As well as being a scales book Alternative Pentatonics is also a method to practice improvising over common chords using uncommon groups of five notes. Five notes are somewhere between an arpeggio and a scale, as well as being the ideal number of notes to craft some really nice phrasing (in my opinion), as I’m sure you realized when you first learned your minor pentatonic scale and started jamming over a 12-bar blues.
This book contains 28 new pentatonic scales divided into chord types so that you’ll know exactly what chords you can use them over.
For the intermediate player: this book will give you plenty of new and interesting options for playing over common chords and force you out of standard pentatonic scales and/or the major scale modes.
For the more advanced player: this book could be more about exploring possibilities than learning scale patterns; in fact, I would suggest that advanced players avoid even remembering the patterns in this book. Instead, they can be used to explore the improvisational terrain and find new sounds, then filed away in your subconscious and allowed to seep into your playing while you’re in the throes of improvisation.
So, if you’re stuck in a soloing rut or are looking for new sounds, outside sounds, exotic sounds, or even a few downright weird sounds, this is the book for you.
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.