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Lesson time: (11min 1sec)
En esta lección, Laurence Juber te enseña a tocar su tema "PCH" en la guitarra acústica.
This lesson is part of the course Componer y arreglar para guitarra sola
Watch this lesson for free below.
Lesson transcript:
So that's a tune called "PCH." In keeping with the theme of this video, we're going to be exploring some of the more advanced aspects of fingerstyle guitar, both technically, compositionally, and harmonically.
This particular composition is in the key of B Major, which is not a normal guitar key, nor is it an abnormal guitar key, because indeed we have:
In the relative minor, G# Minor, we actually have three open strings:
"When did you ever think that your open G string would be an F double sharp?"
In the key of G# minor, that's the seventh degree of the scale, leading to the progression from F# to G#.
The tune starts off with this repeated pattern. Here's what I'm doing:
This leads me down the bass line. For example:
You'll notice that because I'm involving the open top E string, I'm using my thumb to fret the bottom bass note, the F#, and then walking up in sixth to the B.
Here's the sequence of chords I use:
This gives me:
Notice that it's the same bass progression as the intro figure. Now I'm fleshing out the chords and moving into the next section:
In G# minor, I have three open strings but instead of landing on the G# minor cleanly, I create complexity with a melodic motif.
What do I have?
G# and B make an A minor third, but with A# (the second of the scale) in the middle.
Along with this, I maintain an alternate bass pattern.
From here, I move to:
Here's how it looks:
In the bridge section, I go firmly into G# minor out of the riff:
The chords here are:
(Check for E presence in the sequence).
Now I change in the lick at the end. I'm moving through:
Transitioning to A, I think of this as a B flat seven chord, but technically we're dealing with A# seven.
With a conventional alternate bass, I move into:
As I walk up in sixths, I switch to:
I'm walking up the sequence back to B, and we go through the verse and chorus structure again.
Let me conclude by doing this one more time.
I sit on the G, articulate a G7, and then end up on the G# minor.
"It almost sounds like I've made a key change there, but really I'm just going back to one of my two home keys of the piece, and that's 'PCH'."

Laurence Juber se dio a conocer primero como guitarrista principal de Wings, la banda de Paul McCartney. Desde entonces ha construido una carrera como guitarrista fingerstyle, compositor y arreglista, trabajando en gran medida con la afinación DADGAD, que le valió el apodo de 'the Duke of DADGAD'.Los lectores de Fingerstyle Guitar Magazine lo han votado Guitarrista del año, y la revista Acoustic Guitar lo ha incluido entre los mejores guitarristas, junto a una larga lista de álbumes en solitario y giras por todo el mundo.En sus cursos enseña su técnica fingerstyle y la afinación DADGAD por la que es conocido, cómo combinar melodía, armonía y bajo en un arreglo para guitarra sola, y las piezas -como su emblemática 'Wooden Horses'- que lo reúnen todo. read more