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Guitar: How to Master the Circle of 5ths: Apply the Circle to Notes, Chords, and Keys

Posted By: Free butterfly
Guitar: How to Master the Circle of 5ths: Apply the Circle to Notes, Chords, and Keys

Guitar: How to Master the Circle of 5ths: Apply the Circle to Notes, Chords, and Keys by Scott Harris
English | 2015 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B015XIKS9G | 73 pages | EPUB | 0.65 Mb

The Ultimate Tool for All Musicians…
Inside How to Master the Circle of 5ths you'll learn…

  • Why the Circle of 5ths is the Ultimate Tool…
  • How to Quickly Build the Circle of 5ths…
  • How to Effortlessly Remember the Circle of 5ths…
  • How the Circle of 5ths Applies to Notes, Chords, and Keys…
  • What Makes a Key Major or Minor…
  • How to Transition Between Major and Minor Keys…
  • And MORE…

    "I never considered myself to be a musician when I was growing up. In fact, I was thoroughly convinced I did not have what it takes to be able to play music.

    I took cello lessons and failed miserable. I took piano lessons without making much progress. I sort of learned to play the recorder in school, if you can call playing hot cross buns playing.

    What I’m getting at is that I was a terrible musician. I couldn’t sing, I couldn’t keep time, I couldn’t play an instrument, the list of things I couldn’t do with respect to music is long.

    I found this particularly frustrating because my father is an absolutely fantastic professional saxophone player. I figured somewhere in me there had to be an inherent talent for music.

    I was very wrong.

    What I realized as I grew older was that my father didn’t have an inherent musical talent either. What he did have was an unstoppable drive to succeed.

    It took me a few years to get over my false idea that I could never be a good musician.

    A few years earlier my father had bought me a guitar as a Christmas present. It was sitting in a dusty case in my room, neglected.

    I had recently met a man named Jacob, another amazing musician. Jacob’s talent was with string instruments, particularly the bass. I asked his advice about what I should learn first.

    He told me to learn music theory, so I went online and began to read. I read a lot and started to teach myself scales. I was still really terrible at the guitar, but I kept at it, and slowly I improved.

    I stress the word slowly.

    A couple weeks into this process I asked Jacob to teach me guitar, and he said he would. I quickly found out that Jacob–despite being a wonderful player–is a horrible teacher.

    Jacob cannot think like a beginner, he cannot break down the knowledge and present it in bite sized pieces that are easy to swallow and digest.

    I wrote this book with that in mind.

    During the process of teaching myself the guitar, I learned a lot about how to teach guitar. I applied what I learned to write my best-selling guitar series: Scott's Simple Guitar Lessons.

    I’m still learning today. Music is extremely complicated and eclectic. I know for a fact that I will never master music, but that was never my goal.

    My goal was to be able to play with other people and enjoy doing it.

    I've achieved that goal, and it was worth the work.

    Now I want to help you achieve your musical goals, no matter what they are.

    I want to use what I learned the slow, hard way to make your learning process fast and easy.

    All the best,
    Scott J. Harris"

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