Escala de Sol Blues Mayor para Mandolina — Standard
Posiciones para Mandolina en afinación Standard
Sol Blues Mayor en Standard — Notas e Intervalos
La escala Blues Mayor de G es la pentatónica mayor con una nota blue añadida para darle más expresividad. En Mandolina, las notas son G, A, Bb, B, D, E. Combina el carácter alegre de las tonalidades mayores con los bends y deslizamientos del blues. Va genial para country, swing y cualquier contexto de jazz-blues. Usada comúnmente en Blues, Country, Jazz, Swing, Southern Rock. Entre los intérpretes destacados se encuentran B.B. King, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Albert King. Use over major and dominant 7th chords in blues, country, and swing contexts. Mix with minor blues for complete blues vocabulary.
Notas: Sol, La, Sib, Si, Re, Mi
Intervalos: 1P, 2M, 3m, 3M, 5P, 6M
Grados: 1 2 b3 4 5 6
Fórmula: W-H-H-WH-W-WH
Número de notas: 6
Afinación: Standard (G-D-A-E)
Acerca de la Afinación Standard
The mandolin is tuned in fifths — G-D-A-E from low to high — the same intervals as a violin. This tuning gives the mandolin its distinctive bright, penetrating tone that cuts through any ensemble. With only four courses of doubled strings and 20 frets, the mandolin rewards precise melodic playing and rapid tremolo picking.
From Bill Monroe's invention of bluegrass to Chris Thile's genre-defying virtuosity with Punch Brothers, the mandolin has proven itself far beyond its folk roots. Its fifths tuning makes it a natural partner for fiddle players, and its compact fretboard encourages creative chord voicings and rapid scale runs that are impossible on guitar. The mandolin is also central to Italian classical music, Brazilian choro, and Irish traditional music.
Artistas destacados: Bill Monroe, Chris Thile, David Grisman, Sam Bush, Sierra Hull
Ideal para: Bluegrass leads, Celtic melodies, tremolo picking, and any ensemble that needs a bright, cutting melodic voice