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How to SEE walk-ups & walk-downs on the fretboard 3 года назад


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How to SEE walk-ups & walk-downs on the fretboard

Get my PDF chord sheet for this lesson @ https://songnotes.net/lessons/354 Hey there friends! Another video on walk-ups & walk-downs today, where I'll show you how you can use the guitar fretboard as a visual aid when understanding what notes you're playing. I covered a very similar topic back in lesson #342 ( https://songnotes.net/lessons/342/ ), and after many requests, I'm explaining things a bit more -- this time with a brand new PDF for you to reference. I'll be looking at a walk-up & walk-down sequence, as it appears in five common musical keys (A, C, D, G, and E). For each key I'll show you the sample tab, as well as two different maps of the fretboard. My hope is this further helps you understand how walk ups & walk downs work, when to use them, and where the notes are coming from. Let me also remind you, my free web tool FretMonster - https://songnotes.net/fretmonster - is available for you to use to visualize the fretboard. It lets you select your desired key, and your desired scale (when in doubt, use the "major" scale) -- and it shows you all the matching notes on the guitar fretboard. There's other cool things you can do -- such as change the way the notes are labeled, as I reference in my video and PDF. Lessons I've made that use walk-ups & walk downs Here's some of the songs I've made lessons for that utilize what I show in this video. These make for great additional practice if you want to open up FretMonster, set it to the key of any song below, and make out what scale degrees are being used in the walk-ups and walk-downs. PDFs for each lesson are available via the links below! 👉 Walk the Line by Johnny Cash - this one is absolute treasure if you're looking to see how these walk-ups & walk-downs can be put to use. Cash uses three different keys in this song (changing the key with each verse), but always uses the same formula within each key. https://songnotes.net/lessons/6/ 👉 Angel Flying Too Close to the Ground by Willie Nelson - this one's great because Willie embraces chromatic walk-ups & walk-downs... which basically means, he's adding sharp (or flat?) notes between the "main" walk-down notes, traveling a half-step at a time within each connecting phrase. https://songnotes.net/lessons/135/ 👉 Honky Tonk Heroes by Waylon Jennings - the intro to this song is quite great, and has a subtle but important use of walk-ups & walk-downs leading up to each chord. Similar to the Willie Nelson song above, some of these runs are chromatic. https://songnotes.net/lessons/94/ 👉 Summertime by Billy Strings & Marcus King - a great example here of how just a few walk-up & walk-down phrases are all you need to add a ton of character to a longer progression. In my lesson, I teach you how Billy plays it, but also a simpler way that still taps into the walk-up and walk-down spirit. https://songnotes.net/lessons/279/ 👉 Kodachrome by Paul Simon - while this one isn't terribly heavy on the walk-ups and walk-downs, but there's a few distinctive runs used during the intro riff (also heard in the verse) which further embrace chromaticism, which really spices things up. And such a great song! https://songnotes.net/lessons/20/ That's just a few... check out my website for even more! https://songnotes.net/search/?query=W... If you want to view more of my lessons, visit songnotes.net which is my personal collection of lessons, tabs, and notes -- all created with care by me (David Potsiadlo). 🎸 Browse all my lessons https://songnotes.net 📝 View all my PDFs & song sheets https://songnotes.net/printables 🎟️ Unlock all my courses & premium content https://songnotes.net/join

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