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Any suggestions are welcome.
Thanks.
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04-06-2020 03:46 AM
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Here's a free article:
9 Triad Pairs That Sound Great | You'll Hear It
I like them all and especially the pair he recommends over C7 : C+ and Gb
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Originally Posted by mrblues
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Thanks rintincop, thats a good article for start!
Well Christian I am looking for a guitar centered book, which focuses on improvising only with triads. Thats it.
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Originally Posted by mrblues
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Originally Posted by mrblues
Well TBH I’m not entirely sure if such a book exists. Maybe I will write one! Any ideas?
Triads are very natural to the guitar. You can use them in root position or as upper extension structures.
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There's several books that address triad pairs Walt Weiskopf, Gary Campbell, Jerry Bergonzi first to come to mind.
George Garzone has a DVD that develops an approach
connecting random triads
forum member Jordan Klemons has a teaching group that addresses harmony in a triad + 1 (quadrad) mentality.
Mick Goodrick and Tim Miller have a book that explores the 10 possible pairs of 3 note structures derived from a hexatonic 6 of 7 scale collection.
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There’s basically not one book that does it all.
i really like Jordan’s approach btw
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I think a lot of the stuff out there I find a bit dry. Respect to Goodrick, but it always felt like an exercise working through his stuff.
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Bobby Stern who posts here has a book called Tradicisms ..it explores triad movement in half..whole..minor and major third and chromatic intervals..all in single note format..Major and minor chords..ascending and descending..
as Stern is not a guitarist but a sax player..your melodic lines develop quickly and you begin to hear fragments of melodies and harmonic/melodic movement from many tunes that use common triads in them
after you go through several exercises you begin to connect chords of all types and directions..
those who may think they know triads well may be surprised with this type of approachLast edited by wolflen; 04-06-2020 at 05:31 PM.
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Jerry Bergonzi's melodic structures is based on 1235 and 1345 patterns. They are triads + 1. He shows how to use them both in root position and as extensions over basic changes, including all permutations and inversions.
The thing is 4 note inversions are complicated structures. Another alternative is to work on guide tones and see triads as guide tones + 1 as a starting point. Build up from there (different fingerings, string groups, inversions, other superimpositions over the harmony)
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We are working on one right now. See the stickied thread(s) Up top of this forum.
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I’m shocked that nobody has mentioned Garrison Fewell’s book yet.
Sorry! Something went wrong!
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Originally Posted by whiskey02
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Originally Posted by whiskey02
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I am interested in both traid pairs and triads and extensions also. So I need a book (if that exists) which inlude both. And everything what you can do with triads during improvisation.
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Originally Posted by mrblues
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Actually I believe you should study triads - not only in concern of soloing... but first of all their possible application - soloing ideas come up more natural then..
I saw triad material in Randy Vincent "3-note voicing and beyond' and in some chapters of Steve Kahn's method - in very elaborated and guitaristic way... Mick Goodrick partly covers that too.. I think there are lots of methods that do that
Actually you can elaborate it yourself...
master voicings of close and open triads and inversions (major, minor, dim, aug) on 1-4 strings, 2-5 strings, 3-6 strings... it is not a crazy task to do...
Then just
1) apply to different bass/functions
2) combine them in different ways
While you are looking for method it can be a good point to start from
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Not to beat a dead horse, but there is literally a study group on this EXACT topic following Garrison Fewell’s book on this forum.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
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Originally Posted by mrblues
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If you want to learn George Garzone's triadic approach on guitar, get in touch with Chris Crocco!
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Thanks guys! Gonna look forward to what you all suggested.
Has anyone played or had a Supro Amulet ?
Today, 04:44 AM in Guitar, Amps & Gizmos