C: Exercise 3 of 4
![exercise 4 for a major](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Ff005.backblazeb2.com%2Ffile%2Fploddings-threads%2Ffeatured_img_200px%2Fploddings_default_200x200.webp&w=96&q=75)
Memorizing the fretboard
Date posted: 21 December 2023
Purpose
Absorb a mental-mapping of the C-major scale: [i] in groups of 3-notes per-string across 2-strings, horizontally; then [ii] chaining together those 2-string chunks across the fretboard, vertically.
Requirements
- Sing/speak every note-name aloud while (or moments before) plucking them †
- Play in-time with a metronome ensuring zero errors ‡
†: this is the ingredient that builds the neurological/brain link, assigning the exact fret a "name" to later remember & visualize it by. It's as challenging to do as it is effective; without this, it renders the exercises and fretboard memorization method fruitless
‡: an analogy is lifting weights, where the tempo you can: (a) speak note-names aloud and (b) play in-time, is the achievable "weight" to bench-press. Pushing the "weight-limit", aka increasing the tempo, determines how firmly the neurological/brain connection of the fret<-->note-name is achieved.
‡: an analogy is lifting weights, where the tempo you can: (a) speak note-names aloud and (b) play in-time, is the achievable "weight" to bench-press. Pushing the "weight-limit", aka increasing the tempo, determines how firmly the neurological/brain connection of the fret<-->note-name is achieved.
Tips
- "Get it off the paper".. practice without having to read the sheet music
- Start with a tempo (bpm), any tempo, no matter how humiliatingly slow, to immediately satisfy the 2 requirements
Estimated time
1 week
Note reference
![](https://f005.backblazeb2.com/file/ploddings-images/blog/c-major-scale.png)
Low-E & A Strings
Note: could take time to load MIDI tablature...