|
|
Guitar
Lesson - Mastering Arpeggios
By Mike Beatham
When learning how to play effective lead guitar, there
are two areas guitarists must be prepared to delve into
- the theoretical side, and the physical side.
Theoretical aspects include things like knowing your
scales, knowing how certain notes work to highlight
particular tensions, basically anything that involves
the translation of the creative mind onto the fretboard.
The physical aspects include techniques such as hammer-ons,
vibratos, tapping, and anything that involves your
fingers really working the creativity onto the fretboard.
Arpeggios are no exception - they involve both these
aspects.
Firstly, let's define what an arpeggio is: simply, the
notes of a chord played separately in a sequence. So
whereas with a regular rhythm chord you would make the
notes overlap, or play them simultaneously, arpeggios as
a lead guitar technique involve the dynamics of one note
at a time, with each note cleanly separated from the
last. The effect is very different. |
|
As a lead guitar technique, you have the benefit of
using slides, hammers, pulls etc. within the arpeggio,
giving it even more depth. This is where the physical
aspect comes in. However, there is theory (ah, the
dreaded T word) to learn before one can master the
physical side of this technique.
1) You need to know how chords work within scales
Remember this, if nothing else: Where there is a chord,
there is an arpeggio!
Since arpeggios are theoretically the same as chords, we
can use the same process to pull the notes we need from
scales.
Think of the scales (especially the "natural" major
scale) as the pot from which we draw the tones we need
to create a particular chord. In the world of lead
guitar, this process can also be seen as identifying
"tensions" or "flavours", that build up the melodic
soundscape.
E.g. if we wanted an A major flavour, we would pull out
the Root (1), 3rd (3) and 5th (5) from the A major
scale. Of course, the A major scale appears across the
whole fretboard - you just need to know where these
tones are situated in relation to the scale.
If we wanted an A minor flavour, we would pull out the
Root (1), flat 3rd (b3) and 5th (5) from the A major
scale. No, that wasn't a typo - minor chords are still
referenced against the natural major scale. That's why
we label a "flat 3rd" as "flat" - it is flat in relation
to its natural position in the major scale!
Once you learn how to pull chord tones right out from
their fuller scales, you'll know how to use exactly the
same process with arpeggios. |
|
|
2) You need to be able to make the fingering of these
"chords" more appropriate for lead guitar phrasing
Regular chords are naturally created to be "boxed" in,
to allow all the tones of the chord to be reachable,
with your static fretting hand. However, lead guitar is
about dancing your fingers across the fretboard and
creating more kinetic phrasing.
This is where knowledge of ascending and descending
scales comes in. A lot of scales we learn as guitarists
are presented in "boxed" format, spanning only 4 frets,
but what you need to realise is that the tones used in
these boxed scales recur across whole fretboard (this is
a whole lesson in itself!)
So if you can get into the mindset of learning broader
scale patterns, you'll be able to give your fingers the
"breathing space" to embellish slides, hammer ons, pull
offs etc. into your arpeggios. Whereas regular static
chords devote one string to each note, arpeggios across
wider scale patterns can accommodate more than one note
per string, which allows hammer ons, pull offs and other
physical lead guitar techniques to be used. |
3) Finally, make sure you know how to incorporate
arpeggios into your regular solos
Let's say your solo is in the key of A major - would you
keep it all simple and just play an A major arpeggio?
Or would you spice it up a little and use the rules of
modal music to play an arpeggio from a different chord,
but still within the key/scale of A major?
If we look at the modal scale (or "chord scale") of the
key of A major, these are our basic options:
(I)A Major - (ii)B minor - (iii)C# minor - (IV)D Major -
(V)E Major - (vi)F# minor - (vii)Ab diminished
So for example, we could play an F# minor arpeggio over
an A major key solo and it would still be compatible.
This is all about knowing what your options are,
experimenting and seeing which one suits the emotion
you're trying to convey. This is essentially what
musical creativity boils down to.
So, if you follow this process of learning, you should
become confident with not only the physical side of
playing arpeggios, but also the creative and
improvisational side.
Enjoy the learning experience, take your time, explore
the fretboard and above all... experiment!.
Mike Beatham runs a free, easy to follow guitar lessons
site with backing tracks and audio exercises for you to
develop your own unique playing style. To follow on from
this article, visit the Beginner Arpeggios Lesson
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Mike_Beatham |
|