How to play guitar and read notation, Reading The Thin E String
Reading The Thin "E" String
In the next section you will learn all the
notes on your six strings within the first four frets
and how they are written on paper. Each diagram (like the
one to the left) will be laid out the same. Lets break
the diagram down into three parts;
Finger Number
Note Names
Position of notes on the staff
Your E note is played open on the first string,
F is played with your first finger on the first
fret
on the first string and G is played with your
third finger on the third fret
on the first string.
What you see below are not songs but exercises.
They should not be memorized, they should be read, the same
way you would read a book. When you read a book you take in
the story but you don't memorize the words do you? The same
should happen when you read
sheet music fluently.
There are two ways to play any instrument, one is
to learn how to sight read music. This is the same as reading a
book out loud to someone. The next way is to memorize the song,
this is the same as being an actor where you memorize your lines
then repeat them when you are performing. Because you have memorized
your parts, this gives more room to be creative with your performance
(to ad-lib or improvise). Neither way is better or worse than the
other, and both take a while to master, doing both memorizing and
sight reading should be your goal, this will set you apart from
other guitarist.