Guitar Fretboard Visualization

Guitar Fretboard Visualization

Following my earlier posts covering an introduction to the notes on the guitar fretboard and some basic music theory, in this post I’ll provide some

As mentioned earlier, learning the notes across the fretboard can be a bit challenging because there are six strings, and the same notes appear in different places on each string.

Notes

In some ways, keyboard players have an easier time: the pattern of keys on a keyboard repeats every octave, and it maps directly on to natural and non-natural notes. This makes it somewhat easier for a beginner keyboardist to recognize the notes across the instrument.

Learn The Guitar Fretboard

Many years before I started learning guitar, I played the piano, and because of this background I wanted to see if it’s possible to show the notes on the guitar fretboard in such a way that they “jump out” visually, somewhat like a piano keyboard.

In order to do this, I first tried drawing a fretboard with each string thickened into a stripe, and then making each fret position

The reason for choosing the ranges CDE and FGAB is that they highlight the underlying pattern of natural notes. Where one range ends and the next begins, the naturals are a semitone apart (i.e. no black note between): the boundaries B-C and E-F. Everywhere else, the naturals are a tone apart (i.e. one black note between).

Where Are The Notes?!

Next, I added the same colours to the guitar fretboard, in addition to lighter and darker fret positions representing naturals and non-naturals. This is what we get.

Now, the pattern of light and dark boxes doesn’t look so random. The notes on the guitar fretboard are revealed in a slightly more visual, perhaps more “piano-like” way.

Furthermore, this gives you a good idea of the overall layout of the notes, and it’s possible to see at-a-glance where the same absolute pitch can be played on different strings. For example, Middle C (c′) is the first lighter-coloured (i.e. natural) fret position within the pale blue range (c′ to e′), which appears on at least four different strings.

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The note names are written using Helmholtz pitch notation. This strip only shows natural notes, so the note names correspond only to the lighter-coloured fret positions in the fretboard image above. Again this is due to the way the natural and non-natural notes are distributed. If we lay out the same natural note names across the fretboard it looks like this.

Now let’s use the same coloured note ranges to understand musical notation for guitar. In the following diagram I’ve added the same coloured note ranges to show how the notes map on to the guitar fretboard.

—so once again they correspond only to lighter-coloured fret positions in the fretboard image above, and the white notes on the keyboard.

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While we’re on the subject of musical notation, now is a good time to mention that the guitar is a “transposing instrument”.

Is one in which the absolute pitches of the notes played on the instrument are shifted up or down by a certain amount, compared to how they are written in notation.

To make this clear, let’s look at how the following written note would be interpreted—first on a non-transposing instrument that also uses the treble clef, and then on the guitar.

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This distinction only relates to how guitar music is written in notation. Unless you’re dealing with notation, the fact that the guitar is classed as a “transposing instrument” has no relevance. Really, it’s guitar notation that is transposed, not the guitar itself.

Guitar

What’s really happening is that guitar notation is transposed up one octave when written, which means you need to transpose back down one octave when you read it.

A little “8” sign can be placed under the treble clef to indicate that you must transpose down by one octave. You don’t generally see that in guitar music, but in the notation diagram above I used it to avoid ambiguity.

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The absolute pitch played on any instrument can be unambiguously described based on how you would write or describe the same note for a non-transposing instrument. This absolute reference is sometimes called

In the visualization diagrams above, I didn’t choose the colours at random. Neighbouring note ranges required contrasting colours, so I started off alternating between blue and red for the CDE and FGAB ranges one octave below middle C. As the note ranges get higher in pitch, the colours shift towards the green corner of the colour gamut, and also become lighter. So there is a kind of pattern to it.

To help learn the layout of the notes. You can also use them to break the fretboard down into smaller chunks, to make the process of memorizing the notes a little more manageable.

Guitar Fretboard Scale Visualisation Tool

One good thing about the CDE and FGAB coloured ranges is that, despite breaking the fretboard down into smaller chunks, they maintain clarity of where the same absolute pitches can be played on different strings.

Studying fretboard charts does not in itself make you remember the notes on the guitar fretboard. That only seems to come through much playing and practising.

Guitar

What I’ve tried to do in this post is to plot an overall map of the fretboard, to make it possible to “see” it in its entirety.

Caged System (guitar Fretboard Visualization)

In order to actually learn the notes on the fretboard, a great tip is to start by learning the notes on the 5th and 6th (A and E) strings only. This is because the most common barre chord shapes have their roots on these strings.

Once you know the main barre chord shapes such as major, minor and dominant seventh rooted on either the 5th or 6th strings, then by combining this with knowing the note positions on these two strings, you can play these chords in any key.

Be sure to learn plenty of songs using these chords in order to learn the notes on the 5th and 6th strings. Some things just stick in your head more easily when there is a musical context.

Memorize And Master The Guitar Fretboard

Once you know the 5th and 6th strings, with minimal additional effort you can also learn the 1st (e′) string as well, since every note on this string is always two octaves higher than the same fret on the 6th (E) string.

When this is done, you know the strings E, A and e′—that’s three, out of a total of six. Congratulations: you’ve covered half the fretboard! Only three more strings to go…

The guitar fretboard visualization chart provides a selection of images from these blog posts on one free single-sided PDF sheet. It can be used as a quick reference, helper and learning aid. There is also a version of the visualization chart using scientific pitch notation instead of Helmholtz notation.

Using

Guitar Fretboard Visualization Chart With Note Names, Notation And Keyboard

Charts, which have a clean, simple design optimized for printing out and writing on, and alternative versions of the fretboard charts, including left-handed versions.is a practice tool for guitar, bass, ukelele and other strings that helps you learn new songs, make the most of your practice time, and stay motivated to keep playing. opens any Guitar Pro file in an auto-scrolling tab view, synchronized with backing audio, that listens as you play along with any guitar, providing immediate feedback on your accuracyandtiming.

Use this interactive tool to create a map of the notes on the neck of your guitar. See the note for every fret on each string on the neck of your guitar in any tuning, any number of frets or number of strings.

For example, you can create a guitar fingerboard note map, bass guitar fingerboard map, a custom 5 string bass fretboard map (B E A D G tuning), and so on.

Do This To Improve Your Fretboard Knowledge

These tips are intended to help you take full advantage of the tool. But we'd like to think this fret map is pretty easy to use, so feel free to just poke around with the controls above. The guitar neck diagram will update automatically as you make changes to the form, so there's no need to submit the form or reload the page to see the impact of a change to the configuration. (You can also use the Generate button to trigger a refresh if you need to.)

In addition to the standard tuning for guitar or for bass guitar, you can create fretboard charts for an arbitrary tuning. Just list the note to which each string is tuned in the box marked Tuning.

For example, to tune your guitar to the popular Drop D tuning you lower the pitch of the low E string (the thickest, top-most string) by one full step, from E to D.

How I See The Entire Fretboard When Improvising

To see the notes across the entire fretboard for the Drop-D tuning, simply edit the tuning description to change the first string from E to D. This yields D A D G B E. The diagram will update automatically to show you the notes on the fretboard under this new tuning.

Guitar

After the base note to specify a sharp (#) or flat (b). You can actually use the real sharp and flat symbols -

For example, you may be familiar with the Open E tuning, which lets you play an E chord by simply strumming the open strings. Open E

Using Arpeggios To Visualize The Guitar Fretboard

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