Electric Guitar: The Scriabin Scale with Licks & Exercises

By Jason Earls, published Apr 15, 2008
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Alexander Scriabin was a brilliant Russian pianist and composer who lived from 1872 to 1915. He was an innovative musical genius with a touch of the mystic about him (he composed works with such titles as, Prometheus: Poem of Fire, and The Poem of Ecstasy). He was also a devoted follower of the philosopher, Friedrich Nietzsche, and regularly attempted to represent Nietzsche's ideas in his music (particularly the concept of the ubermensch, or "overman").

Scriabin died under strange circumstances. In one of Henry Miller's books he stated that Scriabin "died of a pimple," but what actually happened is that Scriabin either cut himself shaving and a serious infection set in, or he developed a boil on his mouth that became severely infected, resulting in his death.

Experts suspect that Scriabin had a condition known as synesthesia, in which a certain blending of the senses takes place. For example, when a person with synesthesia hears music, they might also see various displays of color and images in their mind as the pitches and rhythms of the music change.

Enough about Scriabin the man. Now on to some exercises for the guitar using a wonderful scale that Scriabin invented, which we now simply call the Scriabin scale. Here it is in the key of C, with a chord at the end built from the scale tones:

Low E string: {-8-9-12-} A string: {-10-12-} D string: {-10-11-14-} G string: {-12-14-} B string: {-13-14-17-} E string: {-15-17-} chord: { 8 10 11 x 8 8 }

(Forgive the strange tablature, I don't have the ability to use a fixed-width font as in normal guitar tablature for this article.)

Play the scale above in a 1-2-4, 3-4 fingering combination per every two stings, shifting between them as needed. That is, think of the strings as being in sets of two: E-A is a pair, D-G is a pair, etc, then follow the 1-2-4, 3-4 fingering combination for each set. It's easy to see that the wide intervals of the scale make it a fairly challenging exercise on its own when layed out on the fret board. Also, choosing one set of strings and going up and back in the scale can make for a fairly challenging fingering and picking exercise as well. For example, try this pattern:

Electric Guitar: The Scriabin Scale with Licks & Exercises

Alexander Scriabin, brilliant Russian composer.

Credit: Romanm

Copyright: Wikipedia Commons

Did You Know?
Experts suspect Scriabin had a condition known as synesthesia, in which a certain blending of the senses (hearing, sight, etc.) takes place.
Comments
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Thanks, Laura.

Posted on 04/16/2008 at 7:04:31 AM

 
Ow! My fingers hurt just reading that. :) I might try it sometime for a good workout though. Thanks for the interesting article!

Posted on 04/15/2008 at 9:04:31 AM

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