Since you started with a different naming of the root note, all the notes that follow will have different names between the two scales even though they are the same notes when compared by ear
I have a burning question so please answer me, Do all guitar solos revolve around the major key then? Or how do you identify the meldoy of a song ? Please provide a solution, I'm kind of frustrated
Not all solos revolve around Major keys. There are also minor keys and other scales that chord progressions come from. It's def way too hard of a question to answer in text. We'll try our best to answer your question during our Live Q&A's. Thanks! -Chad
+Fingerstyle Is Life Technically B# is a C and E# is an F. But in music sometimes you have to call them B# and E# instead for it to be the proper spelling. For example: If you spell out a Major Scale you need to have all the letters of the musical alphabet (A-B-C-D-E-F-G)....That means if you spell out an F# Major Scale it would be F#-G#-A#-B-C#-D#-E#-F#. On your fretboard that E# is really just an F but you can't spell it as F because then you wouldn't have all the letters of the musical alphabet...you'd end up with F#-G#-A#-B-C#-D#-F-F# which would mean you have two F's and be missing an E. There will be other times you'll run into E# and B# as well or even something like Abb which is technically the same note as G. I wouldn't worry too much about it for now just know that there are reasons for it. Thanks! -Chad
technically your right, but its called different in a other scale. Cus a C## is a D note, there are 2 half steps becouse it takes a half step to make a major note a sharp (minor)
You always go to the next letter of the musical alphabet, so after d comes always e. After d# follows e# that’s why you would pick the eb so you can go to the f note. Could u understand my explanation?
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Hey man, can't thank you enough for making it this easy to learn music theory
I've been looking for good lesson all over TH-cam yours was the only useful one thanks
These lessons have been helping out a lot!
Chad I appreciate these very detailed and clear lessons. Thanks!!!!!
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the site is down where can i get the e guide
thank you sir
Do I need to learn whole fret note
why is A# and Bb major scale different when they are the same notes?
Since you started with a different naming of the root note, all the notes that follow will have different names between the two scales even though they are the same notes when compared by ear
I have a burning question so please answer me, Do all guitar solos revolve around the major key then? Or how do you identify the meldoy of a song ? Please provide a solution, I'm kind of frustrated
Not all solos revolve around Major keys. There are also minor keys and other scales that chord progressions come from. It's def way too hard of a question to answer in text. We'll try our best to answer your question during our Live Q&A's. Thanks! -Chad
@@Moveforwardguitar will you upload the Q&A afterwards on your channel because I might miss it and I would really like to get the explanation
Yes we always upload the replays of the Q&A's so they can be watched at any time. Thanks! -Chad
@@Moveforwardguitar i just want to say that you are completely awesome for posting these videos!
@@icyburger Thanks! -Chad
Best explained
I am unable to download e guide free
This makes sense but why do you have a b# and an e# I thought they didn't have sharps?
+Fingerstyle Is Life Technically B# is a C and E# is an F. But in music sometimes you have to call them B# and E# instead for it to be the proper spelling. For example: If you spell out a Major Scale you need to have all the letters of the musical alphabet (A-B-C-D-E-F-G)....That means if you spell out an F# Major Scale it would be F#-G#-A#-B-C#-D#-E#-F#. On your fretboard that E# is really just an F but you can't spell it as F because then you wouldn't have all the letters of the musical alphabet...you'd end up with F#-G#-A#-B-C#-D#-F-F# which would mean you have two F's and be missing an E. There will be other times you'll run into E# and B# as well or even something like Abb which is technically the same note as G. I wouldn't worry too much about it for now just know that there are reasons for it. Thanks! -Chad
+Move Forward Guitar Thanks Chad I think that explained it well!
Does that mean that there are no songs in the key of A#?
technically your right, but its called different in a other scale. Cus a C## is a D note, there are 2 half steps becouse it takes a half step to make a major note a sharp (minor)
I don't understand something. For the key of D# for example, if you go up 1 whole step why does it say E# instead of F?
You always go to the next letter of the musical alphabet, so after d comes always e. After d# follows e# that’s why you would pick the eb so you can go to the f note. Could u understand my explanation?
Hope that helps
@@OkeOke-zs5ju Thanks, that helped.
Thanks for the question and the answer