.
Excelente maestro. Muy buenas lecciones 👍
I never visualized wide intervals this way. Great practicing material.
Thanks a lot ! Super.
good lesson
Groovy!
Excellent lesson, thanks!
Your videos are great. Very helpful. Thank you for sharing.
Love the Tony macalpine nod there at 10:42
Thank you!
Thanks!
Been fooling around with something very much like this for a few weeks. If you leave out notes in these patterns you get various arpeggios. E.g. leave out the middle note of the highest string and you have complete diatonic 9th arpeggios.
Great stuff Rob. I'm stealing some of the sequencing in your demonstrations 😝
very impressive, thanks for sharing sir🙏
Thanks so much sir this is powerful idea for solos
Your videos are top tier. Thank you so much
Great ideas! Im on it!!
Another top class lesson, I am enjoying the ebooks from your store Rob, thank you.
A nice Dutch ending, brilliant!
Thank you Craig!
Wonderful explain!
Thank you Cri :)
11:05 😎
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I propose permuting the order of notes on one string. Does this sound like Allan H?
In a strict 3nps approach we would jump one note higher on the B string but you seem to stay in position and do a different interval - could you comment on this a little bit? Is it just mechanically easier or you have a way of looking at it differently?
hi there, Please upload the backing tracks for practice routine sections(if we want to practice scale arpeggio patterns of 1 key) . I could not find them (for scale arpeggio lesson)
who clicks like even before you see the video :)
I have to know is there some type of advantage to not having a head stock on his green guitar I guess it would stay in tune longer?
Hi Bathrope man. Some say the advantage of a headless guitar is that headstocks can give a tiny but nasty extra sound while recording. For me the headless concept is an advantage in my small recording studio and it's just so compact. Besides this, Strandberg guitars are extreme light weight, they have a trapezium shaped neck (endure neck profile) for better positioning of the thumb and the hand and the Strandberg has fanned frets which is better for string tension of the lower strings (www.strandbergguitars.com). The guitar I use is Strandberg Boden Prog NX
@@QJamTracks I am envious of thoes faned frets I will look into them. thankyou for all the knowlage you provide it's moved my playing years ahead I've watched your melodic minor video like 10 times lol.
@@Nickshreds890 I play a li hermin it just looks of seeing thoes with no head stock
What type of guitar is that?
It's a .strandberg* Prog NX (www.strandbergguitars.com)
I a m not gonna pay 2000$ for a stupid strandberg