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The Chromatic Scale

Lesson 4/95 | Study Time: 5 Min
Course: Acoustic Guitar
The Chromatic Scale

The Chromatic Scale

Using sharps you can now play five extra notes, which occur between the seven natural notes you already know. The following example uses all twelve notes which occur within one octave. It is an example of a Chromatic Scale.

Chromatic scales consist entirely of semitones (i.e., they move up or down one fret at a time) and the start and finish notes are always the same (the key note or tonic). The chromatic scale uses all twelve notes used in western music and can begin on any note. Note that there are no sharps between B and C, or E and F. This is because they are a semitone apart and there is no room for an extra note between them. Play the exercise slowly and steadily, making sure you use the correct fingering.

The Natural Sign

This is a natural sign.

A natural sign cancels the effect of a sharp or flat for the rest of that bar, or until another sharp or flat sign occurs within that bar.

A sharpened note stays sharp until either a bar line or a natural sign ( @ ) cancels it as in the following example.

Peter Gelling

Peter Gelling

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Class Sessions

1- Learning All the Notes 2- Minor Chords 3- Rests 4- Seventh Chords 5- Fingerpicking 6- The Major Scale 7- INTRODUCTION 8- Bass Note Rhythm Patterns 9- Sharp Signs 10- Silent Strums and Continuous Rhythms 11- Flat Signs 12- The Three Four Time Signature 13- Bass Runs 14- Scale Tone Chords 15- Minor Keys and Scales 16- Relative Keys 17- Suspended Chords 18- Right Thumb And Fingers Together 19- The Hammer-On 20- The Triplet 21- Sixteenth Notes 22- How to Tune Your Guitar 23- The Eighth Note 24- Chords 25- How to Read Music 26- Notes on the First String 27- Notes on the Fourth String 28- Transposing 29- <span class="symbolA">^</span> Time Rhythm Patterns 30- Playing Notes Together Fingerstyle 31- The F Sharp Note (F<span class="symbolA">#</span>) 32- Notes on the Second String 33- Strumming 34- The Note B Flat (B<span class="symbolA">b</span>) 35- Sharps 36- The Half Bar 37- Syncopation 38- Tablature 39- The Harmonic Minor Scale 40- Add Nine Chords 41- Clawhammer Style 42- The Pull-Off 43- The Minor Pentatonic Scale 44- Sixteenth Note Triplets 45- Using an Electronic Tuner 46- 12 Bar Blues 47- C Major Scale In Open Position 48- Alternate Picking 49- Notes on the Fifth String 50- Picking With Your Thumb 51- Visualizing 52- The Lead-In 53- Notes on the Sixth String 54- The Chromatic Scale 55- Sequences 56- Chord Shapes 57- Rests With Chord Playing 58- The Melodic Minor Scale 59- Music Notation 60- Slash Chords 61- Dropped D Tuning 62- Swing and Shuffle Rhythms 63- Acoustic Guitars 64- The Slide 65- Major Chord Formations 66- Fingerpicking Patterns In <span class="symbolA">^</span> Time 67- The F Major Scale 68- Fingerpicking Pattern 1 69- Playing Air 70- Bass Note Rhythm Patterns In <span class="symbolA">*</span> Time 71- The G Major Scale 72- Notes on the Third String 73- Adding Scale Tones to Chords 74- The Key of C Major 75- Pivot and Guide Fingers 76- The Octave 77- Two Note Chords 78- How to Hold the Guitar 79- Key Signatures 80- Flats 81- Learning the Notes on the Staff 82- Staccato 83- Alternating Bass Notes 84- Using a Pick 85- Arpeggios 86- Accompanying a Melody 87- Fingering Numbers in Traditional Notation 88- Chord Symbols 89- Enharmonic Notes 90- Rhythm Patterns 91- Fingerpicking Pattern 2 92- Right Hand Position 93- Eighth Note Strumming Rhythms 94- Fingerpicking Accompaniment 95- Left Hand Technique

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