Unlocking the Neck: Understanding the Guitar with the Five-Position CAGED Method by Daniel Mylotte

Unlocking the Neck: Understanding the Guitar with the Five-Position CAGED Method by Daniel Mylotte

Author:Daniel Mylotte [Mylotte, Daniel]
Language: eng
Format: azw3
Published: 2016-06-08T00:00:00+00:00


But! I will say that this scale shape is incredibly useful. I really love doing arpeggios and string skipping with this shape. It’s just a lot of fun to play with once you get the hang of it. It’s also the form that is closest to the forms found in the next most common system for playing scales, the three-notes-per-string system.

A note about stretching

You’ll see in this form and some others that there are more frets involved than you have fingers. In other words, one finger has to cover two frets. These stretch fingers will always be finger one or finger four. In this example playing a G major scale with the D form we need to cover frets three through 7. The first finger will play all the notes on frets three and four.



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