Tag: C Major Scale

  • Notes and Chords on the Guitar

    Having learned a method of limbering up the fingers, and of finding notes on the guitar, we’ll now take a look at how to make chords.

    We saw that the C Major Scale of notes is useful because it has no sharps or flats. We’ll find that it’s particularly useful in other ways for the guitarist.

    Let’s review the C Major Scale of Notes. C to C gives us an octave. We can number the notes. We’ll use the numbers to build chords:

    Numeric Note12345678
    Letter NoteCDEFGABC

    A major chord is built stacking the 1st, 3rd, and 5th of a scale. We can build a chord that begins with each letter of the C Major Scale. When finished, we’ll have the C Major Harmonized Scale of chords:

    Chord #IiiiiiIVVvivii
    NameCMdmemFMGMamb-dim
    Notes
    5GABCDEF
    3EFGABCD
    1CDEFGAB

    The C Major chord (I, or CM in the table above) contains the notes C, E, and G, the 1st, 3rd, and 5th steps of the C Major scale of notes. The D minor chord (ii, or dm in the table above) contains the notes D, F, and A. Why is it a minor chord? A minor chord is built also using the 1st, 3rd, and 5th steps of a scale, but the 3rd is flatted, moved a half step down, which, on the guitar, is one fret down. I thought you said there were no flats or sharps. Here’s where things get a bit tricky.

    Let’s take a look at the C Chromatic scale of notes. This is a scale that shows all the notes, including the flats and sharps. A sharp is indicated with a # sign, and flats are indicated with a b. Note that a C# and a Db is the same note, called a flat when moving down and a sharp when moving up):

    11#2b22#3b344#5b55#6b66#7b78
    CC#DbDD#EbEFF#GbGG#AbAA#BbBC

    The C Major scale of notes uses just 7 of the notes of the Chromatic scale above. As we have seen, those notes include: C D E F G A and B. What happened to the sharps and flats? We skipped over them. How do we know where to skip? That’s a given. To build a major scale, we skip over the 1#2b and the 2#3b, but notice there is no 3# or 4b, and there is no 7# or 8b. So we have notes that skip like this:

    1 (skip) 2 (skip) 3 4 (skip) 5 (skip) 6 (skip) 7 8
    C (skip) D (skip) E F (skip) G (skip) A (skip) B C

    In other words, there is no 3# or 4b and there is no 7# or 8b. There is no E sharp or F flat and there is no B# or Cb in the C Major scale. If we want to flat the F, we get E. If we want to flat the C, we get B.

    It might be useful now to take a look at the whole guitar fretboard (depending on your device, you should be able to slide right to see all the columns):

    Open Strings1st Fret2nd Fret3rd Fret4th Fret5th Fret6th Fret7th Fret8th Fret9th Fret10th Fret11th Fret12th Fret13th Fret
    efgabcdef
    bcdefgabc
    gabcdefg
    defgabcd
    abcdefga
    efgabcdef

    And here are the same notes using corresponding numbers:

    Open Strings1st Fret2nd Fret3rd Fret4th Fret5th Fret6th Fret7th Fret8th Fret9th Fret10th Fret11th Fret12th Fret13th Fret
    345671234
    712345671
    56712345
    23456712
    67123456
    345671234

    Notice the 1 skips a fret to 2, but the 3 does not skip a fret to 4. Same for 7 to 1. The 1 corresponds to C, the 2 to D, etc.

    If we start a major scale on D and use the skipping method of counting through the Chromatic scale, we get:

    123456789
    12#3b344#5b55#6b66#7b
    DD#EbEFF#GbGG#AbAA#Bb

    If we build the D Major chord using the 1, 3, and 5 of the scale in the table above, we get a chord with the notes D (1), E (3), and F# (5). The D Major chord is built using the notes D, E, and F#. Taking the D Major chord of D, E, and F# but flatting the F#, we get D, E, F. The chord is now a 1, flat 3, 5 chord, or, a minor chord.

    Now, back to the C Major Harmonized scale, which is built with the chords C Major, D Minor, E Minor, F Major, G Major, A Minor, and B Diminished. The chords are shown in the table as

    IiiiiiIVVvivii
    CMdmemFGamb-dim

    It’s a bit tricky to say all of the chords contain no sharps or flats, since we saw that the D minor chord has a flatted third. But the flatted third of a D chord, as we’ve seen, gives us an F note, not an F#. You can work it out for the E minor and A minor, as well as the B diminished (which flats both the 3rd and the 5th notes of a scale). What you’ll find is that the chords as expressed in the C Major Harmonized scale appear to have no sharps or flats. They are built with “natural” notes, meaning not sharped or flatted notes.

    Chord #IiiiiiIVVvivii
    NameCMdmemFMGMamb-dim
    Notes
    5GABCDEF
    3EFGABCD
    1CDEFGAB

    Here are some suggestions for practical application:

    1. Play chord progressions using chords from the C Major Harmonized scale. For example, play ii (dm), V (GM), I (CM), or play I (CM), vi (am), ii (dm), V (GM). Play I, IV, V.
    2. Memorize all of the C notes on the guitar fretboard. Be able to jump from one to the other, in any order.
    3. Play the C Major scale of notes on the fretboard beginning (ascending and descending) with each of the C notes you found in 2 above.
    4. Play all of the chords in the C Major Harmonized scale in the first position of the fretboard (frets 1 thru 3). Play them in order, ascending and descending.
    5. Don’t forget to warm up and cool down using the Guitar finger coordination exercises of Manuel Lopez Ramos.
  • Finding Notes on the Guitar

    A good way to learn the notes on the guitar fretboard is to begin with the notes in the C Major scale, which has no sharps or flats1. The C Major scale, using letters to signify notes, goes like this:

    C D E F G A B C.

    To begin, play the scale, one note at a time, using the open strings and fingering the notes on the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd frets, beginning and ending on the C note, forward (ascending) and backward (descending), memorizing each note in its open or fretted position.

    Use your 3rd (ring) finger on the 3rd fret, 2nd finger (middle) on the 2nd fret, and 1st finger (index) on the first fret. If you want to finger-pick, alternate index with middle fingers of your right hand, or use your thumb throughout. The table below shows the 6th (thickest) string at the bottom.

    Open String1st Fret2nd Fret3rd Fret
    BC
    GA
    DEF
    C

    Now play the C Major scale on the 2nd through the 8th frets. Here you’ll be playing through two octaves2. Again, play forward (ascending) and backward (descending) in alphabetical order, memorizing the notes. When you get to the C on the 3rd string (5th fret), move your hand up so that your index finger plays that note, ring finger the D, index the E, middle the F, pinkie the G, index the A, ring the B, and pinkie the final C (1st string, 8th fret):

    1st Fret2nd Fret3rd Fret4th Fret5th Fret6th Fret7th Fret8th Fret
    ABC
    EFG
    ABCD
    EFG
    CD

    As you play through the notes, you can sing: Do Re Mi Fa So La Ti Do. Or, sing the notes: C D E F G A B C. Or sing numbers: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8.

    SolfaDoReMiFaSoLaTiDo
    Numeric Note12345678
    Letter NoteCDEFGABC

    Next, we’ll look at the C Chromatic scale and the C Major Harmonized scale to see how chords are built.

    1. On the piano, to play the C Major scale, you press only the white keys, skipping over the black keys, but on the guitar, every fret is what is called a half step, and the sharps and flats can’t be seen. ↩︎
    2. An octave is 8 notes, beginning and ending on the same note. ↩︎