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The Guitar
EncycloMedia...
Total Fretboard Knowledge In One Book
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Guitarists Everywhere
Are Raving About This Amazing book
That Empowers You To
Fully understand the fretboard
You're a guitar player - but you're more than
just a guitar player, you're a musician... thinking and
speaking the language of music that you then apply to the guitar,
thus becoming a student of the guitar.
The Guitar
EncycloMedia
Is based on the premise that music is a language
If you knew the music alphabet of 12
Sounds and 21 Symbols (letters and tones) on your guitar, you could
spell any chord, scale, or arpeggio, and then combine them (grammar)
to play any song in any style.
So, where does music begin?
Like most languages, with an alphabet. Now, you've known the English
alphabet (26 letters) most of your life, but, do you know all the
words in the dictionary? We know the answer to that question.
However, do you know every letter in the dictionary? Yes! So the
question becomes, if you know every letter in the dictionary, why
don't you know every word? The answer, because you don't know how to
spell them.
On your first day of
school they didn't give you a book of Shakespeare and a dictionary
and say "Go home you're finished." You understand that's absurd.
However, that's what you're trying to do with the guitar.
You say, I want to play this song.
Then you open a song book, see the first chord, find it in your
chord dictionary, try to finger it and then move on to the next
chord. You will never learn guitar that way.
Remember the first grade? You
memorized a list of vocabulary words that you could spell. This
enabled you to read a story that contained those words. Then you
learned a new list of words, read a new story, a new list, a new
story,
and so on. Until finally, years later, you could read that book of
Shakespeare.
That's
how you must understand the
language of music.
As chords, scales and arpeggios that you can spell
Which become your vocabulary!
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"The Guitar EncycloMedia is
a very comprehensive and all inclusive book.
It contains everything you need to
educate yourself as a guitar player."
Pete Anderson. Multi-platinum, Grammy award winning producer
and guitarist. |
Pythagoras told us that if we take a
string length and divide the string in half the frequency is doubled
and the octave is created. So from the nut to the bridge is one
string length and the 12th fret divides the string in half. Now you
have 12 frets, one for each of the 12 pitches (letters and tones).
While it's true there are 12 pitches
in music (7 natural and 5 chromatic) there are only 7 letters in the
music alphabet: A, B, C, D, E, F, G and these
7 letters can be placed horizontally on every string.

Most guitarists start with a vertical view of the fretboard.
However, by not seeing the letters and tones horizontally, they miss
the concept of chord shapes which are vertical
groupings of the horizontal letters and tones.
Trying to remember thousands of chord
block diagrams (vertical groupings) by memorizing finger patterns
will never work.
You learn and
remember chords, scales and arpeggios
By spelling them!
Going a
step further, the letters of the C Major scale: C, D, E, F, G, A, B
can be thought of as tones (the numbers of the scale). So instead of
"Do-Re-Mi", which in the key of C major is C, D, E, we can give
those letters tone numbers: 1, 2, 3. Now you can spell in tones as
well as in letters.
This is very important because
now we have two ways to think about the guitar,
as letters and those letters as tones, in any given key. Okay, we
understand that music is a language expressed as an alphabet of
letters and tones.
This is a key point
for
Turning A Guitar Player Into A Dynamic Musician!
Now, getting back to my first analogy,
I said that if you knew all the letters of the alphabet it would be
possible to spell all the words in the dictionary. So now I'll
assume that you know the musical alphabet of 7 letters on the guitar
fretboard.
Do you know the song Happy Birthday?
Yes? Okay, can you play it? No, why? Because you don't know how to
spell it. That's the concept.
If you know how to
spell it you can play it.
In fact, you can play
anything you know how to spell!
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"One of the most complete reference books I
have come across, equally addressing beginning and advanced players."
Gunharth Randolf - Guitarist, songwriter and
teacher. Founder of iBreathemusic.com |
The Guitar EncycloMedia teaches you
how to see the guitar in a very simple way - letters and tones on
the fretboard, which will enable you to play what you can spell.

Now, what do you know how to spell? How big is your vocabulary?
No matter what song you want to play, if you
have the vocabulary you'll be able to play that song.
However, you must have an order, a system, a method to get through
the complex vocabulary of the guitar. The
Guitar EncycloMedia introduces this vocabulary in the proper
sequence.
As you can see in the above diagram, the Guitar EncycloMedia doesn't use "notes" (staff notation) to represent
music, or tab (tablature) to show its application on the guitar.
Instead, fretboard diagrams and an alpha-numeric (letters and tones)
system of spelling is used to develop a
vocabulary which will make it possible for you to read and perform
any song in any style.
As a general statement, the Guitar
EncycloMedia presents its material in four parts: chord - scale -
arpeggio - song. In traditional music theory, an "in order scale"
alphabet is first presented, and then from the letters and tones of
that scale - chords and arpeggios are spelled (constructed).
However, I've chosen to introduce chords first because we tend to
hear the harmony (chords) of a song first - and then play an "out of
order scale" melody - that fits the chords.
In the Guitar EncycloMedia
you discover five moveable (barre) chord forms.
These five moveable forms are created by vertically grouping the
letters and tones of a chord in one position. However, there are
thousands of chord voicings (fragments) on the guitar, and these
should also be explored.
In addition, seven forms of vertically grouped
scales and arpeggios are presented, and once again there are
thousands of fragmented possibilities.
Using the Guitar EncycloMedia, you
also discover many innovative ways to see your
fretboard such as "Hidden Chord Shapes". Below you see
5 quick ways to play the F major chord!

There are
forty-two songs included in the Guitar EncycloMedia, and
every song has been analyzed to show each chord's corresponding
tonal center scale and mode, providing you with many opportunities
to apply the chords, scales and arpeggios that you have learned.
Also, numerous substitution ideas are presented, which suggest many
variations.
The most complete
reference of
Guitar knowledge Available...
Containing all the chords, scales and
arpeggios
Necessary to perform any song in any style.
Well Over 300 Pages of Guitar Power! The Fast Table
is a table of contents and an index combined. It's the fastest and easiest way to locate any chord, scale or arpeggio, by simply scrolling across the columns and moving down the rows.
The
Guitar EncycloMedia thoroughly explains
how chords, scales and
arpeggios combine with one another, enabling you to play
something uniquely different the second time through a song.
It teaches you how to see the
guitar in a very simple way, letters and tones on the fretboard.
Here's Just A Few
More Things You'll
Discover...
Letter
and Tone Fretboard Charts
Open Major Chords
Five Major Chord Forms
Diatonic and Chromatic Intervals
Nine Triads
Chord and Arpeggio Spelling Chart
Key Signatures
Major Scale Letter Chart
One Fret Rule
Seven Scale and Arpeggio Forms
Octaves Chart
Major Scale Harmony
Circle of Fifths
Major Scale Modes
Alterations and Extensions
Minor Chords
Natural Minor Scale and Progressions
Minor Pentatonic Scale
Power Chords
TAB and Staff Notation
Major Pentatonic Scale
Chord Substitutions |
Blues Scale and Harmony
12 Bar Blues Progressions
Major Scale Tonal Center
ii-V-I Progression
Augmented, Suspended and Diminished Triads
Whole Tone Scales
Inversions
Slash Chords and Progressions
Melodic Minor Scale and Modes
Dominant Seventh Altered
Flat-Five Substitution
Harmonic Minor Scale and Modes
Diminished Scale Construction
Major and Minor Turnarounds
Chord and Arpeggio Construction
Scale and Mode Tone Spellings
Cross-Correlations
Enharmonic Chords
Polychords
Overlapping Chords and Arpeggios
Chord-Arpeggio-Scale/Mode Relations
and More... |
30 Day Money Back Guarantee
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improve!
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give you a complete refund.
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