
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send Steve a Text Message
Forget memorizing the entire fretboard at once. We start where it counts most: the sixth string, the low E. You’ll learn a practical map that turns guesswork into certainty by pairing the chromatic scale with the guitar’s visual cues. We break down the “BE” shortcut so half steps make sense, show how to lock F, G, A, B, C, D to odd-numbered frets, and explain why that single sequence instantly improves your chords, scales, and riff targeting.
We walk through a clean framework: open E, then 1, 3, 5 for F, G, A; add 7 for B; place C at 8 and D at 10 around the ninth-dot trap; and finish at the 12th-fret octave to mirror everything you’ve learned. With that core in place, sharps and flats stop being speed bumps. Need G sharp? Move one up from G. Need E flat? Move one up from D or one down from E. Enharmonics become a tool, not a tangle.
The best part is how quickly this sticks. Use quick-fire prompts without even holding a guitar: what note is at 5, where’s C, what lives at 10, what’s A sharp near? You’ll build recall that survives stage lights and practice fatigue. Once the sixth string feels automatic, you’ll be ready to map the fifth string with the same method, shifting only where those half steps land.
If this helped you see the fretboard in a new way, follow the show, share it with a guitarist who’s stuck on note names, and leave a review telling us which drill clicked for you most. Your feedback guides future lessons and keeps these shortcuts coming.
Links:
Check out the GuitarZoom Academy:
https://academy.guitarzoom.com/
By Steve Stine4.8
7979 ratings
Send Steve a Text Message
Forget memorizing the entire fretboard at once. We start where it counts most: the sixth string, the low E. You’ll learn a practical map that turns guesswork into certainty by pairing the chromatic scale with the guitar’s visual cues. We break down the “BE” shortcut so half steps make sense, show how to lock F, G, A, B, C, D to odd-numbered frets, and explain why that single sequence instantly improves your chords, scales, and riff targeting.
We walk through a clean framework: open E, then 1, 3, 5 for F, G, A; add 7 for B; place C at 8 and D at 10 around the ninth-dot trap; and finish at the 12th-fret octave to mirror everything you’ve learned. With that core in place, sharps and flats stop being speed bumps. Need G sharp? Move one up from G. Need E flat? Move one up from D or one down from E. Enharmonics become a tool, not a tangle.
The best part is how quickly this sticks. Use quick-fire prompts without even holding a guitar: what note is at 5, where’s C, what lives at 10, what’s A sharp near? You’ll build recall that survives stage lights and practice fatigue. Once the sixth string feels automatic, you’ll be ready to map the fifth string with the same method, shifting only where those half steps land.
If this helped you see the fretboard in a new way, follow the show, share it with a guitarist who’s stuck on note names, and leave a review telling us which drill clicked for you most. Your feedback guides future lessons and keeps these shortcuts coming.
Links:
Check out the GuitarZoom Academy:
https://academy.guitarzoom.com/

78,416 Listeners

11,509 Listeners

1,147 Listeners

822 Listeners

153 Listeners

6,348 Listeners

486 Listeners

350 Listeners

783 Listeners

309 Listeners

215 Listeners

74 Listeners

57,881 Listeners

4,516 Listeners

44 Listeners