bass guitar fretboard layouts for alternative tuningDescripción completa
A visual manual to help getting to know your guitar fingerboardDescrição completa
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bass guitar fretboard layouts for alternative tuningFull description
Full description
Full description
Full description
Guitar Fretboard Theory (CAGED) The 5 Types of “C” Major Chords (C, E, G) By Dub-R This chart shows that by using just 5 chords, you can connect the entire Guitar fretboard. These 5 types of chords are known by their name in the open position (C, A, G, E, and D, and they connect in that order up the neck). Each of the fingerings below are the 5 ways of playing a “C” Major chord. You can play a chord progression in the open position, or high on the neck, or in between. There are 125 possible combinations for a simple C-F-G progression. Not all are going to necessarily sound great, or be easy to finger. To play other than a C, A, G, E, or D chord, play one of them but move it up or down a whole or half-step, ie: to play a B just finger one of the 5 C chords, and then move it down 1/2 step. From these 5 Major chords naturally flow the 5 types of Major scales, perhaps the greatest value of this method. To make a Minor chord, just lower the E to Eb, lower the C to Bb for a Dom.-7th, lower the C to a B for Major-7th, etc. Same with scales. III
nut
E E B
C
E
E
E C
G
E
G
C
E
G C
= Open
(either/or)
C
A
8va
IX
C
G
G G D
VII
V
C E
A
G
G C
G
E
D
The 5 Types of Chords in the Open Position (see how they connect?):