Home Artists Posts Import Register

Downloads

Content

New here? Visit my Where To Start page.
Scroll down for more helpful links.

Hi Everyone,

In this lesson, we'll see how a I IV relationship looks when using a C shape as your I chord. This updated CAGED Soloing series is spending a lot of time on just one shape, showing the relationships between two chords at a time: The I chord and another chord. 

Your practice for these lessons can consist of playing fragments of the C shape over the I chord and fragments (or a full bar) of the E shape for the IV chord. If you need a refresher on all the CAGED shape fragment possibilities, check out CAGED Basics.

Once you start getting comfortable with the CAGED chord shapes, you can branch out into the relationship between the pentatonic scale, the the major scale, and each chord (I and IV). This is where you can begin creating phrases using melody-making "rules" or guidelines spelled out in Music Theory Monday lessons 17, 18 & 19.

Use this Jam Track in E Major to practice making chord fragments and melodic fragments. Remember, music practice doesn't always have to be musical and beautiful. Exploring and getting comfortable takes time.

Have fun and share your progress, frustration, excitement, etc on the community forum.

AND remember, there is no perfectly correct way to do this. All of my lessons just show a set of considerations. You can veer off from there when it feels right. Have fun!

More from this course:

Previous Lesson   |   Next Lesson 

Other helpful links:
Scott's Recommended Lesson Plan
Searchable Lesson Archive
How to Join the Community Forum
Scott's Jam Tracks
SPJ Live YouTube Channel
Scott's Main YouTube Channel

Files

CAGED Soloing- C Shape- I IV_v01.mov

This is "CAGED Soloing- C Shape- I IV_v01.mov" by Scott Paul Johnson on Vimeo, the home for high quality videos and the people who love them.

Comments

David Lynch

An old friend of mine always used to say that you had to play tight before you could play loose. It's great to have the structure there and then mix between major, minor, and pentatonic.

Gregory Lehman

Thanks Scott! So my previous question is about a comment you made new caged c shaped soloing I-vi. At 3:40 of the lesson you mentioned how Am the 6th chord was the relative minor of C the first chord. I have understood the terms relative major and minor applied to scales, such as Am scale is the relative minor of the C major scale. They use the same notes. So I guess you can also use this term for chords within a scale??