A game changer for me when it comes to finding notes in the fretboard was learning the following sentence: Battle Ends And Down Goes Charles Father. You basically start from a note from the lower or higher E or A string, from any note that you know, and just continue going down or up while you repeat the sentence. The initial of each word is also the note of the fret you are on. The rules are: you advance half a step every time the sentence ends or every time you are going from the G string to the B string, if both things happen at the same time, advance a full step. You can also start the sentence in higher strings by just saying "Father Charles Goes Down And Ends Battle". When going from a higher string to a lower one, you return half a step every time the sentence ends or when you are passing from the B string to the G string, entire step if both happen at the same time. For example, if I want to know what note is in the 8th fret of the G string i could just start from the 8th fret of the E string (C) saying "Charles", move to the A string, staying on the 8th fret and say "father" as that is the next word in the sentence, move to the D string and advance half a step (to the 9th fret) since the sentence ended and start the sentence again with "battle", move to the G string while remaining in the same fret and say "Ends". With all of this, we now know that the 9th fret in the G string is an E, so the 8th fret, the one that we wanted to find is D#. Once you understand how this works you can move vertically to find notes instead of being limited to start from the fret 1 or 12 and follow the order of the scale to find notes and of course, if you want to know the what note is in the 11th fret of a string you can start from the 12 fret of that string, this method that i have shared should be combined with other methods to help you finding notes in just a second, and woth this, learning them eventually
I memorized as "BE A DoG ClifFord!" and instead of jumping half step when restarting the sentence I just redo de "A DoG ClifFord!" part for the sharp notes, so I can also find them all. The jumping when reaching B string must still be used tho.
Ive been playing guitar about 8 months and have just been able to work out the chord progession on several youtube backing tracks using the techniques taught here! This feels like such a huge step for me, and im super excited to continue putting these techniques into practice. Thank you so much for your videos! They're the best ive found online, with a great combination of theory and practical examples! Keep up the good work!
Thanks for watching! Leave any questions you have in the comments and I'll be sure to answer them. And make sure you give the BlueNote app a try: apps.apple.com/app/apple-store/id1587389494?pt=118336808&ct=andrew-clarke&mt=8
Google it for yourself, you'll remember the diminished chord shapes better. 👍 Write them down and play them to get the sounds in your ears and the shapes under your fingers.
Hey Andrew! Thanks for your videos, I have learned more about theory in the past week than in years of playing guitar. I’ve got a question, when following the scale of any note you always “jump” 2 semitones except between iii & iv is that correct?
Thanks for this awesome video. Would it be possible to understand how should one approach this if there are like chords like 7th chords or Add 9 or add 11 chords? How can one find them building on what you teach? Thanks ❤
There isn't as much of a system or process beyond critical listening. You have to learn how to pick out the qualities of a chord. It mostly comes from training your ear to pick up on these things.
I like your approach - take you time to get the process down. It seems a little tedious in the beginning but the more you practice, that time will cut down to under a minute.
Thanks! As you get even more proficient with these skills you can find the key after playing just one or two notes. Ear training and working on your relative pitch can go a long way.
Can you make a video on how to find the triads near each pentatonic position and their chord number relative to the key? Hopefully my question makes sense
@@andrewclarkeguitar yes exactly I want to be able to play some fill in between the chords so I figure playing the triads would be the best way to do that so knowing where they are in relation to the pentatonic positions would be awesome
You totally can. As long as you know a repeating pattern of some sort. You can do that with CAGED shapes based around position 1 of the pentatonic scale (the homebase). Then just move that position around to cover all the chords.
Not always. The key is just the common thread tying these chords together. It doesn't necessarily mean that the "I Chord" has to be in the progression at all.
As a beginner being honest this lesson is a little beyond me but also very cool at the same time. This will be awesome in the near future you explain thing really well . Thankyou going to subscribe now.
It's an awkward chord and not super useable. But if you want to learn it, go to this video: ruclips.net/video/e4jUC7eaSRU/видео.html -- the diminished (minor 7 flat 5) shapes are at 3:55 and 6:36.
A game changer for me when it comes to finding notes in the fretboard was learning the following sentence: Battle Ends And Down Goes Charles Father.
You basically start from a note from the lower or higher E or A string, from any note that you know, and just continue going down or up while you repeat the sentence. The initial of each word is also the note of the fret you are on. The rules are: you advance half a step every time the sentence ends or every time you are going from the G string to the B string, if both things happen at the same time, advance a full step. You can also start the sentence in higher strings by just saying "Father Charles Goes Down And Ends Battle". When going from a higher string to a lower one, you return half a step every time the sentence ends or when you are passing from the B string to the G string, entire step if both happen at the same time.
For example, if I want to know what note is in the 8th fret of the G string i could just start from the 8th fret of the E string (C) saying "Charles", move to the A string, staying on the 8th fret and say "father" as that is the next word in the sentence, move to the D string and advance half a step (to the 9th fret) since the sentence ended and start the sentence again with "battle", move to the G string while remaining in the same fret and say "Ends". With all of this, we now know that the 9th fret in the G string is an E, so the 8th fret, the one that we wanted to find is D#.
Once you understand how this works you can move vertically to find notes instead of being limited to start from the fret 1 or 12 and follow the order of the scale to find notes and of course, if you want to know the what note is in the 11th fret of a string you can start from the 12 fret of that string, this method that i have shared should be combined with other methods to help you finding notes in just a second, and woth this, learning them eventually
I like this! I'd suggest combining it with the Octave Centers method.
@@andrewclarkeguitar absolutely! I forgot to mention that and the combination of both can help anyone finding notes immediately
I memorized as "BE A DoG ClifFord!" and instead of jumping half step when restarting the sentence I just redo de "A DoG ClifFord!" part for the sharp notes, so I can also find them all. The jumping when reaching B string must still be used tho.
One of the best guitar videos! A real game changer for me
you deserve more credit, dont stop it helps more than you know
Ive been playing guitar about 8 months and have just been able to work out the chord progession on several youtube backing tracks using the techniques taught here! This feels like such a huge step for me, and im super excited to continue putting these techniques into practice. Thank you so much for your videos! They're the best ive found online, with a great combination of theory and practical examples! Keep up the good work!
WOW! Simple, easy and direct to the point . Each video of yours just adds another brick to the wall
Thanks
Glad you liked it. Thanks for watching!
Dude, your pedagogy is amazing. Big fan of your videos, keep it up, and the best of luck!
Thank you so much! 🙏
Wow. This was great. I’ll have to watch it a few more times to fully grasp it but so cool. Thanks Andrew!
Thanks for watching! :)
Yay I waited for a video like this one! Can’t wait to watch it and play along
Awesome!
Excellent lesson. I can read but need work on my ear. Thanks so much.
Another great video Andrew ! Thanks for the help !
Any time!
This video helped me a lot! Thanks!
You're welcome!
Thanks for watching! Leave any questions you have in the comments and I'll be sure to answer them. And make sure you give the BlueNote app a try: apps.apple.com/app/apple-store/id1587389494?pt=118336808&ct=andrew-clarke&mt=8
Hey Andrew, What do you program do you recommend for a windows computer? 🙏
Thanks, this is great!
Hey man when will you tell us the chord shape for diminished!! Great videos btw
Go to this video: ruclips.net/video/e4jUC7eaSRU/видео.html -- the diminished (minor 7 flat 5) shapes are at 3:55 and 6:36.
Google it for yourself, you'll remember the diminished chord shapes better. 👍
Write them down and play them to get the sounds in your ears and the shapes under your fingers.
Useful lessons ❤
Great lesson
Thanks Andrew " Great " Video thanks as always ! 👍
Thanks for watching :)
Thanks for your sharing❤
Thanks for watching! :)
thankyou 😊😊
No problem 😊
Always great.
🙏🙏
Great teaching! Thanks! 🎉❤Would you make a video about how to recognize the chord changes? It's hard for me to distinguish them.
Thank you! Good idea. I'll put something together. A big tip is to really pay attention to the bass.
to help the algorithm🤘
🙏🙏
Thanks
Thank you!!
Great video
Thank you!!
this was a great lesson. i was wondering, where do you find your backing tracks to practice with?
In the description of the video, there's a link saying "FREE Backing Track Pack". Those are the ones you want.
Hey Andrew! Thanks for your videos, I have learned more about theory in the past week than in years of playing guitar. I’ve got a question, when following the scale of any note you always “jump” 2 semitones except between iii & iv is that correct?
Also between the vii and the I. The pattern to remember is 2 2 1 - 2 2 2 1. I like to think of it as a phone number.
Thanks for this awesome video.
Would it be possible to understand how should one approach this if there are like chords like 7th chords or Add 9 or add 11 chords?
How can one find them building on what you teach?
Thanks ❤
There isn't as much of a system or process beyond critical listening. You have to learn how to pick out the qualities of a chord. It mostly comes from training your ear to pick up on these things.
I like your approach - take you time to get the process down. It seems a little tedious in the beginning but the more you practice, that time will cut down to under a minute.
Thanks! As you get even more proficient with these skills you can find the key after playing just one or two notes. Ear training and working on your relative pitch can go a long way.
Awesome video! How does this work with a capo? Most songs I play on Guitar are with a capo.
amazing
Thank you! Cheers!
Can you make a video on how to find the triads near each pentatonic position and their chord number relative to the key? Hopefully my question makes sense
Are you looking for one where it's all 7 diatonic triads in all 5 positions?
@@andrewclarkeguitar yes exactly I want to be able to play some fill in between the chords so I figure playing the triads would be the best way to do that so knowing where they are in relation to the pentatonic positions would be awesome
@@99agility34 Cool. I'll try to find a good way to work it into a future video.
Andrew, can you base your chord road maps off of triads?
You totally can. As long as you know a repeating pattern of some sort. You can do that with CAGED shapes based around position 1 of the pentatonic scale (the homebase). Then just move that position around to cover all the chords.
It works in classical guitar too, but it is rather harder because the acoustic sound wont fit as good as electric tho. Keep going!
Could you make a video of the minor scale
Sure! What about the minor scale would you like to know?
@@andrewclarkeguitar ye
@@andrewclarkeguitar just like the video on the major scale
About the major minor formula, what if it is some special chord like sus2 , aug etc how can I identify those?
It requires you to listen to each chord individually which can be more challenging and doesn't have the same type of simple system as the others do.
I've been trying for a while but I'm struggling with finding the key haha. I'll keep thing tho
It can still be tough with this method. And some songs might be a little tougher than others. Just keep at it, you'll get the hang of it, I promise!
If it’s in the key of G, shouldn’t there be a G cord in the progression?
Not necessarily
Not always. The key is just the common thread tying these chords together. It doesn't necessarily mean that the "I Chord" has to be in the progression at all.
Thanks! Learn something new everyday. Great video. Cheers
@@josephgonzalez9522 my pleasure! Thanks for watching 😊
As a beginner being honest this lesson is a little beyond me but also very cool at the same time. This will be awesome in the near future you explain thing really well . Thankyou going to subscribe now.
I'm watching my tenth major scale video and no one talks about the diminished chord. I guess I'll never know how to build it.
It's an awkward chord and not super useable. But if you want to learn it, go to this video: ruclips.net/video/e4jUC7eaSRU/видео.html -- the diminished (minor 7 flat 5) shapes are at 3:55 and 6:36.
First
Try chordify😂
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