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Amen brother I was just feeling that way trying to learn too many things in advance that I don't really need instead of just learning them as I come across them so I wind up was way too much information in my head then I'm not even using😂
Ok thank you, I couldn’t figure out which fret it was down at some point and it’s the 10th. I love the tone of the guitar on this song, since I typically play heavier music, for anyone curious, this sounds pretty good on a guitar tuned to Drop B 😂
What I've found helping me learn the notes on fret board is practicing slides on all the strings.. So I'll slide G to D on 1st string. High E string. Then there is bending. I pick note as I have to know the note so I know what I'm bending to 1/2 step or full step. AT first I didn't notice it but I know were the notes I practiced on. So I change up my slides and bends now.
Good to learn notes for sure. Another popular method, that I do is to learn where each note is in the Triad e.g., start with one chord- C Major. Spend a week learning only C. Find all the positions. Then find E (the 3rd) and then G (5th.) Then you can play inversions of the chord when you learn caged. Then you can target the notes and associate the relevant Major Penta position to it. I figured out it goes like this C1 A5 G1 E2 D2 The numbers relate to the pentatonic shape.
There's a recurring set of patterns on the guitar. If you play a set of chords "open" the patterns can be thought of as C, A, G, E, D. Because the open chord shape for those chords ARE the pattern. That pattern can be translated over. D pattern moved up by two frets becomes, E. The actual thing you should be doing is learning how to build chords and learning all chord inversions. Scrap the bar tricks.