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Now we're going to show you the actual G flat major scale on my right hand. It starts right
here on G flat which is the bottom of the group of three here, G flat. You count up,
one, two, three, four, five, six, seven. So you have this white note and this white note.
It's very important that you get that pattern down. If you want to go through and make some
chords, start off with the triad, you want to make a third; which I skip a note in the
scale, that's why they call it a third. Sounds very nice on the accordion, you can fool all
of your friends, tell them you've been playing for years. Now, if you take a third and put
another third on top, you have a triad.
Again, the most important thing to remember are those note values; one, two, three, four,
five, six, seven. That's G flat major on your right hand, on the accordion.