Guitar Lessons & Scales – Modes That Matter – #7 Mixolydian Southern Rock
FULL COURSE, TAB, JAM TRACKS: http://bit.ly/ModesThatMatter
More guitar lessons: http://bit.ly/TrueFire
Looking to expand your palette of single-note tonal colors? A great way to do so is to delve into modes and alternative scales. While that’s a worthy endeavor it’s rife with obstacles. Often guitarists don’t really know what the new scale or mode is all about and as a result they don’t know where to apply them. Guitarists are often presented concepts related to scale study that seem too good to be true and in time prove to be just that. And, guitarists in becoming frustrated with said methods also never gain a full neck vision of these new sounds. That all ends here: Welcome to 13 Scales and Modes That Matter.
#Guitar #Lessons #Scales #Modes #Matter #Mixolydian #Southern #Rock
Originally posted by UCiReSwhx7y_LpNFNg4GCuCQ at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QtMMHz7LwBY
Playing acoustically so the guitar can't be heard over the backing track?
Thanks/Great overview.
Is this a joke??!!
@surrealIdeal thank you kindly, i thought so
@noHOPEyo Thanks
@mudylafeet thats why they are called 'modes': its one scale, for example G major (or Ionian) = E minor (or aeolian) = D mixolydian = … and so on. no difference in notes; it's the chords that create the magic (and like you say, the root)
Question, D mixolydian = E aeolian pattern but with the root in D?