Hey guys!, i've been one working on memorizing the scales, now i only need to memorize the fretboard!, any tips?
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JOIN THE DISCORD VIEW THREADReally?, Wow I must have completely missed it, I'll look into it!, Thanks!I believe we have a lesson on this?
I'll check it out!, Any help is great help for me, Thanks!I uploaded this the other day if it's any help
I'll try this out too, i once memorized a whole order of a deck of cards!, so the fretboard can't be that hard, Thanks!I haven't done it a much yet, but I guess saying each note out loud as you play it helps.
Starting on an open string and going up to 12 and than the next string.
I saw the names changed when you go back from 12 to 0, so probably practice them separately.
Got a little confused doing both at the same time.
Another way to further that would probably be to take sections of 4 frets and name those,
playing it down or up the strings and not up and down the fret board. Good Luck!
I'm going to practice naming a bit again right now, after reading this
I uploaded this the other day if it's any help
So, I guess you can memorize it either with sharps or flats, right?, Doesn't make that much of a difference, right?.
You just need to realize which note is corresponding to one another I guess, correct?
Gotcha man, thanks!I'd memorize it thinking of both - but starting with Sharps was easier for me if I was Ascending, & Flats if I was descending. The reason you want to know both is so that you can visualize/think of your Major Scales/Keys the easiest way. For example, your first fret on the A string - I call it A# on the video, which is correct, but I usually think of that fret as Bb, because the Bb Major Scale/Key is a lot easier to keep in your mind than the A# one: A# B# C## etc - you can see why Bb would be : Bb, C D Eb, F G A - 2 flats versus LOADS of sharps.
To be honest, It really doesn't make a massive difference - unless you try to exclusively choose to think of everything in the Sharp side - that will end up confusing you as soon as you try and play in any 'Flat keys' as you'll get what keys like A# give you.
I tend to be like: A, A# or Bb, B, C, C# or Db etc - just to remind myself that the fret can be both.
Hope that makes sense!
interested in how this corresponds too when dropping tunings downHey guys!, i've been one working on memorizing the scales, now i only need to memorize the fretboard!, any tips?
Well i actually play on a floyd rose, that's constantly in drop d.interested in how this corresponds too when dropping tunings down