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Scott Paul Johnson
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Circle of fifths | Practice No. 2 | Movable Shapes

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This is the 2nd practice video that accompanies Music Theory for Guitar • Lesson 4 • Circle of Fifths 

In this exercise, we'll play through all the Major Scales in the same order as Practice No. 1, but we'll only use one shape the entire time, moving the root note of the shape up and down the fingerboard as needed. 

Check out the PDF below and feel free to post your progress and questions in the Patreon Community post for this lesson.

Have a question? Ask on the weekly live Q&A, called Office Hours. Also, check out Practice Thoughts if you need help figuring out how to practice.

Play-Along Practice Tracks:

30BPM 

40BPM 

50BPM 

60BPM 

80BPM 

100BPM 

120BPM 

140BPM 

160BPM 

180BPM 

200BPM 

Other lessons in this series:

- Circle of Fifths Lesson 

- Homework

- Practice 1 - Open Position Scales

Check out the Lesson Archive for more Music Theory lessons.

This lesson is part of my Music Theory For Guitar series.

Circle of fifths | Practice No. 2 | Movable Shapes

Comments

Always work some balance in. This sounds like a great, personalized approach. The more you look inward and ask "how do i keep focusing on the things that excite me now while working toward other things that sound exciting" the more you'll start to feel like a musician

Scott Paul Johnson

So, the circle of fifths lesson - that slowed me down. What I noticed about myself is, I have been practising the lessons so much I was neglecting just playing an practising the songs I already sorta knew and liked. I needed to bring some balance back into my practice. I feel better for it. So, now I work on theory and my top four. Later it will be theory and a second top four.

Richard Finlay

Could I do the same workout by creating, 6th string to 1st string shape pattern and moving it for all 6th string root notes and then creating another 5th string to 1st string pattern and moving for those respectively ? Would this give me another octave to play over ?

harsh ghesani

me too I always fumble in the open string position lol

Donnie Marhefka

Yeah, it's worth it

Clement Kabiligi

I was trying to demonstrate the power of shapes on guitar, so I wanted a bit of contrast between exercise 1 and 2

Scott Paul Johnson

at least one common shape. memorizing all the shapes in exercise #1 was a bit tricky for me

Clement Kabiligi

What kind of music after 160 bpm...

Sev

I believe it's attached at the bottom?

Scott Paul Johnson

Is there a PDF sheet of the practice of the diagram for the play-along?

Cameron Reeves

I love thesiunds between the fiths. New devide by linkin Park's intro uses them and I love the song, its some what nostalgic and this was a good lesson, thank you. :3

Flamecrew9 At roblox

Love this lessons man.

Flamecrew9 At roblox

Once i had worked on the #01 major scales lesson, this one was pretty easy to keep up with!

Rafael

right i guess it is both depending on the direction.

Magela Crosignani

It's true. Sometimes people call it the circle of fourths for that reason!

Scott Paul Johnson

so confusing that if you look at it from C then the one above is the perfect 5th but if you look at from G the one below is the perfect 4th..... brain is exploding.

Magela Crosignani

Nope! Just those two strings.

Scott Paul Johnson

does this shape work all around the fret board? Aside from the E and A string?

Nicholas Burbano

i have to use gorilla snot.

ken roberts

It’s a weird/gross-looking habit but yes! If you have dry skin on your hands, it makes it a lot easier to grip the pick.

Scott Paul Johnson

You lick you finger before grasping the pick; does it help?

ken roberts

Haha. Yeah. I just really wanted to illustrate the power of guitar shapes

Scott Paul Johnson

Practice number one is a pain in the a** compared to this 😅

Daniele La Rosa


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