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Topic: Anyone have a blank chart like this? |
Bobby Nelson
From: North Carolina, USA
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Posted 27 Dec 2018 6:13 am
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I had to draw the vertical columns with a pencil because my word processor has decided to give me only horizontal lines no matter what I do to fix it.
This is just a classroom exercise I'd like to do a couple times a week. If anyone has something like this (10 lines with 16 columns x 2, representing all the notes on the fretboard) they could email, or message, or, just post would probably work, that I can copy and print, it would be much appreciated. |
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Paul Wade
From: mundelein,ill
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Posted 27 Dec 2018 6:30 am Anyone have a blank chart like this?
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i have one like this if, this would work for you
p.w
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Bobby Nelson
From: North Carolina, USA
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Posted 27 Dec 2018 7:10 am
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Thanks Paul. I must have gotten this from you a while back. But it's not what i'm looking for - thanks again. |
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Charlie Hansen
From: Halifax, NS Canada and Various Southern Towns.
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Posted 27 Dec 2018 9:31 am
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Is this what you need??
_________________ I don't know much but what I know I know very well.
Carter S-10 3X5, Peavey Nashville 112, plus Regal dobro and too many other instruments to mention.
Bluegrass Island CFCY FM 95.1 Charlottetown, PE, Canada, on the web at cfcy.fm.
A Touch Of Texas CIOE FM 97.5 Sackville, NS, Canada,
on the web at cioe975.ca. |
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Bobby Nelson
From: North Carolina, USA
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Posted 27 Dec 2018 11:02 am
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Thanks a million Charlie - it's exactly what I was trying to do when the word processor went kaput. |
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Ryan Bramlett
From: Colorado, USA
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Posted 28 Dec 2018 9:13 pm
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i have no idea what this is about but i'm interested to see where it's going. What are you using this chart for? |
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Bobby Nelson
From: North Carolina, USA
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Posted 29 Dec 2018 2:10 am
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Ryan, It represents the 10 strings x 27 frets of the fretboard on my E9 neck. When I played 6-string guitar, after a couple years, you could take a poker, and hit a spot anywhere on the neck, and I could tell you what the note was - if not instantly, then certainly within 1/2 of a second. I'm using this chart to help learn the same on pedal steel. I do it kind of like a crossword puzzle a few times a week. I'm a sort of a "seat of the pants" kind of guy: I can drive your race car to the win, but couldn't tell you how the carburetor works, other than it sucks air and gas. So, this is a pretty cool exercise, as it gets the technical part of my brain working and thinking and learning, and helps me to overcome that kind of deficit. |
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