Pentatonic Scales Part 1: Fretboard Mapping
Right Now You Can Learn To Quickly And Easily Visualize Scale Patterns All Over The Fretboard!!!
Hey there fellow bass thrasher,
I have a really killer tip I want to share that easily goes undetected by many bassists.
I didn’t realize this for a long while, and it would have made it so much easier if I had!! That’s why I want to share
it with you now -you’ll be way ahead of where I was before this dawned on me…
For a long time I thought of pentatonic scales as the “dumb” version of Major and minor scales. This is far from the
truth. A lot of Rock, Blues, and RnB/Soul music are made up of nothing but pentatonic scales. Pentatonics outline a more
skeletal version of the Major and minor scales, and when play through two octaves, it can help make mapping the
fretboard a little more clear. It can make it a little simpler to remember where those notes are when you want to make a
large leap to a different part of the fretboard.
In this video, I go through a handy fingering pattern for a two octave minor pentatonic scale and where to shift
positions. I quickly go over the Major pentatonic pattern and typical fingering, but I just realized I never played it
in two octaves. Lemme know if you wanna see that.
If you play a Major pentatonic scale(or a regular Major scale for that matter) starting on C, then you can play the
scales “relative minor” scale by playing all the same notes starting on the A(the sixth) a step and a half(minor third)
down.
See, turns out pentatonics aren’t so dumb after all – in fact, they are a great tool to have sharpened up and ready to
bust out!
Please leave your comments and let me know if this vid helps – and be sure to catch the latest EasyBassVid updates
Jonny
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