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A diminished arpeggio is a three note "broken chord" with a numerical formula of T/1- Arpeggio UsageAs an arpeggio is essentially a chord played as individual notes not overlapping, a lead guitarist can construct a melody following the chords that the rhythm guitarist is playing without any fear of hitting bad notes, resulting in a melody that is generally, very harmonious. Arpeggios are also very useful when constructing a sweep picking melody or part solo as the patterns tend to have a note on each adjacent string (with the occasional two notes per string depending on the pattern) which lends itself very nicely to sweep picking. Arpeggios are also excellent dexterity and coordination exercises and most good guitar teachers will use them in their curriculm. About Arpeggio Pattern NumberingThe diminished arpeggio patterns below are referenced as numbers #1, #2, #3, #4 and #5 which you will find correspond directly with the chord voicings, scale patterns and reading positions of the same number, for instance: diminished arpeggio pattern #4 is built from diminished chord voicing #4 which is built from diminished scale pattern #4 and all belong to reading position #4. The five positions cover the entire neck which gives us a structure to memorize scales, arpeggios and chords. Diminished Arpeggio Profile
Diminished Arpeggio PatternsThe scales below are not shown in any particular key, they are patterns which can be moved around the guitar neck freely using the tonic (circled dot) as your navigator. See example below.
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Using octaves to learn notes on the guitar neck
Diminished Arpeggio Audio Sample(s)To download audio sample(s) for later listening, right click on the MP3 link, then from the context menu that appears select Save Target As (Internet Explorer) or Save Link As (Firefox).
Related Lessons & Resources
External Resources
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