Sort of like moving a power chord up one fret at a time till you cover an octave - except arpeggiating (playing each note of a triad one at a time). There’s no scale. It’s arpeggiated chords which go up and down the guitar chromatically. No scale uses all 12 notes and he just goes up and down the fretboard. Each arpeggio is the same starting on a different root note. Each arpeggio is from a different scale because each arpeggio is in a different key.
I used to play this one years ago but forgot it and have been searching for the tab.....thank you for sharing !!!.
Sería genial otro ejercicio de petrucci o de Gilbert. Saludos 🙋🏻♂️
Can’t believe I slept on this
Gracias, lo estaba buscando 🙋🏻♂️🎸
Excelente!
An Workout for this Quarentine, please master 👏🎸
Really Cool.❤
I found this in my files and forgot I had it. Did Petrucci write this or did Morse? I love this exercise. You played it great!
Petrucci learned it from Mose. Thanks, I'm glad you like it!
I'm going to try this one on the bass!
Excelent work, grate playing, where can i find this exercise on pdf?
Thankyou 🙏
Without Sweep?
Yes, basically is an alternate picking exercise
alternate picking this is hard!
Kind sir thats the hole point!
What is the scale ?
Sort of like moving a power chord up one fret at a time till you cover an octave - except arpeggiating (playing each note of a triad one at a time). There’s no scale.
It’s arpeggiated chords which go up and down the guitar chromatically. No scale uses all 12 notes and he just goes up and down the fretboard. Each arpeggio is the same starting on a different root note. Each arpeggio is from a different scale because each arpeggio is in a different key.
@@arlarl5122 Kind sir but chromatic scale uses all 12 notes haha
Bruno Sutter tá ensinando guitarra? kksksksksks
Nice brow thanx