• Skip to main content
  • Skip to header right navigation
  • Skip to site footer
Howcast

Howcast

The best source for fun, free, and useful how-to videos and guides.

  • Arts & Crafts
  • Entertainment
  • Food & Drink
  • Health
  • Home & Garden
  • Relationships
  • Explore Guides
  • Contact
  • About
  • FAQs
  • Explore Guides
  • Arts & Crafts
  • Entertainment
  • Food & Drink
  • Health & Wellness
  • Love & Relationships
  • Home & Garden
EntertainmentHow to Play Country Guitar

How to Play a Minor Pentatonic Scale in Country Guitar

Transcript

Minor pentatonic scales for country guitar can be really cool. There’s some old mountain music, old ballads that use very modal sounding scales. Some of them are minor pentatonic. So let’s take a listen to something in E minor. E minor is the relative minor of G major. So we looked at G major’s pentatonic scale, and we just started the scale on a G note and ended two octaves below on a G note. What if we start the same group of notes in a scale-like fashion starting with an E note on the first string? Go down an octave. Continue down another octave to the low E. It would sound something like this.

So it’s got kind of a primitive sound to it. You could use that same E minor pentatonic on top of a E major tune, a tune that’s in E major, and you get a bluesy sound. So it’s a really versatile scale. It’s, like I’ve said before, it’s basically a major scale with a couple of notes missing. You can stick it on a minor sounding song or you can stick it on a bluesier major sounding song and it’ll give you all sorts of ideas for playing melody, playing solos.

Some melodies are song just using the pentatonic scale tones, so be listening for that when you’re trying this out of the guitar. When you’re hearing your favorite music, your favorite artist, listen to what the sound of the scale might be or the tonality of the key. You’ll probably start identifying that pentatonic sound whether it’s major or minor and once you get in these open positions where you’ve got the open strings, then you can start moving into other positions up the neck where maybe you don’t have any open strings to use but you can still use certain patterns. So, check it out and keep on picking.


Lessons in this Guide

How to Play Country Guitar with Boo Reiners

How to Play Country Guitar like Vince Gill

How to Play Country Guitar like Hank Williams

How to Play Electric Guitar like Johnny Cash

How to Play Acoustic Guitar like Johnny Cash

How to Play Chet Atkins Style Country Guitar

How to Play Doc Watson Style Country Guitar

How to Play Travis Picking Style Country Guitar

How to Play “Mother” Maybelle Carter Style Country Guitar

How to Play Jimmie Rogers Style Country Guitar

How to Use Amp Effects & Pedals in Country Guitar

How to Comp on Electric Guitar in Country Music

How to Comp on Acoustic Guitar in Country Music

How to Play Pedal Steel Licks on a B-Bender Guitar

How to Use a B-Bender Guitar

How to Play Pedal Steel Licks in Country Guitar

How to Play Pedal Steel Bends in Country Guitar

How to Bend Strings in Country Guitar

How to Play Boogie Rhythm Patterns in Country Guitar

How to Play 12-Bar Blues in Country Guitar

How to Play Chicken Pickin’ Style Country Guitar Licks

How to Play a Solo in a Country Guitar Ballad

How to Play Movable Chord Shapes in Country Guitar

How to Play w. Drone Note or “Pedal” Tone in Country Guitar

How to Play Grace Notes in Country Guitar

How to Play 6ths on Country Guitar

How to Play Double Stops in Thirds on Country Guitar

How to Play Vibrato on Country Guitar

How to Play with a Bottleneck Slide in Country Guitar

How to Play the Blues Scale on Country Guitar

How to Play a Minor Scale in Country Guitar

How to Play a Minor Pentatonic Scale in Country Guitar

How to Play a Major Scale in Country Guitar

How to Play a Major Pentatonic Scale in Country Guitar

How to Play Melodies Using Intervals on Country Guitar

How to Play a Sliding Note on Country Guitar

Copyright © 2026 · Howcast · All Rights Reserved · Powered by BizBudding Ventures with Springwire.ai

Privacy Manager