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Notes on the staff –> frets

Question:

> I’ve searched sans success to find a web page that shows all the notes > on the staff translated to frets and strings. Suggestions?

Not on the web maybe, but many how-to-play guitar manuals have such a chart in the front section; i’ve got about 6 such here, gathering dust. You can draw you own up too i guess : also once i drew out a grid 12 by 6, and then cut out little stickers with A Ab/G# G etc, and then u test yourself by picking one at random and learning where they go.  The e octaves, for instance : the lowest note (ie open 6th), the 12th fret on the lowest note, and the same on the top string (open 1st and 12th on 1st) covers them, written each side of the treble staff; .  Then where the ‘e’s appear on the 2-4th strings, etc. I’ve just broken the hurdle with notes above the 5th fret – hope you break it in a shorter time than i took! — ::::~~~~rOOth~~~~::::

Response:

Hi, Is this that kind of stuff you were looking for ? http://www.guitar-online.com/newsgrp/e1_notes.gif Have a nice day, Amar Guerfi – www.guitarbeginners.com – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -> I’ve searched sans success to find a web page that shows all the notes > on the staff translated to frets and strings. Suggestions?

Response:

The sheet music is probably wrong, it should be an F#

> I’ve searched sans success to find a web page that shows all the notes > on the staff translated to frets and strings. Suggestions? Also, is > anyone real familiar with "Minuet in G" by Bach? There’s apparently an > F that I just don’t hear but is on the sheet music. An answer to the > first question will probably yield results with the second. > Thanks, > -Cam > "Working hard to unlearn bad habits ingrained by years of air guitar > during the 80’s."

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Response:

>This probably won’t help much, but I believe the C at 3rd fret, 5th >string  (same note as 8th fret, 6th string) correlates to middle C on >the staffs (the C on the line between the treble & bass clefs).  

Actually, the guitar is a transposed instrument. it is transposed by an octave. So, although you can read music written for instruments in C, when you play it, it will sound one octave lower than written. The C on the 3rd fret of the 5th string, though written as middle C in guitar music is in fact an octave lower than middle C. This may not matter to you unless you write for other instruments. Just thought  you might like to know. Peace, Christopher Roberts

Response:

Low E open = (space beneath the 3rd line below the staff) – F 1 – F# 2 (3rd line below staff) – G 3 – G# 4 (space beneath 2nd line below)……. A open (2nd line below staff) – Bb 1 – B 2 (space btw 1st and 2nd line below staff) – C 3 (1st line below) – C#/Db 4 D open (space right below staff) – Eb 1 – E 2 (lowest line of staff) – F 3 F#4 (lowest space on staff) G open (2nd line of staff) – Ab 1 A 2 (2nd space) Bb 3 B 4 (3rd line) B open (3rd line of staff) – C 1 C# 2 (3rd space) – Db2 D 3 (4th line) High E open (top space in the staff) – F1 F#2 (top line of staff) – G3 G#4 (space above staff)  A 5 (1st line above staff) Hopefully you can decifer that stuff, but I think that’s pretty much all you’ll need and you should be able to figure out the rest. You have to figure out the enharmonic stuff.  Like if you have a Gb on the high E string, it would be written on the space above the staff (G) with the "b" sign in front of it.  But, if the same note was being called F# it would be written on the top line of the staff (F) and use the # sign in front. But, of course both of these are fretted in the same place.  If you can understand that kind of stuff you should be ok. BTW..if you’re into classical guitar music, you should pick up a method book like Carcassi.  They all explain all the notes on the staff and all that early on in all those books. — Joshua Dougherty http://trax.to/joshuadoughertytrio

– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -> I’ve searched sans success to find a web page that shows all the notes > on the staff translated to frets and strings. Suggestions? Also, is > anyone real familiar with "Minuet in G" by Bach? There’s apparently an > F that I just don’t hear but is on the sheet music. An answer to the > first question will probably yield results with the second. > Thanks, > -Cam > "Working hard to unlearn bad habits ingrained by years of air guitar > during the 80’s."

Response:

This probably won’t help much, but I believe the C at 3rd fret, 5th string  (same note as 8th fret, 6th string) correlates to middle C on the staffs (the C on the line between the treble & bass clefs).   The C at 1st fret, 2nd string (same note as 5th fret, 3rd string & 10th fret, 4th string) goes with the C on the treble staff in the second space from the top.  You can work out the rest from there. Or more likely, you’re now completely confused.  :) Tom – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text ->I’ve searched sans success to find a web page that shows all the notes >on the staff translated to frets and strings. Suggestions? Also, is >anyone real familiar with "Minuet in G" by Bach? There’s apparently an >F that I just don’t hear but is on the sheet music. An answer to the >first question will probably yield results with the second. >Thanks, >-Cam >"Working hard to unlearn bad habits ingrained by years of air guitar >during the 80’s."

Response:

Hi, Subscribe to my mailing-list, I will provide it to the subscribers within a few weeks… Regards, Amar GUERFI   –    Guitar Courses    -    Cours de Guitare Remove "NOSPAM" or reply to the group – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -> I’ve searched sans success to find a web page that shows all the notes > on the staff translated to frets and strings. Suggestions? Also, is > anyone real familiar with "Minuet in G" by Bach? There’s apparently an > F that I just don’t hear but is on the sheet music. An answer to the > first question will probably yield results with the second. > Thanks, > -Cam > "Working hard to unlearn bad habits ingrained by years of air guitar > during the 80’s."

Response:

I’ve searched sans success to find a web page that shows all the notes on the staff translated to frets and strings. Suggestions? Also, is anyone real familiar with "Minuet in G" by Bach? There’s apparently an F that I just don’t hear but is on the sheet music. An answer to the first question will probably yield results with the second. Thanks, -Cam "Working hard to unlearn bad habits ingrained by years of air guitar during the 80’s."

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