Guitar basics
Lesson 4 – Notes on the Fretboard
Nov 2nd
Lets take a look at fretboard of the guitar and learn the notes that are on it. First, you will notice that there are six strings on the guitar. The open strings of a guitar from the thickest (top) to thinnest (bottom) and can be easily remembered using this mnemonic: “Every Apple Does Go Bad Eventually”.
The metal vertical strips on the neck are known as the frets. A note is played by pressing your finger in the position between the frets and striking the string with a guitar pick or finger(s).
Now, lets learn the notes. Here is a map of the fretboard with the notes labelled.

Guitar Natural Notes
The labelled notes in the above diagram are known as Natural notes. The unlabeled notes are known as sharps(#) or flats(b). For example, the note on the E string between the F and G note is known as either an F sharp (F#) or a G flat (Gb). A sharp indicates the Natural notes pitch is raised a semi-tone, a flat note is the natural pitch lowered a semi-tone.

Guitar Notes
As you can see from the A string above for example, the guitar has 12 notes:
A, A#, B, C, C#, D, D#, E, F, F#, G, G#
Notice that there is no B# (or Cb) nor E# (or Fb) – this is a universal rule in music.
You will notice that there are many places on the guitar neck to play an A note. Some of these are the same pitch and sound exactly alike. Others may sound different. They are still A notes, but in a different pitch.
Also note that on your guitar neck, you probably see round dots on the guitar neck which mark the 3rd, 5th, 7th, 9th, 12th, 15th, 17th frets and so on. These are used as a guide when playing, so you do not need to count frets all the time.
This is your guitar neck and its notes. Get to know it, and try to memorize where the notes are located. This will help you greatly in your guitar playing.
Lesson 3 – How to hold a plectrum
Nov 2nd
Holding a plectrum, is a matter of taste. However, a few pointers to bear in mind is to not have a tight grip; keep it loose, but not so loose it moves every time you strum. Let your other three finger move freely when strumming and even use them to steady your hand if you’re picking strings, by resting the tip of your little finger on the body of the guitar.

Holding a plectrum / pick correctly
Bottom line to holding the plectrum is:
- Maintain a loose and relaxed wrist
- Don’t hold the pick so tight, you’re knuckles turn white; keep the grip relaxed
- Keep the pointy part of the pick at right angles to your thumb
- Practise, practise and practise
Here’s a video, showing a master guitarist holding the plectrum in the aforementioned manner to flatpick, enjoy

