Anyone wants a girlfriend who can jam with you? May 18, 2020May 18, 2020| Strong BearStrong Bear| 0 Comment| 1:26 am Categories: Blog Related Post navigation PREVIOUS Previous post: Find intervals on all fourth tunings (part 1) – Minor PentatonicNEXT Next post: Major scale 2 octaves from any degree or mode – Part 1 Related Post Link triads with scales – Part 2Link triads with scales – Part 2 In this post, we'll continue to link major and minor triads with the rest of major scale family including Dorian, Phrygian, Lydian and Mixolydian Read MoreRead More Common 4 parts chord formsCommon 4 parts chord forms Learn Maj7, Min7, Dom7, Min7b5, Dom7sus4, 7#5, Dim7, Maj6, Min6, Min9, 9, 7b9, 7#9, 13– at least 2 forms for each. These chord forms are in all fourth tuning Read MoreRead More A simple way to solo over ii-V7alt-I-VIalt chord progressionA simple way to solo over ii-V7alt-I-VIalt chord progression Simply using pentatonic scales to improvise over ii-V-i-vi chord progression Read MoreRead More
Link triads with scales – Part 2Link triads with scales – Part 2 In this post, we'll continue to link major and minor triads with the rest of major scale family including Dorian, Phrygian, Lydian and Mixolydian Read MoreRead More
Common 4 parts chord formsCommon 4 parts chord forms Learn Maj7, Min7, Dom7, Min7b5, Dom7sus4, 7#5, Dim7, Maj6, Min6, Min9, 9, 7b9, 7#9, 13– at least 2 forms for each. These chord forms are in all fourth tuning Read MoreRead More
A simple way to solo over ii-V7alt-I-VIalt chord progressionA simple way to solo over ii-V7alt-I-VIalt chord progression Simply using pentatonic scales to improvise over ii-V-i-vi chord progression Read MoreRead More