The updated edition of this bestselling guitar instruction book now includes new music examples! This book will show you how to: play lead and rhythm anywhere on the fretboard, in any key; play a variety of lead guitar styles; play chords and progressions anywhere on the fretboard; expand your chord
Fretboard Roadmaps
β Scribed by Fred Sokolow, Tim Emmons
- Publisher
- Hal Leonard Corporation
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 64
- Series
- Fretboard Roadmaps
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This book/CD pack will get you playing bass lines anywhere on the fretboard, in any key. You'll learn to build bass lines under chord progressions; major, minor, and pentatonic scale patterns; and much more through easy-to-follow diagrams and instructions for beginning, intermediate, and advanced players. The CD includes 64 demonstration and play-along tracks.
β¦ Table of Contents
Index......Page 1
Notes On The Fretboard......Page 6
The Major Scale......Page 8
Two Moveable Major Chords......Page 12
The I-IV-V Chord Family......Page 16
The "D-A-F" Roadmap......Page 22
Chord Fragment/Chord Families......Page 28
The Circle Of Fifths......Page 34
Variations Of The Two Moveable Major Chords......Page 40
Moveable Major Scales......Page 46
Moveable Blues Scales......Page 50
Sliding Pentatonic Scales......Page 56
A Moveable Double-Note Lick......Page 60
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
These essential fretboard patterns are roadmaps that all great blues guitarists know and use. This book teaches how to: play lead and rhythm anywhere on the fretboard, in any key; play a variety of lead guitar styles using moveable blues boxes, chord-based licks, blues scales and double-note licks;
It's here, yes, it's possible. A single Diagram can show you how to play any Major and Minor Scale and their Modes, any Major and Minor Pentatonic Scale and their Modes, how to build Chords, and to make and identify Intervals, from one end of the guitar fretboard to the other! It's now offered in th
Do you love sitting at home playing guitar, but find yourself playing the same old things over and over without making much progress?<p> When other musicians invite you to jam, do you worry that you wonβt be able to keep up?<p> Are you a veteran guitarist who has played for years, but youβre embar
Teaching memorization of the guitar fretboard