Arpeggios in position March 20, 2015 No CommentYou’ll have noticed, from playing the arpeggios in the last post, that each arpeggio type – major, minor and diminished – have their own shapes. If you play them in the same position – as opposed to along the neck – things change. Arpeggios in A Let’s take the arpeggios in the key of A, fifth position. This means we’re using the A major scale, or A ionian. Same thing. As you play this you’ll notice different shapes for the same chord quality. Major and minor triads each have two shapes, even though both shapes start on the root. This makes playing arpeggios in position a bit more difficult, but it makes it easier to use when soloing. Use both Both ways are useful, and – good news – they’re complementary. Once you know your arpeggios in other modes, you can move between them using arpeggios. In the next post, I’ll show you the arpeggios in the dorian mode. Then we’ll start moving between ionian and dorian. guitarShare : Tweet ‹ Moving from ionian to dorian Dissonance, consonance, and arpeggios ›