Learn to play the guitar

I am sure that like anything when you start or perhaps you already know it but you want some more or new ideas to comprehend what you know already, it can be very frustrating to find through pages of pages on a big site for what you really need. And learning to play the guitar is no different as getting the right information to help you get started with your guitar lessons or perhaps getting the right information to help you even more with your skills can take time. We created this site with the intention of making it small so that all Guitar enthusiats who come here may be able to get the extra information they need fast to help them hone on their Guitar learning skills. We hope you find the right information came to this site to seek to help you play or understand the skill of Guitar playing even better.



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Wednesday, November 3, 2010

The Pattern for Learning Guitar Notes On the Neck

Learning to play different notes up the neck and on each string is an important part of a beginners foundation. After all chords and scales are all made up of a mixture of notes, if you don’t know where different notes are located on the neck you’ll sort of plateau with your learning sooner then later.

In this article I’ll show you the simple pattern you can use for learning the guitar notes on each string. We’ll first look at half and whole steps between notes and how they transfer to the guitar neck, next we’ll review the space in steps and frets between each note and finally an example to tie it all together.

After reading this post please watch the video at the end. It covers everything the post talks about plus a more detailed example. You should be able to find each variation of major notes A through G on the neck once you’re done this post and video.

Steps

The first concept to understand is what a step is. Steps, both whole and half steps, come from the concept of the piano keys and the space between each note. Between most notes there is one full step except for between the B and C notes and E and F notes. There is only one half step between these two sets of notes.

Frets as Steps

So that’s great, a half or whole step between notes, how do we play this on the guitar? Well good news, each fret on your guitar neck denotes on half step. So now you can use the space between each note on the guitar neck in terms of frets.

Here’s an overview of the spacing in terms of frets between each major note:

A to B = 2 Frets
B to C = 1 Fret
C to D = 2 Frets
D to E = 2 Frets
E to F = 1 Fret
F to G = 2 Frets
G to A = 2 Frets

Using the above information we now look at a simple example on your guitar neck.

Let’s start with the low E string. Playing that string open is an E note and what comes after an E? An F right? The spacing is only 1 fret between an E and an F so if we play the 1st fret on that E string we’ll be playing an F.

NEXT

After F comes G, from our list above there is 2 frets between an F and a G note so sliding up two frets to the 3rd fret is a G. Finally if we go from our G to the A note, another full step, we’re at the 5th fret.

This pattern will continue all the way up that low E string until you run out of frets, but I’m sure you get the picture with that simple example.

Next take some time to watch the video below. It covers the same concepts but also shows you what we’re talking about and gives a more in depth example. After you watch this video I suggest grabbing your guitar to give it a shot on your own.

Interested in learning more beginner guitar content? Ever consider trying a learn to play guitar dvd? You can gain access to lots of great content that you can watch and learn from in the comfort of your own home and on your own time.

December 17, 2009 at 3:15 am | Learn Guitar Scales | 4 comments


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