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The Major Scale #3: Melodic Patterns (Guitar Lesson SC-022) How to play

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Uploaded by on Dec 4, 2006

In this lesson you learn how to apply melodic patterns to your scales so they sound more like music than scales when you improvise. Covers 3rds, 4 in a line and more.

Taught by Justin Sandercoe.

Full support at the justinguitar web site where you will find hundreds of lessons on a wide range of subjects, and all the scales and chords that you will ever need! There is a great forum too to get help, no matter what the problem.

And it is all totally free, no bull. No sample lessons, no memberships, no free ebook. Just tons of great lessons :)

To get help with this lesson (and for further info and tabs), find the Lesson ID in the video title (like ST-667 or whatever) and then look it up on the Lesson Index page of justinguitar.com

http://www.justinguitar.com

Have fun :)


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  • likes, 13 dislikes

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Uploader Comments (JustinSandercoe)

  • This is probably my first time to ever comment on a video, just wanted to say that I for one really appreciate what you do, and I have seen alot of online guitar courses, no one has that gift of being so simple and dedicating oneself totally to it as well. You really cover alot of ground in guitar theories which is really helpful and I owe my 3 years of playing all to you. You are a beautiful person, god bless.

  • @alisherif90 cheers :) glad you dig it :) And thank to all the other people giving me some good vibes too!!

Top Comments

  • Your just lazy thats all , u could press pause and rewind n look again . If you were serious bout it , you'd focus , think what your doing , listen and learn.Would you like it if Justin put his hands out through your screen and played it for you..Dont be such a whinger and thank him for even bothering his ass to do it..For free

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All Comments (167)

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  • You are awsome, thanks Justin!

  • Your vid is a favorite on Pakistan

  • hi justin. can you please tell me where can i find tabs for 3rds?

  • you can also do hannon piano theory stuff for practicing scales (;

  • @rodite No, a triad is considered a chord. You don't need a seventh quality to make it officially a chord. A triad is a chord by itself. G major triad like you said, G-B-D...is a G major CHORD. If you add in a flat seventh for example, you make it G Dominant, but it still needs that Root, Third and Fifth. Triads are 100% chords, you won't find a music teacher in the World who says a triad isn't a chord.

  • A problem I've had as a guitarist is breaking out of sounding really "scale-y" in my improvisations. Just memorizing all of the notes in a given scale has hampered my creativity at times in the past, and I truly appreciate this interesting way of spicing up practice time while simultaneously giving oneself the opportunity of stumbling upon their own unique patterns. Justin, you are the man.

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