Jazz Guitar Lessons
What About Octaves?
In this JGT lesson, jazz guitarist Leon Rodriguez takes a unique look at ‘octaves’ in this music theory lesson specifically for guitarists.
We saw how two tetrachords laid out on a string set of one string defines the diatonic major scale in a really visible way. In the example, we see that the first note of the A tetrachord is one octave higher than the last note of the E tetrachord. The cycle of 4ths/5ths further


Stacking tetrachords further incorporates the


We use identical fingering (1,1,3,4) for every single-string tetrachord so that we intuitively trust it and just focus on the first note of each tetrachord along a somewhat diagonal line of alternating 5ths and 4ths. Finger the left hand in a comfortable “one finger per fret” ergonomic. Tetrachords are common musical words in the language of

The decending ‘slide’ lines up best on the 3rd finger. Ascend and decend each tetrachord individually until intuitive.

Take another look at the octaves from the perspective of


To be continued…Books and On-Line Private Lessons available at www.LeonRodriguezGuitar.com/shop
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!
-
Jazz Guitar Lessons2 weeks agoJazz Guitar Today Lesson: Variations On Standard Jazz Blues Chord Changes – Part 2
-
Jazz Guitar Lessons4 weeks agoJazz Guitar Today Lesson: Variations On Standard Jazz Blues Chord Changes – Part 1
-
Jazz Guitar Lessons2 weeks agoNew Vince Lewis Guitar Arrangement, “What The World Needs Now”
-
Artist News4 weeks agoGuitar Great Ron Eschete’ Dies at age 77
