In this video

The three-note descending pattern works just as well in major keys as it does in minor keys. This lesson applies the pattern to C major pentatonic, starting from the highest note of shape 5 and working downward in groups of three.

What You'll Learn:

  • The three-note descending pattern starting from the highest note

  • How to count: one, two, three, one, two, three

  • Patterns of four and six notes as additional exercises

  • Why "Live Forever" and "Dancing in the Moonlight" use this pattern

  • Proper alternate picking: down, up, down, up

  • The smart metronome trick: halving the BPM

  • How to play two notes per click instead of one

  • Building speed without an annoying fast metronome

  • Why descending patterns are most common in solos

  • How to extend the pattern to full scale shapes if desired

Starting High

The pattern starts from the highest note of C major pentatonic shape 5 (the C at the 8th fret of string 1). From there, you descend three notes, step back one note, descend three more, and repeat. The count is simple: one-two-three, one-two-three, one-two-three.

Alternate Patterns

While three-note patterns are most common, you can also practice in groups of four (1-2-3-4, 1-2-3-4) or six (1-2-3-4-5-6, 1-2-3-4-5-6). These variations build different aspects of your technique and train your fingers to handle various groupings. However, three-note patterns remain the most musically useful.

The Metronome Trick

Instead of setting your metronome to an intimidatingly fast tempo like 120 BPM, set it to half that speed (60 BPM) and play two notes per click. This makes the metronome less intrusive while still keeping you honest about timing. As you improve, increase the metronome speed by 5-10 BPM increments. When 60 BPM feels comfortable with two notes per click, move to 65, then 70, building speed gradually.

Starting Slow

If even 60 BPM with two notes per click feels too fast, start by playing one note per click at 60, 80, or 100 BPM. There's no shame in starting slow - it's far better to play slowly with perfect technique than quickly with sloppy execution.

Why Descending?

Descending patterns are more common in solos than ascending ones. Most iconic guitar runs move down the scale rather than up. Practicing the descending pattern prepares you for the phrases you'll actually use in real playing situations.

Next Up: C Major Extentions

Well done! Let's jump into the next video of the course.

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