![]() Take your guitar playing to the next level. Strings of Rage™ Syndicate Membership Join The Strings of Rage Syndicate! Don’t overdo it however, take regular breaks and stop if you start to feel any pain/strain. Remember to start slow and do lots of repetitions to build up your muscle memory. Once you start to get the hang of it you’ll be able to string them together and play the full sequence. Next you can start to practice moving from one shape to the next. Practice each arpeggio separately until you feel comfortable with them. A Major Sweep Picking Arpeggio for 7 String Guitar B Minor Sweep Picking Arpeggio for 7 String Guitar G# Diminished Sweep Picking Arpeggio for 7 String Guitar C/E Augmented Sweep Picking Arpeggio for 7 String Guitar C Augmented Sweep Picking Arpeggio for 7 String Guitar A Harmonic Minor Riff for 7 String Guitar A Harmonic Minor Riff for 7 String Guitar The sweep arpeggios will lead nicely into this. To make the sequence more interesting I’ve written a short riff using the A Harmonic minor scale. They are fairly straightforward to play and fit nicely into a single bar of 4/4 when played as 16th notes. The following shapes work pretty well because they use common 5 string shapes which are extended down to the 6th and 7th strings. There are a few different ways to play these shapes across seven strings. Playing the 7 String Sweep Picking Sequence So E+ doesn’t technically fit within A Harmonic minor: A – B – C – D – E – F – G#. You could call it an E+ chord as it has the correct pitches for this chord, however the +5 in E Augmented should technically be B# and not C (Even though they are the same pitch). After this we’ll slide up to a regular C+ chord. I’ve noted this as C/E+ (C Augmented with the E in the Bass). We could play an E Major chord but instead we’ll swap the 5th (B) for the minor 6 (C), this gives us an inversion of a C+ (C Augmented) chord. ![]() Then we will lower the C# to C, this puts us in A Harmonic minor. G# diminished 7 String Sweep Pickingįor our first arpeggio progression we’ll use AMaj, Bm and G#dim. We’ll start off using A Major and then use the V chord to transition in to A Harmonic minor.Ī – B – C# – D – E – F# – G# Chord In The Key of A Major: ![]() 12,903 views, added to favorites 926 times. ![]() In episode 1 we’ll be using chords from the Major Scale and Harmonic Minor Scale. Basic Sweep Picking Exercises And Warm Ups Tab by Lessons - Sweep Picking. Check out the video lesson for this post! Seven Basic Triads in A Major/A Harmonic Minor ![]()
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