Sunday, March 7, 2010

How do i write guitar notes onto sheet music but with the notes, not the chord boxes?

How do i write guitar notes onto sheet music but with the notes, not the chord boxes?


like you would do on a piano but on guitar instead? I know all the notes on the frets eg C#, F but how do i write it onto sheet music cos i don't know whats middle C on guitar. Also can i convert it onto piano if i've written it on sheet music?How do i write guitar notes onto sheet music but with the notes, not the chord boxes?
Machine Head's factual information is quite correct. The C on a guitar which is played on the 5th string at the 3rd fret is written as middle C, even though pitch-wise it is an octave below middle C.





However, his opinion on the utility of writing guitar music this way is way off. In fact, writing it this way serves to orient the guitar's range very nicely on the treble clef. In particular, classical or finger picking music works out nicely in that you've got the bass notes, normally plucked with the thumb, down at the bottom of the staff, and the melody, on the upper three strings, plucked with the first three fingers (non-thumbs), on the top of the staff, and the whole thing fits nicely on one staff. If you wrote it out in true pitch, you'd have to use two staffs, as with piano music, which would be vastly more cumbersome (on piano it at least makes sense to use two staves because you're using two hands to play two separate parts).





Yes, you have to use a lot of ledger lines if you move way up the neck and play the really high notes. But guess what, that's what you have to do on a violin, too. Big deal. Look at the violin part to the ';Kreutzer'; sonata, you've got ledger lines up to the stratosphere, but nobody complains that violin should be written differently.How do i write guitar notes onto sheet music but with the notes, not the chord boxes?
Guitar music is scored on the treble clef transposed one octave up, so the note which is sounded as middle c (2nd string/1st fret; 3rd string/5th fret;4th string/10th fret; 5th string/15th fret|in standard tuning) would be scored as c above middle c.





This is a clumsy method of notation as it involves beaucoups ledger lines, but it is the standard method. Untransposed notation using the bass and the treble clef would be much more readable.

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