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All Comments (99)
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@iRant4u Thinking of how many frets you have overcomplicates it. Learn the notes on the staff and learn the notes on the guitar, then get Frederick Noad's book "Solo Guitar Playing" and/or Fred Hamilton's book "Melodic Studies & Composition for Guitar: A Reading Workout for the Serious Musician". Noad's book takes you one position at a time, offering lots of exercises that get progressively more difficult. Hamilton's book will you take the next step further.
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If you are looking for actual instruction in reading sheet music for guitar specifically, check out Fred Hamilton's book Melodic Studies & Composition for Guitar: A Reading Workout for the Serious Musician. Also check out Frederick M. Noad's book Solo Guitar Playing. Both start you off easy and help you get aquainted with reading for different areas of the neck.
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@iRant4u its easy with a lil dedication, start out simple. before you know it you can whizz along with sheet notation, takes a couple of years of regular playing to read "really" well though
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Sheet music for guitar just seems to difficult to spot read while playing... Way to many frets and strings (120+ depending on how many frets you have). Even though the first octave only goes to the twelfth fret, that is still a lot of frets O_O. I prefer tab, but that makes it annoying to play any other kind of music that I can only find sheet music for... So maybe I should learn sheet so I could convert it to tab and learn it that way haha
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i play guitar for almost 3 years and im pretty good, and im in a special music class in school, but im hiding the fact that i cant read music even tough we kinda learned it for almost three years now!
i hope this video will set things straight...
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I understand the notes but didn't understand how you can just automatically understood where it was on the guitar neck...
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those line are named something. this is what it could look like if they were people
G:Hi, what's your name
F: F
G:what does that mean
F: I don't know. some guy said to me years ago and you shall be called F. then the guy died.
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LOWER NOTES: notes before the middle c (from the piano) FIRST NOTES: first c,d,e,f,g,a,b SECOND NOTES: (after the previous b) second c,d,e,f,g,a,b THIRD NOTES: (after the previous second b) third c,d,e,f,g,a,b N:notes Second step: N on the guitar fretboard first e string : 2nd N third N ... if continue go back to1th N b string : 1th N 2nd N... g string: 1th N 2nd N.... d string:1th N 2nd N ...
a string:lower N 1th N...
last e string:lower N 1th N ...
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LOWER NOTES: notes before the middle c (from the piano) FIRST NOTES: first c,d,e,f,g,a,b SECOND NOTES: (after the previous b) second c,d,e,f,g,a,b THIRD NOTES: (after the previous second b) third c,d,e,f,g,a,b N:notes Second step: N on the guitar fretboard first e string : 2nd N third N ... if continue go back to 1th n b string : 1th N 2nd N... g string: 1th N 2nd N.... d string:1th N 2nd N ...
a string:lower N 1th N...
last e string:lower N 1th N ...
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FACE... Man! That is a much easier method than: Funny Asian Children Excersize, this helps me much more!
this teaches me nothing i havent already known
alien001Productions 8 months ago 19
GUYS!!!!!!! you can play does notes wherever you want on the guitar but it has to be the same notes!!!!!!! like for EXAMPLE: if it tells you to play the notes E, F, G you can play does notes in the E string so it will be: OPEN, 1 fret, and 3 fret. but you can play it in any string. like you can play the E on the A string. the F one the D string. and G on the G string. so it will be A string 7 fret. D string 3 fret. G string open. I hope this helps!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
MetaLMasteR3022 1 year ago 11