You should know the few fundamentals about the guitar, and the first step in is the understanding of notes that is the basis of music. The next step is to have knowledge about musical scales. The problem is that when some individuals are presented with musical scales for the first time, and they are being asked to play variations of these musical scales, it can become a discouraging undertaking. In this article we are going to explore some of the reasons for the existence of musical scales, and why we focus on them so greatly.
what are Musical Scales? A Technical View
We can construct music out of 12 viable tones because we have only 12 possible notes. Western music has produced such rules which describe how and when you can use these tones together. Although this is just convention, but by applying these rules you will instantly notice that something is wrong or unique instead of hearing the several common scales you hear commonly when you do not apply these rules. No special information is written in stone about the way these things are devised, but we are all so used to hearing music from an early age that contains these rules that we don't even consider about the options until we start to study musical theory in depth.
If you want to play western style music and be a great guitarist, you are in need to understand these principles. A noteworthy part of these rules and conventions is the musical scales we use.
What is a scale? It is fundamentally a sequence of notes, picked out from the 12 available, that work out together to give an effect to the music. You can describe individual scales in a better way as a list of gaps between the notes. Half notes or Whole notes are denoted by the term Tone or Semitone which give the rule of using their basic letters, T and S.
Some people utilise Half and Whole (W, H) to denote the gaps, and another way is to list the number of semitones (1 or 2). Either mode is taken, these three are identical or all hand the gaps for the leading musical scale:
1. T T S T T T S 2. W W H W W W H 3. 2 2 1 2 2 2 1
Let us see, how this works. Pick up a scale at random - G# major. This step states two things. First, our root note is G#. Second, we will be utilizing the Major scale formula to work out the notes.
So, we start up with our G# note, and add the first step of the formula which is a T, meaning a Tone. Thus, starting with G # and moving up a tone or two half notes puts us onto A#:
G# + T = A#
Next, we start with A#, and look at the next alphabetic character in the rule - its a Tone again, so we add 2 half notes to A#, to give us a C:
A# + T = C
Next, we start with a C and find out the formula - now it is a semitone, which takes us to C#:
C + S = C#
If we carry on with this we get the following:
C# + T = D# D# + T = F (remember nothing is like an E#) F + T = G G + S = G#
Thus, we have built our scale of G# major according to our major scale pattern to get the notes:
G# A# C C# D# F G
Mostly, the scales we use have 7 notes in them but that is not an essential pattern. For example, the minor pentatonic scale only has 5 notes in it (its formula is 3 2 2 3 2 - I used numbers here instead of T and S because it has a few Tone and a half leaps, which is 3 half notes, and that is more easily written down as a 3 instead of something like "T + 1/2", but it all signifies the same thing). Some scales have more notes, for instance the chromatic musical scale has all 12 notes in it.
So in this way the scales work! The pattern depicts them and we pick whichever root note we want to create. The next step is to convert these notes into a formula so that we can play it.
what are Musical Scales? A Technical View
We can construct music out of 12 viable tones because we have only 12 possible notes. Western music has produced such rules which describe how and when you can use these tones together. Although this is just convention, but by applying these rules you will instantly notice that something is wrong or unique instead of hearing the several common scales you hear commonly when you do not apply these rules. No special information is written in stone about the way these things are devised, but we are all so used to hearing music from an early age that contains these rules that we don't even consider about the options until we start to study musical theory in depth.
If you want to play western style music and be a great guitarist, you are in need to understand these principles. A noteworthy part of these rules and conventions is the musical scales we use.
What is a scale? It is fundamentally a sequence of notes, picked out from the 12 available, that work out together to give an effect to the music. You can describe individual scales in a better way as a list of gaps between the notes. Half notes or Whole notes are denoted by the term Tone or Semitone which give the rule of using their basic letters, T and S.
Some people utilise Half and Whole (W, H) to denote the gaps, and another way is to list the number of semitones (1 or 2). Either mode is taken, these three are identical or all hand the gaps for the leading musical scale:
1. T T S T T T S 2. W W H W W W H 3. 2 2 1 2 2 2 1
Let us see, how this works. Pick up a scale at random - G# major. This step states two things. First, our root note is G#. Second, we will be utilizing the Major scale formula to work out the notes.
So, we start up with our G# note, and add the first step of the formula which is a T, meaning a Tone. Thus, starting with G # and moving up a tone or two half notes puts us onto A#:
G# + T = A#
Next, we start with A#, and look at the next alphabetic character in the rule - its a Tone again, so we add 2 half notes to A#, to give us a C:
A# + T = C
Next, we start with a C and find out the formula - now it is a semitone, which takes us to C#:
C + S = C#
If we carry on with this we get the following:
C# + T = D# D# + T = F (remember nothing is like an E#) F + T = G G + S = G#
Thus, we have built our scale of G# major according to our major scale pattern to get the notes:
G# A# C C# D# F G
Mostly, the scales we use have 7 notes in them but that is not an essential pattern. For example, the minor pentatonic scale only has 5 notes in it (its formula is 3 2 2 3 2 - I used numbers here instead of T and S because it has a few Tone and a half leaps, which is 3 half notes, and that is more easily written down as a 3 instead of something like "T + 1/2", but it all signifies the same thing). Some scales have more notes, for instance the chromatic musical scale has all 12 notes in it.
So in this way the scales work! The pattern depicts them and we pick whichever root note we want to create. The next step is to convert these notes into a formula so that we can play it.
About the Author:
E Walker is the founder of Planet of Rock. For southern rock music and backing track shadows, visit Planet Of Rock today.
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