What is The Indian Scale?
Indian Scale are in present unique form. like Classical
only Five notes are used in Indian Scale its called Raag in Indian Language
And many raag are present in Indian Scale
C Indian Scale Intervals:
1
b2
2
b3
3
4
b5
5
b6
6
b7
7
C Db F G Ab
I show you 5 shapes of C Indian Scale
Do practice daily
pentatonic from Ethiopia and Kumoi-joshi from Japan (mode of Hirajōshi)
Hirajoshi is the name of a Japanese Scale that was originally used in shamisen music. The word Hirajoshi is more correctly written with a macron: Hirajōshi.
This is a pentatonic scale ITs Scale look like a Indian Scale. its called Ethiopian pentatonic
Taking techniques from different instruments and applying them to the guitar can open up a whole new approach to the instrument and add freshness to your playing and ideas.
In this lesson, we will look at approaching the guitar in the style of a sitar and Indian mandolin. A sitar has many strings (up to 20, to be exact). Ironically, out of all of these strings, most of the time only one of them is used to do the actual playing. The others are sympathetic and drone strings. A sitar player plays mostly in a linear fashion up and down on that one string.
As guitar players, we started out learning our scales in box shapes across the neck from E to E. Many players can play a scale from low E to high E at blinding speeds, but if you ask a lot of players to now play those scales only up and down on one string, they will probably not be able to play them quite as fast for two reasons. First, they don’t know the scales as well note-wise as they do finger-memory-wise.
Second, playing up and down on one string requires rapid position changes they might not be used to. In the following examples, two different ways are given to play these scales: picking, which is more of a sitar approach, and legato using slides, which is more of a Indian mandolin approach. The Indian mandolin isn't like the double-stringed, Western mandolin. It has six single strings like a guitar and is a little larger than the Western mandolin. You will often hear legato-type phrasing on this instrument.
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