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My favorite scale substitution, playing a minor pentatonic from the 5th of a Minor chord (also useful for 7Sus chords).
In this example an E minor pentatonic scale (E G A B D) over an Am7 chord.
The fast triplet fill is with fast “shakes” (i think it is called), very much in the Abe Laboriel vibe:-)
Great excercise. How would this theory apply if you are playing a major chord as the primary chord? Ex. amaj7 instead of a minor.
Great ! it open wide world of colourfull music ! thanks
Look at some of the “calendar gift” links, thats examples of transcriptions /tabs.
Hi Marlowe
Thanks for this great work
Would like to donate but cannot understand these ‘tabs’ thing. Are you able to explain how to interprete and use these ‘tabs’ before I donate please.
Thanks
Ogya
Thank YOU!
Hi…meant to include the following 3 things w/ donation: your lessons are incredibly helpful; you are incredibly generous in posting lessons; & you are an outstanding teacher…thank you so much!!
@cHino – tabs are the Devil and will earn you a one way ticket to Hades! lol
Not sure you’d need a tab for it. I mean, he’s doing it right in front of you.
By any chance do you have a tabs for this?
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MarloweDK said,
June 15, 2011 @ 5:42 pm
Try and play an E MAJOR pentatonic scale over an AMaj7 chord;-)