Harmonic Minor Arpeggios
14 interactive lessons focusing on chord-tone targeting across triad and seventh shapes, teaching you to land on strong chord tones across the neck.


In This Course:
- 14 Lessons
- 686 Exercises
Course Focus:
Arpeggio-first training built around Triad arpeggios, Seventh arpeggios shapes and clean chord-tone targets.
Harmonic Minor Arpeggio Lessons
Harmonic Minor Triads
Harmonic Minor TriadsHarmonic Minor Sevenths
Harmonic Minor SeventhsLocrian Triads
Locrian TriadsLocrian Sevenths
Locrian SeventhsMajor (Ionian) Triads
Major (Ionian) TriadsMajor (Ionian) Sevenths
Major (Ionian) SeventhsDorian Triads
Dorian TriadsDorian Sevenths
Dorian SeventhsPhrygian Dominant Triads
Phrygian Dominant TriadsPhrygian Dominant Sevenths
Phrygian Dominant SeventhsLydian Triads
Lydian TriadsLydian Sevenths
Lydian SeventhsSuper Locrian Triads
Super Locrian TriadsSuper Locrian Sevenths
Super Locrian Sevenths
FAQ
What do harmonic minor arpeggios help you practice?
What do harmonic minor arpeggios help you practice?
It trains chord-tone accuracy (triads and sevenths) inside consistent fretboard positions, so arpeggios connect across the neck without losing the tonal center.
How can I incorporate this course into my playing?
How can I incorporate this course into my playing?
Use Jam Mode to generate a computer-backed groove (bass + chords), then loop each lesson in this course in time. Keep the End Note target consistent and practice landing cleanly on beat 1.
What is the difference between this system and other teaching systems?
What is the difference between this system and other teaching systems?
Some systems (like CAGED or 3-notes-per-string) group the same fretboard information differently. ScaleMode.Pro uses Hand Position Organization (Position 1–7 and Position 1–5 for pentatonic/blues) so your labels stay consistent.
How does Start/End Note targeting improve phrasing?
How does Start/End Note targeting improve phrasing?
It turns every run into a destination exercise: you practice resolving to a chosen degree (often a chord tone). Repeating that skill builds real phrasing, not random scale motion.
Why does “Phrygian dominant” show up so often?
Why does “Phrygian dominant” show up so often?
It’s a common harmonic minor mode name with a distinctive sound that guitarists use over dominant or minor-key contexts. Mapping it by position helps you hear the color instead of guessing.
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Pricing
Pro Yearly
Best value: 25% savings with yearly
- Learn guitar without getting lost on the fretboard
- Get instant note feedback through your microphone
- Follow step-by-step lessons that keep you moving
- Practice with backing grooves that make it stick
- Save your best drills and come back to them fast
- Track your progress and stay motivated to improve
Pro Monthly
- Learn guitar without getting lost on the fretboard
- Get instant note feedback through your microphone
- Follow step-by-step lessons that keep you moving
- Practice with backing grooves that make it stick
- Save your best drills and come back to them fast
- Track your progress and stay motivated to improve
Pro Yearly
Best value: 25% savings with yearly
- Learn guitar without getting lost on the fretboard
- Get instant note feedback through your microphone
- Follow step-by-step lessons that keep you moving
- Practice with backing grooves that make it stick
- Save your best drills and come back to them fast
- Track your progress and stay motivated to improve
AboutWritten by Stephen Magreni • Last updated February 6, 2026
- Arpeggio-first training built around Triad arpeggios, Seventh arpeggios shapes and clean chord-tone targets.
- Start/End Note targets by degree are enabled for this course (including negatives and zero when available).
- Apply the same targets in time with Jam Mode backing grooves.
Credentials: BA University of Pittsburgh — Music Theory. Focuses on musicianship, composition, electronic music, and jazz guitar.