| Guitar tablature definitions - how to read tab |
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Discuss this article on the forums. (0 posts) The guitar can be notated in two ways. Either by using proper musical staves or by the use of tablature. Tablature is the more common, and often preferred, method of writing down songs for the guitar. In this lesson you will learn how to read tablature (tab from now on).
Guitar tab is based on this template model of the guitar neck, in a way, it’s a text drawing of the neck. E|---------------------------------------------------------------| B|---------------------------------------------------------------| G|---------------------------------------------------------------| D|---------------------------------------------------------------| A|---------------------------------------------------------------| E|---------------------------------------------------------------| Each of those six lines represents a guitar string, thickest at the bottom, and the thinnest at the top. Here’s a visual explanation: E|----------------------Thinnest---------------------------------| B|----------------------2nd-thinnest-string----------------------| G|----------------------3rd-thinnest-string----------------------| D|----------------------3rd-thickest-string----------------------| A|----------------------2nd-thickest-string----------------------| E|----------------------Thickest-string--------------------------| The letters up the left had side represent the note of the string when it is played open (i.e. played without fingering a fret).
Now you’ve got the strings/lines sorted, now onto the frets!
For those of you who don’t know what frets are, they are those strips of thin metal across your guitar’s neck. To "fret" or play a note, you must place your finger directly behind a fret and press down firmly then pick the string. Frets are notated on tab by the use of numbers.
E|--1--2--3--4---------------------------------------------------| B|---------------------------------------------------------------| G|---------------------------------------------------------------| D|---------------------------------------------------------------| A|---------------------------------------------------------------| E|---------------------------------------------------------------| As you can see, tab is like a map of where the notes you have to play are positioned on the neck. The frets are counted from the top of the neck, to the bottom of the neck. 1 being at the top and 21, 22, 23 or even 24 being closest to the body, depending on the type of guitar you have. So to play the 4 notes shown above (on the high E string) you have to:
It’s that simple!
The "zero" fret?
E|-----------------0---------------------------------------------| B|--------------0------------------------------------------------| G|-----------0---------------------------------------------------| D|--------0------------------------------------------------------| A|-----0---------------------------------------------------------| E|--0------------------------------------------------------------| "What the?!" I hear you say! This is even simpler than before because a 0 = an open string. In other words you play the string without fretting a string. So in the above example you have to play every string on after the other without touching a fret. Easy! Next, chords…
E|--0------------------------------------------------------------| B|--0------------------------------------------------------------| G|--0------------------------------------------------------------| D|--2------------------------------------------------------------| A|--2------------------------------------------------------------| E|--0------------------------------------------------------------| This is E minor (Em for short). In tab, chords are shown by stacking numbers, they are all played together by strumming. To play the Em chord you use your first two fingers to fret the second frets on both the A and D strings. Make sure that they don’t touch any other strings when played, this will cause buzzing! Now strum the chord by sounding all the strings in one motion. There you go, an Em chord in tab! Still easy? Other tablature notations/definitions you may come across are shown listed into categories. Fretting hand tablature/techniques.
Picking hand tablature/techniques.
More coming soon…!
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