Guy Pople is a music, education and multimedia specialist based in the UK's North-West. He plays guitars and runs Dark Halo Music, a one-stop shop for musicians along the Fylde coast. Dark Halo Music offers recording, tuition and instruments.

His band is called Virtual Strangers, an international cyberband of like-minded professional musicians.His latest CD is Virtual Strangers' "Musica Universalis". Virtual Strangers music can be found on G9, ITunes, Spotify, MySpace and via their web site.
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Click here for a printer-friendly version of "CAGED Arpeggios I - Interlocking Forms".
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Here is a great way of acquiring some useful improvisational tools, improving your techniques, sharpening your position shifting, discovering new chord shapes and learning some notes around the board. Carve up this pattern of arpeggios using the economical fingerings provided. These patterns cross the strings relentlessly so whilst you alternate pick, slide, hammer-on, tap and pull-off, etc.; be sure to work in some sweeping.
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Take a rest, grab a fretboard diagram and examine all the notes. They are all D, F and A (repeated in that order). DFA are the notes of a D minor chord (or triad). Arpeggios are simply chords broken into their constituent notes and reassembled in alphabetical order from the root or tonic (in this case D).
After you master the pattern, try jamming around in the patterns looking for licks and phrases. Anything you create will be useful in the three keys where DFA can be found loitering with intent i.e. D minor (D E F G A Bv C), A Minor (A B C D E F G A) and G minor (G A Bv C D Ev F). Now try and combine some of the patterns into fretable variations of the humble open D minor chord.
If you are feeling industrious, break up another common chord and arpeggiate it across your board. If you put redistribute an A minor for example you could bounce between this and the Dm shapes in order to produce a progression. Masochists might even try extending each arpeggio with 6ths, 7ths, 9ths, 11ths and 13th.
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