Well my niece's second lesson went very well. The instructor decided to teach her that rock and roll is based a lot of times on the pentatonic scale. So to begin, he had her do the C minor pentatonic scale:
C Eb F G Bb C - C minor pentatonic
1 b3 4 5 b7 1 - scale functions
Basic minor pentatonic scale
|-b3--|-----|--4--|-----| -G string
|-b7--|-----|--1--|-----|
|--4--|-----|--5--|-----|
|--1--|-----|-----|-b3--| -E string
Starting on the 8th fret of the E string...
He got her grooving the following:
1-b3-1, b3-4-b3, 4-5-4, etc etc.
Then he began playing the same groove on his bass, and so she had to follow along at the same time. She had lots of false starts but he kept encouraging her.
Eventually, she made four repetitions without missing a beat. She was shocked and very pleased with herself. I pointed out that hey, twenty minutes ago, she didn't know how to do that!
Next, he picked a groove out of the Bass Guitar for Dummies book, and played it on the CD player to let her hear the timing. (He was impressed that the book teaches by fretboard diagrams, tablature, and clef.)
She learned that groove, which only had four different pitches, in a couple of minutes, and again, he made her follow along in sync with his bass.
I am very impressed by this young teacher. He is doing a great job of inspiring and educating the both of us. And what really impresses me, and what is UNLIKE most bass books I struggled with so many years ago, is that he is starting her out up high on the neck, where it is easier to physically reach the frets. That takes SO much of the difficulty and frustration out.
She's doing great, and couldn't be more excited about playing bass guitar.
EffClef