03 Guitar Notation
03 Guitar Notation
03 Guitar Notation
Guitar Notation
Music notation maps the pitch and duration of all the notes of a piece of music. Music notation, by
itself, is universal: everyone who reads music can understand the notes in the example below. Most
instruments have special additional notations which give information needed to play that instrument.
Guitar notation has many elements. The most important are outlined below.
< Look at this example of pure music notation. Until guitar notation
is added, there is no way to know which strings or fingering to use.
Guitar notation, added to music notation, shows what strings and fingers to use to play the notes. Guitar
notation consists of symbols for left and right hand fingers, the guitar strings, and the position to play in.
1 = index finger
2 = middle finger
3 = ring finger
4 = small finger
0 = open string *
* Open String
An open string is when the note to be played is plucked
by the right hand without using the left hand. The sound
made, of course, is the pitch that the string is tuned to.
The notation for an open string is the symbol "0" > 0
p = thumb
i = index finger
m = middle finger
a = ring finger
s = small finger
The small finger of the right hand is only used in
flamenco music. Chapter 28, on Flamenco,
illustrates the rasgueado strum that uses the
small finger.
To further illustrate the concept of position, look at this diagram below of notes in the 5th position:
1
2
<region of the 5th position
3
4
2 3 4
V
1
At first you will be learning music almost entirely in the 1st and 2nd positions. Many novices
assume that the higher positions are more difficult to play in. Actually, if anything, they are
easier to play once you know the note locations. Higher positions are easier because the higher frets
are closer together and the fingers do not have to stretch nearly as much along the horizontal axis of
the strings.
For now, begin to work with the concept of position playing without trying to fill in every detail.
Below are the first three measures of the melody of J. S. Bach's Jesu Joy of Man's Desiring.
Example one contains complete fingering notation for the 1st position. The 2nd example is notated
for playing in the 2nd position.
II
3
i
B
C
2
m
String Notation
Each string is named by the note to which it is tuned and is numbered as follows: the high E string is
called the 1st string, the B string is called the 2nd string, etc. When you see a circle with a number in it,
that tells which string the note is to be played on. For example: the symbol: means to play the note
on the 3rd string. Study the fretboard diagram below to see how this notation works:
Open Strings
String number >
I <The roman numeral indicates which position the notes are to be played in.
1
2
3 4
<The notes F > G# are 1st position notes of the 1st string. They are
notated in the diagram above by the black dots, with the fingers offset to
the right.