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Wednesday, May 2, 2007

Guitar Scales Practice Tip - The Number One Reason Why Guitarists Can't Use Scales Musically

by Craig Bassett

Find it hard to use guitar scales in a musical way? This article tells you why!

To start off this guitar scales practice tip, let me ask you a quick question. When was the last time you learnt a guitar scale to mastery? What I mean “to mastery” is this…

You can play the scale anywhere on your fretboard.

You know exactly what each note of the guitar scale sounds like.

You can see the scale over your entire fretboard.

You have memorized the notes and scales degrees of the scale. And you can see these notes and scale degrees over the entire fretboard.

You can solo using the guitar scale without having to think.

You have a large vocabulary of licks that you can play using the scale.


I’m guessing that you probably said something along the lines of “Never”. And that’s fine! Most guitarists never completely master the guitar scales that they learn. They just learn scales on a very superficial level.

And that is the number one reason why they struggle to use scales in a musical way when they improvise solos.

Try this experiment for a minute. Start talking about a subject that you know a lot about. It could be about anything. There are no rules! Pretend that you are explaining the subject to a friend. Keep on doing this for a few minutes. After you have finished, please read the rest of the article.

So what did you notice as you did it? Did you notice how you were thinking about the IDEAS that you were trying to convey and NOT the actual words themselves? I can almost guarantee that you didn’t think about the spelling of all of the words that you said. If you did, you would find it impossible to speak fluently…

Why is this? Why are you able to use those words without having to think?

You have imprinted those words into your brain so much that now you don’t consciously have to think when you use them. You spent countless hours learning, practicing, and mastering those words when you were young. Now you can use those words without thought. And do you know what?

It MUST be this way with the guitar scales that you learn! You need to learn them so well that you don’t have to think when you play them. It must become as easy as tying your shoelaces. Sure…you might think about the IDEAS you want to convey when you solo, but you don’t want to be thinking about the scale itself. If you do, then fluent and creative improvisation will be impossible.

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