A popular podcast in England is The Frank Skinner Show on Absolute Radio, he has a segment called Idiotic Eureka Moments (that moment you finally realise something that was patently obvious to everyone else at first glance, like realising that the number 365 in web addresses isn't just a random series )
My IEM came about as I was referencing the major scale I'd drawn out on a fretboard diagram as I practiced to a backing track in C. Just 2 chords, C and Am, and then as the track moved to minor, I was looking at the minor scale diagram I'd drawn out below the major one...
So, after kicking myself for missing the blindingly obvious for so long I've dispensed with one of the diagrams...
Idiotic Eureka Moment
dtaylor wrote:
Tom N.
It's better late than never as they say Dean. The 6th note of each of the Major scales indicates what the relative minor key is. So it's win, win! multiple times.I can't believe it took me so long to realise :0
Tom N.
tombo1230 wrote:
I finally realised you just need to put any single triad in the correct position on the fretboard for the key you're in, then play on.
This is where I am with mapping the major and minor scale, the A, D and E shaped triads (major and minor). This shows the C triads in green and the relative (Am) triads in red and how they relate (as you say, Tom, with the sixth being the root of the minor shapes).dtaylor wrote:It's better late than never as they say Dean. The 6th note of each of the Major scales indicates what the relative minor key is. So it's win, win! multiple times.I can't believe it took me so long to realise :0
Tom N.
I finally realised you just need to put any single triad in the correct position on the fretboard for the key you're in, then play on.
dtaylor wrote:
I can only suggest that maybe it is too big a jpeg, maybe if you could reduce it. Dermot posts pic’s all the time, so he may know the size limit if that is the problem.tombo1230 wrote:This is where I am with mapping the major and minor scale, the A, D and E shaped triads (major and minor). This shows the C triads in green and the relative (Am) triads in red and how they relate (as you say, Tom, with the sixth being the root of the minor shapes).dtaylor wrote:It's better late than never as they say Dean. The 6th note of each of the Major scales indicates what the relative minor key is. So it's win, win! multiple times.I can't believe it took me so long to realise :0
Tom N.
I finally realised you just need to put any single triad in the correct position on the fretboard for the key you're in, then play on.
(I tried to attach a .JPG image @276 KB. Any advice...?)
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Interesting post Dean
Dermot
Dermot
thereshopeyet wrote:
Thanks, Dermot, I tried a few times again, I'm out of ideas :unsure:Sometimes if a picture doesn't upload for me I open it with MS Paint and resave it to my desktop as a jpg again :dry: .
Then I edit the post and upload the resave jpg.
I also find sometimes the edit needs to be edited to place the image
on the next text line.
Why this works I'm not sure !!