Author: Unknown
•3:02 PM
By Jorge Calvo


If you are a beginner in playing the guitar, you first need to internalize the skill of playing cords. You then advance to playing melodic tunes or passages, which only come after you are consistent with the cords. If you are comfortable, the stage comes where you are required to learn guitar scales. These are usually the base of all the melodies and they are the notes of a particular key, which will usually be played in both descending and ascending order.

For all kinds of instruments that you might want to play, mastering the scales is crucial if you want to be excellent. With regards to the guitar, it is always appropriate to take slow steps and repeat them often for the best results. You can spend some time on a certain scale and then try something different before you can focus on the first one.

Since people are different, you should find an approach that you can use successfully. You should have an overall plan of the time you are going to spend on practice sessions. Regular practice is important but the sessions should not be very long. For example, you can choose to practice twenty minutes daily instead of setting aside two hours on a single day for the practice sessions.

Another method that you can utilize for quick mastery of the scales is picking one instead of trying out many of them at the same time. This prevents you from being confused and after you have internalized one of them, you can always repeat it so that it sticks to your memory. Sometimes it is better if you start with the ones you know before you start practicing on the one you are learning currently.

Your practice equipment should be convenient so that you will have an easy time knowing the notes you will be playing and how they are played. There are many options from which you can choose. You can use an online course, a physical teacher or a tutor book, which guides you through the course. You can get a scale box if you have already learnt a good number of them.

This is just a small box or tin where you place pieces of paper with the names of the scales you know how to play. Before you start a practice session, you pick two papers from the box at random and then play them. If you practice in such a manner then you will not forget those that you have already learnt.

It is appropriate to play them at a slow pace in order to be able to point out where you make mistakes and address them accordingly. Playing slowly is technically referred to as playing in time and it makes it easier for the leaner to adapt to high speeds. After you are capable of playing at fast tempos, you have accuracy, which is made possible by the way you have been practicing.

Once you learn guitar scales and you are confident that you can be able to play a number of them, you need to start over. Play them just as you did but add some more technique such as playing them with all pull-offs, hammer-on, vibrato, slides and bends. You can also play them in tripellets, quadrupelets or anything else that you can think of and then mix a number of them such as playing them with more than one technique.




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