9:1 Except for the 4th and 5th
strings this pattern of intervals is true at any place on the guitar.
9:2 The root is always played with the index
finger in this exercise.
The 2nd
note, a flat 3 interval, is always played with the pinky finger in this
exercise. Flat 3 is three half steps up
from the root on the same string. A half
step is 1 fret.
The 3rd
note is a 4 interval in comparison to the root note, and it is reached by skipping to
the next highest string, and is always played with the index finger.
The 4th
note of the repeatable pattern is a 2 interval.
It is played with the ring finger on the same string as the root, but 2
half steps up from the root.
9:2 The aim is through repeating exercises like
this one many times, speed, fluidity and outright finesse will be3developed.
9:4 Whether you are positioned at the 12th
fret, the 7th fret, the 5th fret, or the 1st
fret, or any other fret for that matter; or if you use the 1st and 2nd
string, the 2nd and 3rd string, 3rd and 4th
string, or the 5th and 6th string, the pattern remains
the same. The index finger will play the
lowest note with respect to tonality, and that will be the root note. The root note is the same as the key that you
are in.
Note: When making the lesson name, the numbering
system used reflects each note of the system with respect to the major scale,
where “1,” is the root note of the Ionian Major scale, and all Ionian notes are
considered to be major, instead of flat or sharp. Thus, a lesson may be of a different scalar
mode, but that will be disregarded in favor of Ionian labeling, such that
though the Ionian major scale has no minor 3rd, or “no flat 3,” if
there a flat 3 in the lesson, this flat 3 will be labeled as such where major 3
is just simply a 3 interval. For example in the key
of G, the note B is the major third. In
G, if a B flat is used, then B flat is flat 3.
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