60 Essential Guitar Scale Patterns
60 Essential Guitar Scale Patterns
60 Essential Guitar Scale Patterns
Scale patterns are an essential guitar technique that builds chops, expands fretboard
knowledge, and gives you inspiration in your guitar solos.
Though they benefit every guitarist, you might not know how to get the most out of this
guitar technique in your practicing.
This article shows you how to play over 60 different scale patterns, essential rhythms
and accents, and how to use these patterns in your guitar solos.
As well, you cover pentatonic scales, modes, and jazz guitar patterns in this lesson.
This creates a well balanced approach to working scale patterns into your technical and
soloing practice.
Then, grab your guitar and get ready to build monster chops with these essential guitar
scale patterns.
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There are over 60 different patterns applied to pentatonic, modes, jazz scales, and a
famous jazz tune to explore in your studies.
You don’t have to learn every pattern to benefit in your practice routine.
If you’re new to scale patterns, start at the beginning and learn a few pentatonic
patterns to begin.
From there, keep going in order, or jump around and try out patterns that sound
interesting to you.
For more advanced players, skim through, find a pattern you like, and work from that
point forward.
As well, any of these scales are beneficial to players of all genres of music.
Even the jazz scale patterns. For jazzers, pentatonic scale and major scale patterns are
found in the solos of Wes Montgomery, John Coltrane, Pat Metheny, and others.
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Just as rock and blues players benefit from the jazz patterns, jazz guitarists benefit from
studying pentatonic and major scale patterns.
Have fun with these patterns and bookmark this page for future study.
You won’t be able to work on every pattern all at once, nor would you want to.
Pick a pattern you like, work it for a while and take it to your guitar solos.
Then, when ready, return to this lesson and move on to the next pattern.
With that approach, learning guitar technique is less daunting, and this lesson provides
a lifetime of study to enjoy.
When learning many, not all, of these patterns, you learn four variations that you can
apply to patterns in the practice room.
Ascending
Descending
One Up and One Down
One Down and One Up
You can use these patterns to build your chops and understanding of scales, but also to
organize your practice routine.
Once you pick a pattern, work it through the four variations, if applicable.
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This gives you an understanding of that pattern, and provides you with variations to use
in your guitar solos.
Speaking of solos, make sure to work each pattern with a metronome to build guitar
technique, as well as apply that pattern to your solos to build improvisational skills.
To increase your vocabulary further, refer to the essential guitar rhythms and accents
below and add any or all of these variations to your practicing.
These rhythms and accents challenge your technique, as well as provide rhythmic
variety when using these patterns in your guitar solos.
Lastly, as you work any pattern, alter your picking hand to provide variety to your
technical and soloing studies.
You won’t be able to apply all of these picking-hand techniques to every scale pattern.
But.
With experimentation, you can find two or three that fit over any pattern.
This gives your picking-hand a workout, and again, makes the patterns more engaging
when applied to your solos.
As you can see, there are many variations when studying these patterns.
Whether it’s different rhythms, soloing, running with a metronome, or changing your
picking, variations help you dig deep into any pattern and provide organization to your
practicing.
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Often, beginner and even intermediate guitarists just play fast and slow.
The best way to improve rhythmic control is by applying rhythms to your scale and scale
patterns practice routine.
In this section, you apply essential guitar rhythms to any scale and scale pattern that
you’re working on.
As you work the patterns in this lesson, use as many of these rhythms as you can with
each pattern.
This way, you increase your guitar technique, and build your rhythmic foundation at the
same time.
Quarter Notes
The first rhythm is the quarter note. Think of this rhythm as being one note per beat.
So, if you set a metronome, when working quarter notes, you play one note per click.
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This means that for a bar of 4/4 time, you play two quarter note triplets.
One falls on beats 1 and 2, and the second falls on beats 3 and 4.
If you’re new to practicing rhythms, skip ahead and come back to quarter-note triplets
when you’re more confident with rhythmic patterns.
Longer triplets like this can be hard to count and feel at first.
But.
With time, they become easy to navigate, and add a new dimension to your guitar
technique and scale practice routine.
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8th Notes
You now play two notes per beat as you learn 8th-notes through scales and scale
patterns.
If you work with a metronome, you play two notes per click.
As well, a lot of modern metronomes have a function to set the click to 8th notes.
This is helpful when learning 8th notes, with the goal to move away from that practice
aid as you progress.
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8th-Note Triplets
As was the case with quarter notes, you can build triplets out of 8th notes.
In this case, you play three notes in the space of one quarter note.
Mostly because each 8th-note triplet lines up with the beat of your metronome.
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16th Notes
Moving into the faster realm of rhythms, you’re ready to explore 16th notes.
It’s easier to run faster rhythms, such as 16th notes, through longer scales.
Because the scale is longer, it gives you more time to get into a flow with these faster
rhythms.
Give 16th notes a try as they challenge your guitar technique and increase your
rhythmic knowledge at the same time.
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Combo Rhythms
As well as practicing singe rhythms, you can mix and match two or more rhythms in
your studies.
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Here are a few examples of where to begin when working on combo rhythms over scale
patterns.
The first example mixes quarter notes and 8th notes over a C major scale.
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Moving on, here’s a classic rhythmic combo, 8th and 16th notes combined over each
beat.
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After working these two sample combos, combine any two, or more, rhythms over any
guitar scale pattern you’re currently studying.
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Now that you have a number of rhythmic variations under your fingers, you’re ready
to check out picking-hand accents.
To do so, you add accents into any scale pattern in the lesson below.
An accent is when you play one note louder than the others within a group of notes.
One of the most direct and beneficial ways to do this is to break up any scale pattern
into groups of 4 notes.
When doing so, you can then accent each of those four notes in that group.
You can also do this with three-note groups when practicing triplets.
Here are examples of four-note accent groups that you can add to the scale patterns in
this lesson.
The first accent pattern is on the first note of each four-note group.
In this case, in a bar of 4/4 you accent the 1st and 3rd beats of each bar.
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Moving on, you can accent the second note in each four-note group.
In this case, you accent the & of 1 and 3 in each bar of 4/4.
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Next, you add the accent to the third note of each four-note group.
When doing so, you accent beats 2 and 4 in a 4/4 bar of music.
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The last single accent falls on the fourth note of each four-note group.
This places the accents on the & of 2 and 4 when applied to a measure of 4/4 time.
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You can also combine accents to have two in each four-note group.
Here’s an example of how to play accents on the 1st and 3rd notes of those groups.
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In this case, the accents fall on the &’s of each beat in a bar of 4/4 time.
Try these examples, then come up with other accent combinations of your own as you
explore this guitar technique further.
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With rhythmic and picking variations under your belt, you’re ready to take these
variations to the scale patterns below.
Whether it’s the minor, major, Dorian, or any variation, patterns help you learn any 5-
note scale.
As well, because pentatonic scales are the first scale guitarists learn, it’s easy to get
stuck in a rut with these melodic devices.
Applying patterns to pentatonics builds chops and brings a breath of fresh air to the
most common scale on guitar.
In this section, you learn patterns over the pentatonic scale, as well as study essential
variations for any pattern you learn and apply to your practice routine.
This means that if you think of the pentatonic scale as having five notes, 12345, you’re
playing 123, 234, 345, etc.
Then, as you reach to the top of the scale you reverse the pattern.
On the way down you play 543, 432, 321, etc. from each note in the scale.
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Pentatonic Pattern 2
You can now expand upon the previous pattern by adding a note to form a 1234 pattern.
When doing so, you play 1234, 2345, etc. up the scale.
Then, you reverse the pattern to play 5432, 4321, etc. down the scale.
Here’s an example to begin, then take this pattern to any key or fingering for the
pentatonic scale in your studies.
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Pentatonic Pattern 3
This pattern skips a note as you run up and down any pentatonic scale.
When doing so, you form the interval pattern 13, 24, 35, etc. going up the scale.
Then, on the way down you play the same intervals, but now descending the scale.
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When applied to the fretboard, it provides you with a new perspective on both patterns
and shapes in your playing.
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Pentatonic Pattern 4
You now reverse the previous pattern as you play 31, 42, 53, etc. up and down the
pentatonic scale.
As you’ve gathered by this point in the lesson, reversing scale patterns is a common
variation of this technique.
When learning new scale patterns, always reverse the pattern to double the amount to
material derived from that single pattern.
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Pentatonic Pattern 5
Once you’ve worked on reversing any scale pattern, you pair up the first and second
versions of that pattern over any scale.
In this case, you can see the last two scale patterns combined over the A minor
pentatonic scale.
Again, this allows you to expand a single scale pattern through variation, rather than
learn a new scale pattern right away.
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Pentatonic Pattern 6
You now take this approach a step further as you reverse the combined pattern.
Reversing and combining patterns provides you with four options for any scale pattern
that you study.
This expands your options when adding these scale patterns to your guitar solos.
If you’re new to these guitar techniques, not to worry, you dig deep into reversal and
combination scale patterns in the major scale patterns below.
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Pentatonic Pattern 7
Here’s a four-note pattern that brings a modern, modal sound to your pentatonic scales.
The pattern is built by playing three notes up the “left” side of the scale, followed by one
note on the “right” side of the scale.
Because it’s a four-note pattern, you cover the entire pentatonic scale pretty quickly.
To keep things flowing, play this pattern three or four times in a row before increasing
the tempo.
This helps you get into a flow when working this larger scale pattern on guitar.
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Pentatonic Pattern 8
In the next four patterns, you work out the four variations for a three-note pentatonic
scale pattern.
This pattern is built by playing three notes up the left side of the scale, followed by three
notes up the right side of the scale.
Again, you play the pattern ascending through both directions of the scale in your
studies.
Here’s the ascending, original, version of the pattern applied to an A pentatonic scale
shape.
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Pentatonic Pattern 9
You now reverse the previous pattern as you descend three notes up and down the
pentatonic scale.
Which is fine.
But.
This prevents the exercise creeping into the arpeggio side of your studies.
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There will be some overlap between notes, but think of it as being smooth and not
overhanging.
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Pentatonic Pattern 10
As you probably guessed, you now combine the ascending and descending versions to
form a combined pattern.
Just work on keeping each note separate, and not ringing like an arpeggiated chord.
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Pentatonic Pattern 11
The final pentatonic scale pattern is a reversal of the combo you just learned.
As you practice this, or any scale pattern you learn, make sure to work it two ways.
The second is to solo with these patterns over chords to build your soloing chops with
the same pattern.
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Though they’re used over the major scale in these examples, you can apply them to
every mode in your studies.
When learning how to play scales and modes on guitar, it’s tempting to learn one scale,
or even one fingering, and then quickly move on to the next scale.
While you cover a lot of ground that way, this approach leads to memory problems with
scales down the road.
By applying patterns to scales and modes, you expand your guitar technique, deeply
ingrain fingerings, and increase your soloing vocabulary at the same time.
This provides a beneficial practice room experience for guitarists of any experience
level or background.
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This is the perfect scale pattern for those beginning their study of 7-note scales.
As there are no skips in this pattern, you challenge your technique without pushing it so
far that it falls apart.
Lastly, this pattern is often used in guitar solos by rock, jazz, funk, and fusion guitarists.
Because of its popularity, the 123 scale pattern will become a regular part of both your
technical and soloing practice routine.
If you’re new to this pattern, notice that the direction of the pattern is the same as you
play down the scale.
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If you worked the pentatonic scale patterns, try playing the pattern below without
reading the music.
Then, if you get stuck, look to see if you’re correct in your application of the reversal
technique with this new scale and pattern.
This helps you build the skill of reversing any pattern, rather than simply memorizing the
pattern in your studies.
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Though each pattern in this section is demonstrated over a one-octave shape, make
sure to work these patterns over two-octave scales as well.
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By now you should have the hang of the four scale pattern variations.
Ascending
Descending
Combination
Combination Reversed
If you’re comfortable with these variations, practice applying them to future scale
patterns without reading the music.
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When doing so, you play 1234, 2345, etc. up the scale.
Though it’s only one more note in each pattern, these four notes are tougher to master.
They require more attention to the fingering, and a deeper understanding of the scale
you’re practicing.
So, if you get stuck with any of these 1234 variations, take a minute and review the
scale you’re working on.
Then, return to the pattern and continue your study from there.
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Go slow with this pattern, starting with quarter notes and 8th notes in the beginning.
From there, for an extra challenge, work triplets with this pattern.
Applying a three-note rhythm to a four-note pattern pushes any scale pattern to new
heights in your playing.
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As you progress through these variations, play two of them back to back.
So, play up and down the scale with the ascending 1234 pattern. Then, right away play
up and down the scale with the descending 1234 pattern.
This helps you switch gears with different patterns, and keeps older pattern fresh within
your practice routine.
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Again, work this pattern first through the example fingering below.
Then, when ready, take it to other major scale fingerings, as well as to other scales and
modes.
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To challenge yourself further, play through all versions in a row over a C major scale.
From there, work that exercise in all 12 keys as you push yourself even further with this
important guitar scale pattern.
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In this section, you apply 3rds to major scales using the four variations.
After you work on 3rds, you can expand this approach by working 4ths, 5ths, etc.,
through any scale fingering.
While they’re beneficial, they’re also more difficult to play as compared to the previous
major scale patterns.
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Go slow with each variation, work with a metronome, and in time you’ll have these four
scale patterns under your fingers.
When jumping around the scale like this, the biggest challenge is often the picking
hand.
While it may be a challenge, 3rds produce big results with your picking hand.
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Study the string transitions, and see if you want to use economy or alternate picking
with this pattern.
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This expands your guitar technique, and lifts your picking hand to the level of your
fretting hand.
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For those players focussing on improvising, this pattern is a great addition to your
soloing vocabulary.
It has a modern sound, in as modern as a major scale can be, and when mixed with
various rhythms brings a new light to your major-scale lines.
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With all four 3rds patterns under your belt, play them back to back as you challenge
yourself further.
For an even bigger challenge, play each variation with a different rhythm as you expand
your rhythmic and technical chops in the practice room.
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In the next four scale patterns, you work on applying triads to your major scale practice
routine.
When working on diatonic triads through any scale, you play two skips in a row.
Because of this, triads through scales is one of the best techniques to build coordination
between both hands.
Then, play them back to back as you expand your study of these important guitar
techniques.
Because this is a three-note pattern, it’s longer than the patterns you’ve studied before.
This builds endurance as well as technique, especially when playing two or more
variations back to back.
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To push yourself further, work on saying each triad as you play through the scale.
For instance, when playing in the key of C major, say the following triad names as you
played them.
C-Dm-Em-F-G-Am-Bdim
You don’t have to say each triad to benefit from this exercise.
But.
Learning theory with your scale patterns opens up your fretboard and increases your
knowledge of music theory at the same time.
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Even doing that once before running the scale with a metronome is beneficial.
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Working guitar technique is great with a metronome, but it really takes off when used in
a soloing setting.
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“If you can play a technique, it’s memorized. But, if you can solo with a technique it’s
internalized.”
You always want to internalize any technique, not just memorize it in your studies.
This way, techniques such as these patterns become a part of your vocabulary, and
don’t remain on the page as a small part of your practice routine.
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If you’ve been working through these techniques in order, you know that once you learn
a three-note pattern, you add a note to make it a four-note pattern.
When adding a note to the three-note triads, you form four-note arpeggios. Below are
four variations of diatonic arpeggios applied to the C major scale.
Work these variations both with a metronome and over backing tracks in your studies.
As well, to challenge yourself, say each diatonic arpeggio as you play it through each
scale.
If you want to say each arpeggio as you play them, here is the order for the key of C
major.
Cmaj7-Dm7-Em7-Fmaj7-G7-Am7-Bm7b5
From there, move this scale pattern and those diatonic arpeggios to other keys.
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Though they’re a reversal of the pattern you just learned, descending arpeggios are
difficult to play.
Picturing the top note of an arpeggio and playing it down from there is tough as it is.
Then, add tempo, rhythm, and different keys, and you’ve got a practice room challenge
in front of you.
To make this easier, play through any arpeggio pattern first with no metronome to
visualize the shape on the fretboard.
Then, add the metronome to bring these diatonic arpeggios up to speed in your studies.
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Make sure to solo with these patterns to apply them to a musical situation.
When doing so, start with a one-chord vamp, then move on to more complex chord
progressions and full songs from there.
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To work on building endurance, play all four arpeggio patterns back to back.
This tests your memory, builds coordination, and challenges your endurance all at the
same time.
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This pattern became famous after Trane used it in his solo over the song Giant Steps.
While he applied the 1235 pattern to each chord, one at a time, you apply this pattern to
each note in the major scale.
So, feel free to use the music for the first few variations, then practice the 1235 group
from any note in the major scale without the music.
Learning guitar technique often means going beyond the fretboard and taking
inspiration from other instruments.
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As you saw earlier, using triplet rhythms with a four-note scale pattern moves your
playing into new directions.
Then, when ready, move on to triplets to hear how a three-note rhythm alters the sound
of a four-note scale pattern.
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Here’s the first variation of the 1235 pattern, where you descend the pattern over the
scale shape.
As was the case with diatonic arpeggios, the descending 1235 pattern is tough to get
down.
With time, and focus in the woodshed, you can nail this essential scale pattern.
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Watch your picking when switching directions with this pattern, or any combination scale
pattern.
But, other times those switches need focus to get them down smoothly.
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When practicing guitar technique you want to build your endurance as much as
anything.
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So, after learning this pattern, play as many patterns as you can in a row over the C
major scale.
It builds your chops and works your memorization of scale patterns in one exercise.
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Each pattern comes from transcribed solos by Joe Pass, Mike Stern, and more.
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Not only do these patterns build technique, they instantly turn your scales into jazz
guitar licks when used over jazz standards in your solos.
Each of the patterns below is demonstrated over a G7 chord. Make sure to apply them
to other scales to build a balanced practice approach.
These include major modes, harmonic minor modes, and the ever popular bebop scale.
Lastly, when working jazz scale patterns, they sound best played down the scale in the
beginning.
So, each of the patterns below is presented with an ascending G7 arpeggio followed by
the descending pattern.
When you’re comfortable with any pattern, apply it in any direction to your jazz guitar
solos.
Enclosed Root
The first jazz guitar pattern is one of the most important, the enclosure.
Enclosures have many variations, but this one is the most popular.
First play a note one fret higher than the target note.
Then, play one fret below the target note.
Then play the target note.
Building tension, these chromatic notes need to be resolved to avoid awkward moments
in your solos.
So, you can add enclosures over any chord or scale, but make sure to land on the
target note at the end of each enclosure.
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This allows you to build tension and release in your jazz guitar solos, and avoid any
lines sounding like mistakes.
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Enclosed 5th
As well as adding enclosures to the root of any scale, you can enclose the 5th.
When this pattern is comfortable, take it to other scales to expand upon the enclosed
5th in your practice routine.
As well, don’t forget to bring this pattern to your soloing studies, that’s where the
musical rubber really hits the road.
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This may sound too tense for some players, but give it a try.
But.
With time, your ears become accustomed to this new sound and you can apply these
enclosures organically in your solos.
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Honeysuckle
One of the most popular jazz guitar patterns, the Honeysuckle is based on the the song
by Fats Waller, Honeysuckle Rose.
In this pattern, you add a chromatic passing note to the original melody line to form this
new melodic sound.
The pattern begins on the root note of any dominant or minor family chord you’re
soloing over, such as 7th and m7 chords.
When starting on the root, you play down three chromatic notes, before running up a
diatonic triad to finish that section.
From there you can run down the rest of the scale as is.
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Again, work the Honeysuckle pattern, and enclosure, over both minor and dominant
family chords.
Start by learning the following example over G7, then bring this extended pattern to
other scales from there.
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After you’ve worked out this pattern, bring both the enclosed root and 5th to your
Honeysuckle pattern.
Try it out, though that may be too busy for you, it’s worth exploring in your practice
routine.
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Double Approach
You’ll now use a double approach pattern to highlight the 3rd of any 7th or maj7 chord.
As you can see, you play one note above the target note, in this case C with a B target
note.
From there, you play two chromatic notes below that resolve up to your target.
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In this key those four notes are C-A-A#-B. You can see this pattern over a G7 chord
below.
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Double Approach 2
Here’s the same approach note pattern, only this time applied to the 6th note of the
Mixolydian scale.
As you can apply this double approach to any two notes a half-step apart, you can use it
between the 3rd and 4th, and 6th and b7th of the Mixolydian scale.
After you’ve learned this, and the previous, pattern, apply it to any scale you know
where you have two notes one fret apart on the guitar.
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Joe Pass
Here’s a Joe Pass inspired pattern that you can use to add a jazz flavor to your
dominant and major family lines.
The crux of this pattern is the chromatic triplets running from the 3rd to the 5th and back
again.
In the example below, there’s an enclosure on the 3rd at the start of the chromatic
notes.
This is to make the exercise run smoothly, and it’s optional when working this pattern
into your jazz guitar solos.
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Dim7 Arpeggio
You can now mix an arpeggio into your jazz pattern practice.
Because this arpeggio is played from the major 3rd, you only use this pattern over
dominant 7th chords.
But, you can use it with any 7th-chord scale, such as Mixolydian, bebop, Lydian
dominant, and the altered scale.
When you play a dim7 arpeggio from the 3rd of a 7th chord, you outline a 7b9 sound in
that chord.
The b9 interval causes tension, so make sure to resolve that tension so it doesn’t sound
like a mistake in your solos.
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When adding in the enclosure, you can change the rhythm of the upper note to be a
quarter note.
This allows the rest of the line to be smooth, and emphasizes to the b9 interval.
Tension is cool is jazz, such as the b9, as long as you resolve that tension.
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For the jazz players in the room, these scale patterns are essential.
They’re the most common scale patterns in the genre, and make any scale you play
sound like jazz.
They expand your guitar technique, open your ears to new options, and bring a bit of
jazz into your playing.
And who knows, we might just win you over to the dark side one of these days.
Recently, I was checking out a video by New York guitarist Oz Noy where he talks about
his approach to octave displacement over a Cmaj7 chord.
The video prompted me to expand Oz’s approach to all seven major modes in order to
create a chops building exercise that teaches you the fretboard at the same time.
If you’re looking for a way to work scales in note order, but hide the fact that you’re
playing scales, octave displacement is the way to go.
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Work these patterns over the given scale shapes before moving them to other positions
on the fretboard in your studies.
Ionian
You’ll begin by applying Oz’s technique to Ionian, which is used to solo over Maj7
chords.
Notice how the scale still sounds like Ionian, but the octave displacement creates a new
way to get around a scale that you use everyday.
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Dorian
Besides Ionian, Dorian is the second most used mode of the major scale, as it works
great over m7 chords in any context.
Here’s the octave displacement approach applied to one position of Dorian, that you
can learn before expanding to other positions from there.
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Phrygian
Though not as commonly used as Dorian and melodic minor scales, Phrygian has a
unique sound that spices up your m7 lines.
The cool thing about octave displacement with Phrygian, is that it expands the b2 to the
a b9, which adds a new approach to this characteristic interval in your playing.
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Lydian
Lydian is an effective way to expand your Maj7 soloing ideas, and adding octave
displacement takes that approach one step further.
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An effective way to practice this idea, is ascending Lydian and descending Ionian,
mixing both major sounds in your studies.
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Mixolydian
Now you can apply Oz’s fingerings to one of the most common modes, Mixolydian,
which is used to solo over Dominant 7th chords.
Pairing this mode with Dorian cousin gives you a one-two punch that you can apply to
major ii-V-I progressions, which crop up all over modern repertoire.
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Aeolian
Next up is Aeolian, often referred to as the natural minor scale.
Take this idea and solo over any tonic minor sound, such as the im7 chord in any tune
like Summertime or Blue Bossa.
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After you’ve run patterns through scales, you can use them in your solos; running
patterns or chord progressions is the bridge between those two goals.
All of these patterns are taken from Coltrane’s Giant Steps solo, and some you’ve seen
previously in this lesson, only now in the context of a song.
If you find these patterns too difficult at this stage to work through, no worries.
Go back to the scale patterns above and focus on running those in your studies until
they’re comfortable.
When you reach that point, come back to this section and see if they’re easier to run in
your studies.
Here are 5 Giant Steps patterns from Coltrane’s solo to study, run with a metronome,
and add to your guitar solos over this, and other, chord progression.
Coltrane’s most used pattern in his Giant Steps solo, this pattern outlines the triad of
each chord, with the 2nd (9th) thrown in for color.
Begin by learning this pattern as written, then take it to other positions and strings sets
from there.
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Coltrane used triads frequently, and with variations that you can use to build your chops.
Below, you’ll find eight different triad variations that Coltrane used in his Giant Steps
solo.
Notice that he used three and four note groupings, repeating one nots to fill out the two
beats for each chord in the tune.
Triads can seem simple, but in the hands of a master like Trane, they sound hip and
fresh.
So, check them out over Giant Steps by running the variations through each chord
change.
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Though they don’t have a 7th, they still outline each chord and sound cool when using
the different variations below.
1. 135
2. 3513
3. 3513
4. 1315
5. 513
6. 351
7. 5315
8. 531
Here’s an example of how the first half of Giant Steps sounds when running triads, with
a variation, 3513, through each chord.
Work it as written, then take it to other positions on the guitar to expand this pattern in
your studies.
From there, work the other variations above through these changes.
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Below are four arpeggio variations that Trane used in his solo.
As was the case with triads, run each one through the chords, then improvise using only
arpeggios.
1. 1357
2. 8537
3. 5317
4. 3579
Here’s how the first eight bars of the tune look with an arpeggio variation, R537.
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Notice how he took a descending arpeggio, dropped the 7th and octave and voila, a
new, hip sound from a simple melodic device.
Often you feel that you’ve mastered a musical idea, such as arpeggios.
But, when you get to that mental point in your practicing, take a step back.
Write out as many variations of that idea as you can to find new approaches to a well-
known concept.
Here is that pattern to work out in this position, and others, in your practice routine.
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Here, Trane runs four scale notes in a row, mostly from the root or 5th of the chord.
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He also connects two four-note groups together to form a scale, which he enjoyed using
over Ebmaj7 with Ionian and Bb7 with the bebop scale.
These scale fragments mix things up melodically when soloing with triads and
arpeggios.
Here’s an example of these scale fragments over the first half of Giant Steps.
The line starts with a 1235 over Bmaj7 before using scales from there.
After working this pattern out as written, move it to other positions and string sets to
expand on it in your practice routine.
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This is when Trane starts on one note, moves away from that note before returning to
the original note at the end of a four-note grouping.
An example of a return lick would be playing D-C-B-D, 2-1-7-2, over a Cmaj7 chord.
There are six variations of this lick in Trane’s solo. Here they are as intervals to explore
in your studies.
1. 2172
2. 3123
3. 5675
4. 7217
5. 1671
6. 2432
Here’s an example of running the first variation, 2172, through all the changes in the
first half of Giant Steps.
Then, work other variations of this lick before mixing them together to form longer lines
in your solos.
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They’re effective chops builders, open up your fretboard, and introduce you to this
classic jazz tune at the same time.
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