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How To Practice The CAGED System

The document provides step-by-step instructions for learning the CAGED guitar system, which organizes the fretboard into five chord shapes (C, A, G, E, D) that can be used to play chords across the neck. It recommends: 1) Learning the five basic chords and notes on the 5th and 6th strings; 2) Applying the five shapes to each chord to expand chord vocabulary; and 3) Practicing scales and soloing in each position to learn the fretboard and lead guitar skills.

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林昌麟
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
267 views

How To Practice The CAGED System

The document provides step-by-step instructions for learning the CAGED guitar system, which organizes the fretboard into five chord shapes (C, A, G, E, D) that can be used to play chords across the neck. It recommends: 1) Learning the five basic chords and notes on the 5th and 6th strings; 2) Applying the five shapes to each chord to expand chord vocabulary; and 3) Practicing scales and soloing in each position to learn the fretboard and lead guitar skills.

Uploaded by

林昌麟
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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How To Practice The CAGED System – Step By Step

Process
Written by  A ndrew Wilson in  C AGED System

The CAGED System is regarded as one of the best methods of learning how
to play guitar. This five pattern system teaches the entire fretboard and
organizes it into an easy-to-understand system so a student can learn chords,
scales, and capo usage just to name a few.

As a teacher, I use this system all the time with my students. As a player and
working musician, I have internalized this system so I can have the neck
mapped out in my mind so that playing, transposing, and transcribing are all
just second nature. 
This system is so brilliant that it allows you the guitar student to not just learn
how to play guitar, but how to teach yourself to play guitar. Since it is designed
to organize the fretboard so that it is no longer simply a blank slate of wood
and wire, it is important for a guitar student to organize their practice to learn
the CAGED System in an efficient and effective manner.

How To Practice The CAGED System


There are several easy, key steps in practicing the CAGED System effectively.
You can incorporate as much or as little of this as you want in your practice
routine, but there are some basic prerequisites one needs to establish before
digging in.

 Step One – Learn the five chords – C, A, G, E, and D.

 Step Two – Learn all of the notes on all of the frets on at least the 6th
and 5th strings. Start with the 7 natural notes (no sharps or flats).

 Step Three – Apply the five shapes of CAGED to each of those five
chords, using the notes on the fifth and sixth strings as the root notes for
reference.
Once step three is achieved, you are ready to expand upon the CAGED
System. It is possible to stop there and you would have greatly benefited from
this five-pattern system by expanding your knowledge of the neck and
significantly increasing your chord vocabulary.
CAGED offers a whole world of possibilities when it comes to learning the
fretboard. It would be wise to unpack step three of the above list before
moving on to other ventures. Beyond expanding chord vocabulary, the
CAGED System is great for learning scales and dabbling in solos, which we
explore a bit further down.

How To Learn The CAGED System


At the heart of the CAGED System are the five chords that give the five-
pattern system its name. Learning the C, A, G, E, and D chords, however, is
only the beginning. It’s not so much learning these chords as it is learning
their shape.

These shapes are transferable to different positions up the neck. In fact, these
five shapes can be used for all twelve major chords as well as a few of their
minor counterparts. Applying these five positions to twelve keys shoots your
chord vocabulary up to 60 chords at a veritable snap of a finger. It’s much
easier to learn five positions than learning sixty chords cold, wouldn’t you say?

The best way to start is just by using the five chords of CAGED and moving
each chord up the neck using the other four shapes.
For example, start with C in the open position.

Then, use the root note (5th string, 3rd fret) to form the A-shape of C in 3rd
position.
Follow that with the G-shape. Here the root is on the sixth string as with the
actual G chord, which places the G-shape of C on the 8th fret.

The E-Shape is next with that root note also on the 6th string, 8th fret.

Finally, the D-shape has its root on the fourth string. The C note is on the 10th
fret.

Presto. You have played all five positions for the C major chord using the
CAGED System. Repeat this idea for each of the other chords. The A chord
will travel up the neck in the order of A, G, E, D, C, starting at the open
position. The G chord goes up with G, E, D, C, A and so it goes.

There are two natural major chords left which are the F and B and those are
easy enough to begin practicing. The lowest available F chord is derived from
the “E” shape, while the B chord uses the “A” shape
After you get the idea of CAGED with the seven natural major chords, the five
accidentals are easy enough to get down since it’s just a matter of going up or
down by a single fret.

How To Practice CAGED Scales


The CAGED System is also a useful tool when learning scales. Learning the
scales in each of the five positions opens up two possibilities for any guitar
student. For one, the student is able to learn the degrees and intervals of a
scale. The various degrees of the major scale are as follows: Root, major 2nd,
major 3rd, perfect 4th, perfect 5th, major 6th, major 7th, and the octave. 

These intervals can be used in various combinations to form chord formulas so


one can learn how to play different types of chords such as Cmaj7, Cadd9,
C13, Csus4, and so on. Simply add one of these notes from a scale to an
existing chord and you can come across some cool chord variations.

The second opportunity that opens up is for a guitar player to start exploring
what it means to play a solo, melody, or riff. For any guitar player looking to be
a lead guitarist, learning all of the scales covering the entirety of the neck is
pretty close to being a requirement. It’s a tall order to be sure, but using the
CAGED System can bring order to this chaos and help to take on this
challenge in more bite-sized portions.

Each of the five positions is represented in the diagrams above. Be patient and
really take your time practicing these. 

Pro Tip!
My recommendation to most guitar students who practice 20-30 minutes per
day is to spend one week per position. I know to most people that seems
agonizingly monotonous, but if you spend a whole week playing just one
position, you will start to get bored.

Getting bored is good! Why? If you use some discipline and really focus here,
as your brain gets bored, you will almost involuntarily get creative. The mind
will tire of doing the same thing over and over and start to think up new, more
exciting ways of practicing each of these positions.
This idea is not unique to me. I learned of this idea from an old Steve Vai
article that talked about musical meditation.

Once each position has been learned, it becomes time to put it all together in
one, seamless journey from the lowest part of the neck up to the last possible
fret. This part is optional for most players as it really benefits those who want
to learn how to create melodies and play solos.

The way to practice connecting these positions uses a technique called


“position shifting” where the player picks strategic places on the neck to play
more than three notes on a single string to quickly move up several frets in
one deft move. 

Here’s an example in Gmajor:

Two major shifts happened here; one shift on the fifth string going from the 7th
fret up the 9th, then another one on the fourth string shooting up to the 10th
fret with the first finger after playing the 9th fret with the fourth finger.

Using this technique, one can travel three whole octaves of a scale spanning
the length of all five positions. One can of course choose to go past the last
octave or to duplicate the higher pitches and access higher frets.

How To Solo With The CAGED System


By practicing the scales in all five positions and learning the position shifting
technique, one is ready to learn how to solo using the CAGED System. The
next step in doing this is to learn the location of the chord tones of the major
scale. The chord tones are simply the notes that make up a chord. For a major
scale, these are the first, third, and fifth notes of that scale.
Trying to solo with only three notes is a challenge in creativity because, on the
surface, it seems quite boring. As mentioned before in the idea of musical
meditation, this limitation is strategic in order to get your brain to explore ways
of making something monotonous into something unique and musical.

Start by just trying to create a melody with the three notes of a C major chord –
C, E, and G using this diagram as a reference:
Next, try practicing over a chord progression, starting with a two-chord
progression such as //: C / C / F / F ://

For F, the chord tones will be F, A, and C. Only play those notes over the F
chord.

Then, step it up to a three-chord progression. Try //: C / C / F / F / C / C / G / G


://

Since G has been added, now play the notes G, B, and D over the G chord.

There are several good resources out there for backing tracks for guitarists to
practice their soloing. Try Guitar Tone Master or GuitarBackingTrack.com.

For more on this, check out the full article on How To Use The CAGED
System To Solo.

Is It Worth Learning The CAGED System?


I am aware that much of what I have outlined seems tedious, challenging, and
a test of one’s will power and patience. At first, it is tedious and challenging
and it takes resolve and a certain level of focus. If you find your mind
wandering, just practice pulling your thoughts back to the task at hand. The
more you do this, the better your focus will get and this will get less and less
difficult and become more and more enjoyable.
For me, it was rough the first few times I tried this level of structured practice
since my mind darts all over the place when I have a guitar in my hand. But
believe me, it is so worth it. I make my case in a separate article of all the
benefits but just know for now that the main benefits of taking the time to learn
this system will be significantly improving your knowledge and mastery of the
guitar neck. What’s not to love?

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