The "Secret" Pentatonic Scale Shapes - Lead Guitar Lesson [GuitarTeacher.com]

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Uploaded by on Aug 10, 2010

Most Blues and Rock guitarists connect the Minor Pentatonic scale using just two patterns that cover the entire neck. Learn them in this guitar lesson from GuitarTeacher.com instructor Storm Stenvold.

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  • thanks for that, good teacher.

  • Thank you

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  • GRACIAS! thanks from Valencia (Spain)

  • MAESTRO!!! Thanks for that... Greetings from Argentina! (:

  • thank you for the post

  • The song: funk 49 uses this scale

  • fav

  • cool

    

  • @SharpDressedMan32

    here is what i do ... write a cool main lead lick. *play main lick and after the main lick play about 2 or 3 notes then go back to *main lick then 3 or 4 different notes then back to *main lick then perhaps only 1 or 2 notes then *main lick and 3 or 4 notes ending on root note. that would be 4 measures (count the *) of a solo that keeps the notes familiar but not boring. by the way the 2 or 3 or 4 or whatever notes is totally up to you. its your creation.

  • THAT WAS VERY GOOD LESSON-THANKS---

  • That makes a lot of sense. You view the guitar more like a keyboard or vibes that way. On those instruments, the shapes for everything are the same in every octave. I tune my guitar in perfect fourths all the way across so I can play all my intervals, chords, and scales the same way in every octave.

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