Another Soloist tone is called the Aolliums, which we touched on earlier. The notes, the note one step up from G in the C scale is A in 6 note (piano playing) in C, so we can build the selection of notes by using A as a tonal center (piano playing), this scale is called the “Natural Minor” or “Aollium mode and uses the same notes as its relative madas scale (piano playing)
In this case is C, but starts and ends on a different place on the scales note letter (piano playing). Start by playing A then carry on act this C, C Major Scale (piano playing) then go to A again, so you get A, B, C, D, E, F, G, and A. Again this is called the natural minor or Aollium mode, try improvising this scale over an A minor chord (piano playing), hear the notes for the A minor (piano playing), trying moving your thumb down and the chords to do seven frication and do (piano playing).
A minor is A minor is relative minor of C major, all twelve keys have their own relative minor, you can find the keys relative minor by either counting up six notes from the root of the scale (piano playing) 2-3-4 and 5-6 or counting down three half steps or semi-tones from the root note (piano playing), either way puts you on the six note of the Major Scale (piano playing). Okay using only the note of the major scale you then carry on up to the same note on octave higher (piano playing), just create some liner Aolliums scale, which just peel the minor chord from the six note (piano playing). So again the relative of C Major is A minor (piano playing), the relative minor of G count up six notes, count up six notes (piano playing) 1-2-3-4-5-6, of the E minor, as I mentioned before you could also find out by counting three counting down three halves steps (piano playing) to E minor, just let me count to three halves steps from C to A minor
Transcription by:
Scribe4you Transcription Services