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Pentatonic Scale Guitar Shapes. Minor pentatonic scales for guitar in TAB, fret diagrams & notation. Learn then play along to free backing tracks.
A-minor pentatonic is a reasonable starting place with the minor pentatonic scale and has the 5th, 7th, 9th, 12th, and 14th fret respectively as the first fret on the different positions. Here is a video that shows how to play the pentatonic scale in its 1st position across the guitar neck and how to use it.
Learn what the Pentatonic Scale is, how to find the Pentatonic Scale on your guitar, and how to memorize the scale shapes in this detailed guide.
Learn and master the pentatonic scale on the guitar with this complete guide including shapes, exercises, licks and theory.
The pentatonic scale, by far, has to be the most widely used guitar scale. Its versatility and playability is unmatched. In this lesson, we take an overall view of the pentatonic scale, how it’s formed, the two most common pentatonic scales used in music, and the patterns of the pentatonic scale.
The Major Pentatonic is a really cool sounding scale, used a lot in country and country blues, and also great for playing over regular chord progressions that would usually take the Major Scale.
Technically, a pentatonic scale could be any 5 tone scale, but in practice when guitarists refer to the ‘pentatonic scale’, 99% of the time they are referring to the minor and major pentatonic scale. Here is the classic pentatonic scale shape: This is in A minor, but the scale pattern is MOVEABLE.