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Hi everybody, I just want to show you this little thing in fifths that I have been working on. You can give the sound of a major chord or minor chord or a domain or domain seven altered with this fifths idea. If you start and let us say we are going to do Am, start here on A, go fifth to E, another fifth to B and then go up a half step and then do more fifths, fifth up to G, fifth up to D.
So you get this now which is usually the sound of Am. If you want it to be a major then you go the same thing here up a fifth, up a fifth, but instead of going a half step, go up whole step and then up a fifth and a fifth. So now you get the sound of like the major seven sharp eleven.
A nice exercise that I do sometimes to warm up is like to do D minor and then Db major and then Dbm and C major. Cm, B major, Bm, Bb major. So it is just like a nice little exercise and you could make like a chord progression, say if you are going to play Em, Cm, Am to F major. It is just a nice way to play over chords and get from point A to point B really fast and not just improvising.
Just to get from bottom to the top really quickly. Another little thing I have been working on is this cool arpeggio that is actually kind of, if you look at this as A, it would be kind of region. Simple pattern and then it just repeats and if you do it fast, alright, it is a nice little arpeggio. You can work over this or if you want to look at it, it could be actually this, it could be minor as well for Gm, G maybe minor with a major 7th.
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