January 2010 \ Premier Clinic \ Lethal Guitar \ Detailed Diminished I

Detailed Diminished I

Jeff Beasley

Learning the basics of the diminished scale so you can apply it to your playing


Premier Guitar January 2010
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More Detailed Diminished
Part I
Part II
Part III
Part IV
Part V
Part VI
Happy New Year Premier Guitar readers! Let's kick off 2010 and another exciting year edition of Lethal Guitar together! As all of my faithful readers know, every year I have several guests in my column and this year will be no different. I have several of my guitar/gun-slinging friends lined up to assist me in getting you, my readers, to where you want to be as guitarists. I also have some lesson series I’ll be covering this year, the first being a genuine comprehension and application of the diminished concept.

Rock guitarists usually have a smattering of an understanding of the diminished idea, but that’s about it! A lot of players would like to incorporate it more, but just don’t know how to. In this series I’m going give you an in depth look into the diminished realm, helping you to truly understand and apply it to your everyday guitar playing and/or writing. First let’s discuss the diminished concept…

The origin of the diminished concept is in the major or Ionian scale. If you look at that scale, there are 7 different tones “Do-Re-Mi-Fa-Sol-La-Ti-Do”. If we take the 7th tone “Ti” and make it the root we have a basic Locrian/Diminished scale. The scale syncs up perfectly with a diminished chord. Here’s why: each tone of the major scale can be harmonized into a chord, for example the 1st tone “Do” (major chord), 2nd tone “Re” (minor chord), 3rd tone “Mi” (minor chord), etc. When you harmonize the 7th tone, “Ti,” it becomes a diminished chord. Thus the Locrian scale (based on the 7th tone) fits perfectly with a diminished chord. We’ll go much deeper than this, but for now this is a great place to start.

Now I’ll illustrate different forms of the Locrian scale for you. In each example I’ll stop on the root of the scale, and I encourage you to do the same as this will give your ear a better understanding of the mode and help you to gain depth in your aural comprehension of Locrian. After you’ve completed the 5th form of the scale you’ll be exactly one octave higher from where you started with the first form of the scale. You should notice that the five forms repeat at the octave!


Listen

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Listen

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We’re just beginning our path through the diminished scale and are at the precipice of applying this idea to your everyday playing. Get acclimated to these fingerings and we’ll explore their use in the coming articles. I’ve got lots to show you so hang in there, it gets better and better. There’s a bit of theory involved but, I’ll walk you in step-by-step! Remember to practice slowly at first, always use a metronome and a clean tone. Thanks for logging on and tuning in, see you next month in Lethal Guitar.

     



Comments

(7 comments) display by
UsernameComment
talmHatr
on 06/04/2010
You are right "New Guy" and I was thinking the same thing; I put it down to rock guitar players not putting the work in. BTW/ the diminished scale is another name for the Whole/Half tone scale or Half/Whole tone scale, depending on perspective.
Jeff Beasley
on 05/30/2010
Thank you for your input newguy but the half-diminished chord is still considered a diminished chord. The fully diminished chord originates in the harmonic minor variant which is discussed in the later installments. thank you for checking out my article.
newguy
on 05/29/2010
There seems to be a pretty significant oversight here:

"Thus the Locrain scale (based on the 7th tone) fits perfectly with a Diminished chord."

No, it doesn't.

When harmonized, the Locrian scale contains a Half-Diminished, or Min7b5 chord (1-b3-b5-b7), NOT a diminished chord (1-b3-b5-bb7).

The diminished 7th required to build a fully diminished chord is not present in the Locrian mode.
T Brown
on 12/27/2009
Great. I have been working on minor b5 arpeggios (1, b3, b5, b7) this fits right in.
Jeff Beasley
on 12/26/2009
Merry Christmas to you guys and welcome aboard the new series, stay tuned, it gets better!

Slayblaze
on 12/24/2009
Very timely as I've only just discovered Diminished patterns and how working them into my playing has really changed my overall sound/style of soloing. Would like to see less scale runs (though I guess it's a good foundation to build on) and more patterns - in case there are a few I've missed.
eddie g
on 12/24/2009
Interesting theory lesson Ti Do Re Mi Fa So La Ti. Jeff's knowledge will not diminish anyone's ability to learn. I'm ready to work these lessons. MERRY CHRISTMAS Jeff, and all Shredders!



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