Hacking the CAGED System: Diatonic Harmony

Β· Graham Tippett
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Hacking the CAGED System: Diatonic Harmony is both a stand-alone ingenious system that teaches you to construct all the components of any key signature on the guitar fretboard, as well as following on nicely from Hacking the CAGED System – Book 1. This book will provide you with the tools to improvise freely within any key using a variety of devices such as modes, pentatonic scales, triads, chord tones, and arpeggios, chord synonyms, arpeggios, AND come up with your own diverse chord progressions using chord synonyms and all the chords in the key.


Please note: it is not a prerequisite to have worked through Hacking the CAGED System – Book 1.


You’ll also be able to create modal chord progressions that can be as simple or as complex as you like, as you’ll have access the full range of chords you can find in any key signature.


Mapping out key signatures on the guitar fretboard is one of the best (and underused) ways to really learn the neck, play with confidence, and sound exactly like you know what you’re doing in any musical situation. Key signatures keep everything in context and prevent you from learning random bits of information that you can’t really use or that don’t add much to your playing. This book will tie your knowledge together and enable you to understand what chords work well together, as well as how to solo over them using a variety of devices such as triads, arpeggios, pentatonic scales, and modes, among others.


I’m sure you’ve been there; you come up with a chord progression, riff or the beginning of a piece of music, but you don’t know what chords work with it, where to go next, or even how to solo over it. This book will put all those options right at your fingertips, leaving you free to do some of your best playing and writing yet.

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Guitarist Graham Tippett studied literature, music and languages in the UK and has been playing guitar for over 20 years. He is well-known for his love of languages and music, drawing parallels between the two art forms as he continues to write and research on the subjects of guitar methods and improvisation in both standard and all fourths tuning. Graham is also a graduate of the ACM (Academy of Contemporary Music) in Guildford, UK where he was taught by the likes of Guthrie Govan, Dave Kilminster, Eric Roche and many others.

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