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Understanding the Fingerboard and Moving Up-the-Neck
Flatpicking Essentials, Volume 4: Understanding the Fingerboard and Moving Up-The-Neck, as the name implies, teaches you how to become familiar with using the entire fingerboard of the guitar and it gives you many practical exercises and song examples that will help you become very comfortable playing up-the-neck. With this book (with downloadable audio content) you will learn how to explore the whole guitar neck using a very thorough study of three important fingerboard familiarization "road maps," including: chord shapes (chord "centers"), scale patterns (both horizontal and vertical), arpeggios, and song examples. You will also learn how to comfortably move up-the-neck and back down using slides, open strings, scale runs, harmonized scales, floating licks, and more. Over 150 pages in length, this book provides a very thorough study of each topic. If you've ever sat and watched a professional player's fingers dance up and down the fingerboard with great ease and you thought "I wish I could do that!" This book and 2 CD set are for you!
Table of Contents for Flatpicking Essentials, Volume 4:
Introduction Understanding the Fingerboard, Part I: Working with Chord Shapes The FDAA System The F-Shape Chord Form I-IV-V Progressions Bile the Cabbage Down Forked Deer (A Section) Version 1 Forked Deer (A Section) Version 2 Forked Deer (A Section) Version 3 Forked Deer (A Section) Version 4 The D-Shape Chord Form I-IV-V Progressions Bile the Cabbage Down Bonaparte's Retreat Worried Man Blues The Upper-A Shape Chord Form I-IV-V Progressions Bile the Cabbage Down St. Anne's Reel (B Section ) Red River Valley The Blues Shuffle 12-Bar Blues Rock Power Chord Riff The Lower-A Shape Chord Form I-IV-V Progressions Bile the Cabbage Down Arkansas Traveler Recognizing Patterns Overlapping I-IV-V Progression Chord Progression Practice I-IV-V Progression Workout Chord Shapes and Vocal Arrangements Will the Circle Be Unbroken Wildwood Flower Blackberry Blossom Minor Chord Forms
Understanding the Fingerboard, Part 2: Major Scales The Major Scale Formula Finding the Root Note That Darn B-String The G Scale Up-the-Neck (Box Patterns) Box Pattern Exercises You Are My Sunshine Whiskey Before Breakfast Busting Out Of the Box The One String "Unitar" Folding Scale on Low E String Unitar You Are My Sunshine Whiskey Before Breakfast The Two String Guitar Scale Practice Whiskey Before Breakfast
Moving Around the Fingerboard Part I: Learning More About Shifting G Major Scale Shifting Exercises Billy In The Lowground
Moving Around the Fingerboard Part II: Using Open Strings and "Floating" Moving Around Using Open Strings A Folding Scale Using Open Strings Learning How To "Float" Floating Through Scales Temperance Reel Forked Deer
Moving Around the Fingerboard Part III: Using Harmonized Scales Harmonized Scale Examples Whiskey Before Breakfast Katy Hill (A Section) Blackberry Blossom (A Section) Jimmie Rodgers Yodel Lick Nine Pound Hammer The Blackberry Blossom Etude Whiskey Before Breakfast The Keys of C and D Forked Deer
Scale Section Summary and Practice Suggestions Dynamics Exercise Blackberry Blossom with Fiddle Tune Pulse Note Duration Exercise Scale Timing Exercise
Understanding the Fingerboard, Part 3: Working with Arpeggios Arpeggio Exercise 1 Forked Deer Example G Arpeggio Exercise 2 G Arpeggio Exercises 3 and 4 G Arpeggio Exercise 5 C and D Arpeggios Exercises I-IV-V Arpeggio Exercise
Extra Song Examples Blackberry Blossom Fisher's Hornpipe Red Haired Boy Cherokee Shuffle Flowers of Edinburgh
Where To Go From Here
Intervals Appendix Playing Intervals Relative to the Root Interval Exercises
About the Flatpicking Essentials Series:
The Flatpicking Essentials instructional series is designed to teach you the art of flatpicking the acoustic guitar in a sequential, step-by-step method that will gradually build your flatpicking skill in a way that leaves no "gaps" or "holes." While this method will be extremely beneficial to beginners, this series will also be of great value to those guitar players who have been working to learn how to flatpick for quite some time, yet can't seem to get beyond a certain plateau. If you are having trouble moving beyond memorized solos, adding interest and variety to your rhythm playing, learning how to play up-the-neck, learning how to come up with your own arrangements to songs, learning how to play by ear, or learning how to improvise, then this series is for you!
Too many flatpickers are learning how to play by simply memorizing transcribed fiddle tune solos from tab books and video tapes. In doing that they are learning ineffectively and inefficiently. They are skipping over many vital elements in the learning process and thus they have a weak foundation. In this series my goal is to help you build a strong foundation so that you can easily maintain consistent forward progress in your study of flatpicking.
Each volume of this series presents material that provides the foundation for the next volume. In this first volume "Rhythm, Bass Runs, and Fill Licks" you learn how to develop all of the basic skills you will need in order to become a solid rhythm player. This book is designed to teach you rhythm skills in a way that will thoroughly prepare you for Volume 2, which is titled, "Learning How To Solo: Carter Style and Beyond". Volume 3 will start to build your fiddle tune repertoire by providing you with melody-based versions of the most popular jam session tunes. Volume 4 will teach you how to become familiar with the entire fingerboard and understand how to use it to your advantage in creating interesting solos. Volume 5 will explore the styles and contributions of the flatpicking legends: Doc Watson, Clarence White, Tony Rice, Dan Crary, Norman Blake, and others. Volume 6 will provide you with advance arrangements of songs and tunes (arranged by Tim May). From there, future volumes will explore other genres such as Celtic, Western Swing, and Gypsy Jazz.
As you will learn in the first section of Volume 1, the flatpicking guitar style developed chronologically along a very clear line of sequential technical skills. In order to learn how to flatpick fiddle tunes like Doc Watson, the student needs to build a foundation similar to the foundation Doc built for himself before he started picking lead solos on fiddle tunes. The first two volumes of this course present the techniques and skills that were developed on the acoustic guitar during the 30s, 40s, and 50s "the pre-Doc Watson skills" the skills Doc acquired as part of building his own musical foundation. The remaining volume then continue to follow the chronological development of the style.
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