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Notes on the Guitar Fretboard

Lesson 3/87 | Study Time: 5 Min
Course: Jazz Guitar
Notes on the Guitar Fretboard

Notes on the Guitar Fretboard

Here is a fretboard diagram of all the notes on the guitar. Play the notes on each string from the open notes to the 12th fret. The note on the 12th fret is one octave higher than the open note e.g., the open 6th string is an E note and the note on the 12th fret of the 6th string is also an E note, but is one octave higher.

A good way to learn all the notes is to take one string at a time. Call the "in between" notes sharps as you progress up the fretboard and flats as you go back down. The following diagram shows the notes on the 4th string.

To practice naming the notes, slide your first finger up one fret at a time and say the name of each note out loud as you go. When you reach the 12th fret where the notes repeat, move back down one fret at a time. You can use any finger to do this exercise, it is the note names that are important here, not the fingering.

The dots on your guitar are good points of reference. You can use them to help the memorizing process.

Once you are confident you know the names of the notes along a particular string, pick the name of any note at random and find it as quickly as possible. When this becomes easy, move on to the next string.

Another useful exercise is to find the same note on every string. Usually a note appears twice on each string unless it is at the 11th fret.

One last way to learn the notes is to name them across each fret. Once again use sharps as you go higher in pitch and flats as you go back down.

Peter Gelling

Peter Gelling

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Class Sessions

1- Keys and Key Signatures 2- More about Eighth Notes 3- Identifying Intervals by Ear 4- Intervals 5- Developing Rhythmic Control 6- Using Ties 7- Transposing 8- Using the Whole Fretboard, Playing in all Keys 9- Scale Degrees 10- The Triplet 11- Scale Tone 7th Chords 12- LESSON NINE 13- Using the Scale Forms 14- Learning all the Notes 15- INTRODUCTION 16- More about Major Scales 17- The II V I Progression 18- Arpeggios and Chord Progressions 19- Seventh Chords 20- Scale Tone Chords 21- Modes over Chord Changes 22- Fingerings for Modes 23- Basic Jazz Sounds and Techniques 24- The Major Scale 25- Understanding Chords 26- Modes 27- Understanding Rhythms 28- Understanding Chord Progressions, Arpeggios and Modes 29- Eighth Notes 30- The Chromatic Scale 31- Arpeggios 32- Major Scales in all Keys 33- Intervals in Sequences 34- Interval Qualities 35- Playing What You Hear 36- Improvising with Arpeggios 37- Scale Tone 7th Pattern 38- Major Key Triad Pattern 39- Tones and Semitones 40- Learning to Play Seventh Chords 41- Improvising with Set Rhythms 42- The Importance of Timing and Attitude 43- Using Set Rhythms 44- Syncopation 45- Mode Formulas 46- Other Common Progressions 47- Swing Rhythms 48- Creating Your Own Melodies 49- Ties Across a Bar Line 50- Combining Modes and Arpeggios 51- Visualizing Scale Degrees 52- Notes on the Guitar Fretboard 53- Tuning Your Guitar 54- Interval Distances 55- Chord Construction - Triads 56- Sequences 57- Jam Along Progressions 58- Scale Tone Chords in all Keys 59- Fretboard Diagrams 60- Major Sevenths 61- Counting Swing Eighth Notes 62- Enharmonic Notes 63- First and Second Endings 64- 5 Forms of Movable Fingerings 65- Major Scale Pattern 66- Notes in More than one Place 67- Dominant Sevenths 68- Listening 69- The G Major Scale 70- Finding Intervals on the Fretboard 71- Left Hand Fingering 72- Memorizing the Notes of the Scale 73- Position Playing 74- The Key Cycle 75- Common Progressions 76- The F Major Scale 77- Higher and Lower Versions of Notes 78- Minor Sevenths 79- Chord Symbols 80- Tablature 81- More titles by LearnToPlayMusic.com 82- Practicing Scales and Arpeggios 83- Other Major Scales 84- Technique 85- Minor 7 Flat Five and Diminished 86- Approach to Practice 87- Practice Position

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