Rhythm Guitar: Notes On The E And A Strings


Notes On THe E and A Strings: Overview

Knowing the notes on the E and A strings is a vital skill to being able to play rhythm guitar. These notes can be used to play bass and are the target notes to play power chords and barre chords. Using the chromatic scale to learn how the guitar fretboard is organized will also help with note identification on higher strings.

Learn how to find the notes on the low strings and use them to play and write bass lines.

The Chromatic Scale


The musical alphabet is the same as the regular alphabet, but it repeats after G:

A B C D E F G A

The chromatic scale is made up of the smallest interval in western music, the half step. One half step up from a note is a sharp. A half step down from a note is a flat. There is no separate pitch for E#/Fb or B#/Cb. The chromatic scale starting on C is:

C | C#/Db | D | D#/Eb | E | F | F#/Gb | G | G#/Ab | A | A#/Bb | B | C

Check your understanding by completing the Guitar Fretboard Worksheet →


Chromatic Scale On E String


The distance between each fret is a half step, just like the chromatic scale. If you understand the chromatic scale, you understand how the notes are organized accross any string.


Finding notes Using The CHromatic Scale


The first step to fretboard mastery is being able to find notes on a string by counting half steps from the open string.

The open string letters from highest pitch to lowest are:

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