Robert
Oranges and lemons, say the bells of St. Clements.
- Joined
- Sep 8, 2005
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- Camrose, Alberta, Canada - used to be Umea Sweden.
Alright, last time I mentioned that over a blues in the key of A, you can use both A Major Pentatonic and A Minor Pentatonic (also referred to as F# Minor Pentatonic) for variety. Well, the thing is there are more Pentatonics.
Let's say we still have a blues, or a some groove, in A7. Try playing B Minor Pentatonic and E Minor Pentatonic as well. You'll have to watch which notes you land on, or emphasize. They will all "work", but some do not work as well as others. Landing licks and phrases on the note G or A or C or C# would be a good idea.
There's still more Pentatonics that can be used, but this is a good start.
So to sum it up, playing over an A Dominant 7 chord, you can use any and all of the following:
Take this idea and play over, for example E7. We are then in a different key, so you need to move these pentatonics accordingly.
Practice question for you - what 4 pentatonics do we then end up with, playing over E7? All you need to do is move them down one fourth, because E is one fourth down from A. You can also just count how many frets there are, going down from the note A down to E, and then move those Pentatonics down the same number of frets. What do ye get?
Let's say we still have a blues, or a some groove, in A7. Try playing B Minor Pentatonic and E Minor Pentatonic as well. You'll have to watch which notes you land on, or emphasize. They will all "work", but some do not work as well as others. Landing licks and phrases on the note G or A or C or C# would be a good idea.
There's still more Pentatonics that can be used, but this is a good start.
So to sum it up, playing over an A Dominant 7 chord, you can use any and all of the following:
- A Minor Pentatonic
- F# Minor Pentatonic
- B Minor Pentatonic
- E Minor Pentatonic
Take this idea and play over, for example E7. We are then in a different key, so you need to move these pentatonics accordingly.
Practice question for you - what 4 pentatonics do we then end up with, playing over E7? All you need to do is move them down one fourth, because E is one fourth down from A. You can also just count how many frets there are, going down from the note A down to E, and then move those Pentatonics down the same number of frets. What do ye get?