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    Learning the Guitar Fretboard Notes

    December 16th, 2009 by guitar lesson | No Comments | Filed in DVD, Guest Bloggers, guitar, guitar lesson, guitar videos, music

    www.GuitarLessonReview.net presents:

    Featured Article By Guest Blogger Ian Fraser:

    Learning the Guitar Fretboard Notes

    Knowing the guitar fretboard notes is the most important foundational thing you can learn as a beginner guitar player. Chords and scales are both of course made up of many notes so knowing your way around the fret board will allow you to understand where different chords are located, how to start different scales and more.

    In this article I’ll be covering what exactly a half and whole step is and how to measure them on the guitar neck, how half and whole steps tie into spacing between musical notes and lastly how to use this information to find the different notes on the guitar neck. After reading this article and watching the video at the end of the post you’ll be able to find different notes on any string of the guitar and begin memorizing what notes are where.

    Steps Between Notes

    The concept of half and whole steps between notes originates on the piano, but since we’re playing the guitar we need to understand what denotes a half step and what denotes a full step on the guitar neck. Thankfully this is very easy. The guitar neck is divided up into many half steps. Each fret is actually one half step, so two frets equals on whole step.

    With this new concept of whole and half steps we can understand the spacing between all 7 musical notes in terms of frets. Most notes have one whole step between them although there are two exceptions. Between the B and C notes there is only a half step as well as between the E and F notes. Below is an explanation of the spacing in terms of steps and frets between each note.

    A to B : Full Step or Two Frets
    B to C : Half step or One Fret
    C to D : Full Step or Two Frets
    D to E : Full Step or Two Frets
    E to F : Half Step or One Fret
    F to G : Full Step or Two Frets

    Now that we know the spacing between each note on the guitar neck we can begin to locate the different notes at different positions one each string.

    Starting from Open Strings.

    The easiest way to start when you’re a beginner is to first learn all 6 string names. I’m going to assume you know those already, a quick refresher starting at the top: E, A, D, G, B and E. Since we know when we pluck each string it plays the corresponding note of it’s name we can use the spacing and step information listed above to find different notes.

    Let’s look at a quick example: Starting with the D string what note comes after D? That’s right it’s an E and there is one full step from D (the open string) to an E or two frets. So the 2nd fret of the D string is an E. What note comes next? It’s an F, and from the information above we know that E to F is one of the exceptions where there is only one half step. So if the 2nd fret is an E the one half step up (only one fret remember) is an F. Finally if we look at what comes next it’s a G, we move up one full step, or two frets, to the 5th fret on the D string and that note is a G.

    Starting from the open string and working your way up is the easiest method to being with. Once you feel comfortable about each note up to the 5th fret on each string (the 4th fret on the G string) you can start picking out notes other places on the guitar neck.

    Below is a short video that explains the concept of steps, spacing between notes and the notes on the top three strings. Take some time to watch it and then grab your own guitar and give this exercise a try.

    Want to learn some more great beginner information like this? Why not try some guitar lessons dvd programs? You get access to the same great beginner guitar information a private teacher would share with the benefit of watching and learning from home on your own time.

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    The Legendary Guitar of James Burton

    July 1st, 2009 by guitar lesson | No Comments | Filed in DVD, guitar lesson

    The Legendary Guitar of James Burton




    The Legendary Guitar of James Burton James Burton is highly regarded in the industry with a roll call of famous names who have sought his contribution to their music: Randy Newman, Gram Parsons, and Emmylou Harris among them. On this DVD he covers vibrato, stringbending, pick & finger techniques, solo construction, slides steel effects and his trademark “chicken pickin’” style.

    User Ratings and Reviews

    5 Stars James Burton Style Guitar
    James plays over chords and his chording style is different, which gives him a pretty unique sound. If you want some rockabilly licks, this is probably the best place to get them… and he’s got everything in slow motion at the end of the DVD. I’m having a ball picking up on this stuff.

    Great!

    5 Stars Insight into an Original
    This guy developed a style and technique that not only has been a foundation for generations of guitar slingers that followed but is still an inspiration today. The cat can just play! The next best thing to a few private lessons. Highly recommended.

    4 Stars James Burton – DVD Review
    This one is for musicians and I enjoyed every minute of it. James demonstrates some of his more famous riffs and, for many of them, it was interesting (depressing)that for all these years, I have not been playing them properly.

    What a great sound from the guitar and his style is unmistakable – there are some really great licks to be had from this if you like country rock.

    One dissapointment – he did not demonstrate Johnny B Goode, which is one my all time favorites.

    4 Stars Good
    I remember Burton playing for Ricky Nelson and always liked his style.

    This DVD does a good job.

    3 Stars Fun to watch, not really an instructional video
    This is really more of a demonstration video than an instructional video. Like many great players, Mr. Burton is not a guitar teacher, so you have to be ready to capture what you can from what he shows on the video. This DVD was originally released as VHS. The hot licks people added sections that slow down the examples so you’ll have a chance to figure out what James is doing. I consider it a good resource that I will go back to over time, but not really a how-to guide. I recommend viewing this in a player or on a computer that will allow you to do your own slow-down and repeats.

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    Nathan East Contemporary Electric Bass

    July 1st, 2009 by guitar lesson | No Comments | Filed in DVD, guitar lesson

    Nathan East Contemporary Electric Bass




    Nathan East, Eric Claptons longtime bassist, is one the most respected musicians and sought-after sidemen in the industry. In addition to working with Eric Clapton, Nathan has performed and recorded with a Hall of Fame roster of artists including El…

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    Adrian Legg Fingerpicking And Open Tunings

    July 1st, 2009 by guitar lesson | No Comments | Filed in DVD, guitar lesson

    Adrian Legg Fingerpicking And Open Tunings




    Adrian Legg takes an in-depth look at some of the more intriguing open tunings for acoustic guitar plus a variety of trailblazing effects. “Frailing” for guitar, Celtic-style playing, DADGAD tuning, open G tuning, dynamics, attack, advanced hammer and pull techniques, and even Scottish bagpipe effects-all these techniques and much more make this instructional DVD an exceptionally rewarding guitar lesson from a British guitar master.

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    Stu Hamm Slap Pop and Tap for the Bass

    July 1st, 2009 by guitar lesson | No Comments | Filed in DVD, guitar lesson

    Stu Hamm Slap Pop and Tap for the Bass




    This classic instructional DVD covers a wide variety of Stuart Hamm’s bass guitar playing styles and techniques including left hand stretching exercises, slapping and popping, funk, major and minor arpeggios, right hand flamenco strums, two-handed polyphonic tapping, contrapuntal playing, percussive tapping, and much more.

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