Arpeggio Work Page
Essential For Technique,Theory, Learning the Fretboard and Training Your Ear
An arpeggio is a broken chord. Through this series we will learn many different arpeggios and fun ways to practice them. Plus we will learn how to use them in our playing. Arpeggios should be a part of your practice routine. They are important to:
- Learning the Fretboard
- Understanding Music Theory and Specifically Which Notes Belong to Each Chord
- Training Your Ear to Hear Chord Tones
- Improving Your Overall Technique
The links below are mostly there for myself as I continue to move old site and expand. You will probably need the log in information as most are currently on the old site.
Note: Don't forget Blues soloing using dominant 7th arpeggios. This should be a part of this series and the improv series.
Dominant Arpeggios - this is essentially the same information as the above page (a7 arpeggio). It is currently in the bluesoloing folder and I think it was created as a way to send people who signed up for blues soloing series to 3 pages for free. Need to figure this out.
- Hot For Teacher (Intro - tapping pattern moving from string to string - I have A major and minor on the A string done and currently on the Am arpeggio page) Youtube link
- Sultans of Swing (End of Solo - Uses Dm, Bb and C arpeggio on strings 1 and 2) should go after lesson 10 because of Bb and C's connection to the G moveable arpeggio is lesson 10
- F Diatonic Arpeggios on strings 2, 3 and 4 (Lesson 11)
- Hotel California (outro - using different arpeggios all on strings 1 and 2)
- Gmaj7th in 7th (Improv Lesson - Gmaj7 to F#7) and (Lesson 15)
- D Diatonic Arpeggios on strings 1, 2 and 3 (Lesson 16)
- Bm7 in 2nd (Lesson 16)
- Bm7 moveable (Lesson 16)




