Guitar Geography is a series of lessons designed to help the student get a clear understanding of the fretboard using intervals and the relationships between steps, notes, and scales.
Lessons
Lesson 1: Guitar Geography
Guitar Geography is a series of lessons designed to help the student get a clear understanding of the fretboard using intervals and the relationships between steps, notes, and scales.
Part 1 includes an overview of the series and a look at some of the preliminary information the student should be up on to get the most out of the lessons.The review touches on Natural Notes In First Position, Major Scales, and Intervals.
Part 2 - There are a few important concepts and techniques that need to be understood to get the most out of this series. The first is being familiar with the Natural Notes In First Position. Part 2 of Guitar Geography reviews and reinforces this knowledge.
Part 3 - Continuing with important preliminary information, this segment is a short review of Major Scales. Understanding intervals and how they apply to the guitar requires being able to think about notes in a key by number in the scale, rather than just the note name.
Part 4 - An interval is just a label for the distance between two notes. This segment goes over the basic distances and terms used when identifying them. A clear understanding of the terminology is essential for the rest of this series to make sense.
Part 5 - One of the first basic skills musicians must understand is the Musical Alphabet, all seven letters forward and back. Not too much further down the line is the ability to quickly go through it in thirds, fourths, and fifths, essentially going up stairs two, three, or four at a time. The segment presents a logical way of mastering these skills.
Part 6 - In this segment we combine some of the earlier ones into a way of understanding and knowing the natural notes all the way up the sixth and fifth strings. The Five Fret rule for finding the same note on an adjacent string and the relationship of the strings being tuned a fourth apart are the key elements.
Part 7 - Fourths, Fifths and Octaves are classified as perfect, rather than major or minor. This segment focuses on recognizing them on the fretboard and how they are tied into Natural Notes on the fifth and sixth strings, as well as the orders of sharps (fifths) and flats (fourths) as used in key signatures. Fourths and Fifths are also known as Complementary Intervals. Meaning they add up to an octave together.
Part 8 - Once you are comfortable with fourths, you only need to expand a little and fill in the blanks between them to easily find seconds and thirds. This segment brings in the Five-Fret Rule as well, reviewing playing the same note on a neighboring string.
Part 9 - The bigger intervals are very similar to the smaller ones but we connect them to fifths and octaves in this segment.
Part 10 - In this segment we look at common patterns among the three primary chords in a key, I, IV and V. We have to remember that going up a string (sixth to fifth) at the same fret takes us up a fourth, or to the root of chord IV. Then the root of V is 1 step higher on the same string. We also look at patterns starting on the fifth string going up to the fourth string and down to the sixth string.
Part 11 - A common question among guitar players is, “Why is the second string tuned differently from the rest?” In this segment we touch on that, as well as the difference it makes when mapping out fourths, fifths, and octaves. We also explore octaves that are 4 strings apart and include the second string.
Part 12 - In our quest to become familiar with the fretboard it is important to reduce the number of notes that we expect to identify instantly. The path to this is having a smaller number of reference poits, notes that we quickly recognize that will lead us to others. This segment prioritizes these and brings them down to a manageable number. We also review the important relationships between strings and intervals.
Part 13 - The main goal of the Guitar Geography Series is to help the student quickly and comfortably answer two questions: What note is that and where can I find a certain note. Our final segment focuses in using the strategies and relationships that we have gone over throughout the series. You should be good to go with a much clearer understanding of the fretboard now!
Lesson 2: Fretboard Geometry - Doug Young - Guitar Lesson
This series of videos aims to help you find your way around the fretboard, and be able to play melodies all over the neck.
Part I. Finding Notes Doug talks about a system for locating notes anywhere on the neck. By learning a few “guideposts” you can unlock the upper frets and find any note on any string.
Part II. Single-String Scale Patterns In this lesson, Doug demonstrates some basic concepts of scale construction and finding the notes of a scale. By limiting ourselves to a single string, we can learn the relationships between each step of the scale, and start to understand the structure of scales without having to learn complicated cross-string patterns.
Part III. Harmonizing in 3rds Being able to play harmonized scale patterns opens up a lot of possibilities for fingerstyle arranging, and helps you understand the fretboard. In this video, Doug builds on Parts I and II of this series to show you how to play harmonized scales anywhere on the fretboard.
Part IV. Scale Fragments.
This lesson builds on the earlier Fretboard Geometry lessons and explores major scale patterns on the guitar. We'll see a way to connect very simple patterns to play scales all over the fretboard, with an emphasis on being able to move vertically along the fretboard, in contrast to the usual approach of memorizing single-position scale patterns.Lesson 3: TG Live November 2023 - Guitar Geography: Intervals - 4ths, 5ths & Octaves
On November 18, 2023 we hosted a Live Event for anyone who registered. This episode focused on 4ths, 5ths & Octaves on the lower strings, then touched on 3rds. To be continued in our next TG Live.
Lesson 4: TG Live March 2024 - Guitar Geography: Intervals - 3rds & 6ths
Continuing with our Live Events Series, this episode went into 3rds and 6ths and songs that use them, with some Q&A from the live audience.