Chris Padilla/Blog / Music

Recordings across instruments!
You can follow by Newsletter or RSS! (What's RSS?) Full archive here.

    Faber - This One is About Cats

    Listen on Youtube

    The little rascals! 🐈

    Learning the Neck on Guitar

    Guitar has hands down been the hardest instrument I've played as far as getting familiar with the notes.

    Saxophone, admittedly, is one of the easiest. You really only have to learn 20 different finger combinations, and then you know most of the instrument.

    Piano is even easier!! You learn 12 notes and you can apply that to all 88 keys. Maybe you could say it's more like 24, since you're also reading bass clef.

    Here's the thing about those instruments: They are two dimensional. You play up the piano, and gradually go up. Same with sax and most wind instruments.

    Guitar, though, is three dimensional. You can go up the instrument by following a string up or by hopping to another string.

    Wicked.

    If you're like me, you can go surprisingly far on guitar without knowing too many notes, too. A trained ear and know that a scale is a series of whole and half steps does wonders.

    But! It doesn't take me far enough. So here's how I'm going about actually learning where every single note is on this instrument:

    1. Reading Sheet Music over tabs.

    For bettor or worse, I learned to read music from the page.

    If you're learning and you don't already read music, I'm not sure it's that necessary depending on what you want to do. If you already do, making the notes visual is a pretty great first step

    2. Barre Chords

    A two for one: Once you can play barre chords, there's no better way to get familiar with the thickest two strings than with playing this across the instrument.

    3. Hardcore Memorization

    The least sexy, but the most effective. A professor of mine from undergrad, while learning Portuguese, said it plainly: "There's a lot of romanticizing around immersive learning. While that's all fine and well, nothing beats buying a dictionary and memorizing the words."

    The point isn't one is better than the other, you need both, but guitar players (especially me) can be guilty of only playing and putting off learning the notes through a more rote approach.

    Thankfully, it's infinitely easier in 2023 with apps and online tools.

    At the risk of this blog sounding like a sponsored post: My favorite is Justin Guitar's Note Finder App. It's what you'd expect and a little more: Finding the note on a nice GUI, an option to try and identify what note is being shown. It even feels like a game, so it can be addictive to study the neck this way.

    4. Triads

    My next step is moving on to playing triads to bridge the theory to actual music making. More improv on it coming soon. 😁

    Dvorak — New World Finale

    Listen on Youtube

    So TRIUMPHANT! 🌅 💪

    Faber — Whispers of the Wind

    Listen on Youtube

    Sooooo pretty. Lots of fun cross-hands action going on!

    This was one of those when I started piano lessons where I thought "I didn't know even the EASY pieces could sound so beautiful!" 🍃

    E Minor Cowboy Waltz 🤠

    Listen on Youtube

    Improvising a Dosey Doe in the ol' 3/4 🌵