This exercise is adapted from
Decide on a note you wish to locate and set your metronome at 60 bpm. Then with each click of the metronome, locate that note in all positions on each of the strings, starting with the 4th string (G string), 3rd string (C string), etc. Play on the beat, continue on all strings and use the open-string positions too. If 60 bpm is too fast, go slower. If it is too slow, go faster. *Most important, practice with all 12 notes.
If you are just starting out, use the fretboard to help locate the notes. Do this exercise everyday until you can do it in your sleep.
Decide on a note you wish to locate and set your metronome at 60 bpm. Then with each click of the metronome, locate that note in all positions on each of the strings, starting with the 4th string (G string), 3rd string (C string), etc. Play on the beat, continue on all strings and use the open-string positions too. If 60 bpm is too fast, go slower. If it is too slow, go faster. *Most important, practice with all 12 notes.
If you are just starting out, use the fretboard to help locate the notes. Do this exercise everyday until you can do it in your sleep.
*I am just a little uke player, I'm going to learn the natural notes (second fret board) and add in sharps and flats later.
Progress update:
Right now I am getting myself motivated to do this exercise by checking the tuning of my strings while I hunt and pluck. All A notes should have the same tone, all B notes, on up the alphabet. It's been fun to find the high notes, and octave up, too. Above the 12th fret they all sound like harmonics- very pretty. But I'm not ready to find all the A notes, then all the B notes, C notes.... string by string on ANY metronome setting yet : )
I'm pleased that by the end of the second day I could see I was learning the position of the A notes. That's more progress than I knew I was going to have. I've had to persist in hunting and plucking multiple times over. No easy student who just soaks it up here. But after a few attempts at A, B & C, I can feel and see progress. I could probably find all the A notes on a 60 bpm. That's progress.
Also, practicing the c major scale has <3 helped me find notes at that end of the fret board, a side effect I didn't realize I had acquired : ) I think saying or singing the notes as I plucked that scale is what did this (I didn't and don't always say the notes, sometimes I just feel the finger memory-- it always feels good when my fingers remember something for me, because I repeated it so much (argh!).
One thing I want to assure you of, learning the c major scale has been fun. I have to post the way I learned it. I put it up on my wall, too, so I could just grab my uke and practice it here and there. There is a pleasure in do-re-mi, that's for sure. Same for practicing song riffs like 'Ode to Joy'. So fun, even if I am really making mistakes, it just sounds good to me-- and you know the uke saying, if it sounds good to you, it sounds good!! :D oh my dear little uke, so sweet and friendly <3
What I'm doing is going through all of the natural notes early in the day... then doing A, then A & B, then add C, and that's it, I"m kaput on that exercise! I go back once or twice during the day and practice ABC again, but I don't hunt and peck down the rest yet. I hope to build up more endurance with my concentration. Until then, I can check to make sure the same note on any string has the same tone, and make little changes in my tuning when a note on the 4th string doesn't sound the same as the same note on the 2nd string.
It's a pleasure to get my uke, to what sounds to my ears like, finely in tune : ) It feels good to my ears.
I'm working on the major notes (A B C D E F G) first, and saving the # and flats for later.
Right now I am getting myself motivated to do this exercise by checking the tuning of my strings while I hunt and pluck. All A notes should have the same tone, all B notes, on up the alphabet. It's been fun to find the high notes, and octave up, too. Above the 12th fret they all sound like harmonics- very pretty. But I'm not ready to find all the A notes, then all the B notes, C notes.... string by string on ANY metronome setting yet : )
I'm pleased that by the end of the second day I could see I was learning the position of the A notes. That's more progress than I knew I was going to have. I've had to persist in hunting and plucking multiple times over. No easy student who just soaks it up here. But after a few attempts at A, B & C, I can feel and see progress. I could probably find all the A notes on a 60 bpm. That's progress.
Also, practicing the c major scale has <3 helped me find notes at that end of the fret board, a side effect I didn't realize I had acquired : ) I think saying or singing the notes as I plucked that scale is what did this (I didn't and don't always say the notes, sometimes I just feel the finger memory-- it always feels good when my fingers remember something for me, because I repeated it so much (argh!).
One thing I want to assure you of, learning the c major scale has been fun. I have to post the way I learned it. I put it up on my wall, too, so I could just grab my uke and practice it here and there. There is a pleasure in do-re-mi, that's for sure. Same for practicing song riffs like 'Ode to Joy'. So fun, even if I am really making mistakes, it just sounds good to me-- and you know the uke saying, if it sounds good to you, it sounds good!! :D oh my dear little uke, so sweet and friendly <3
What I'm doing is going through all of the natural notes early in the day... then doing A, then A & B, then add C, and that's it, I"m kaput on that exercise! I go back once or twice during the day and practice ABC again, but I don't hunt and peck down the rest yet. I hope to build up more endurance with my concentration. Until then, I can check to make sure the same note on any string has the same tone, and make little changes in my tuning when a note on the 4th string doesn't sound the same as the same note on the 2nd string.
It's a pleasure to get my uke, to what sounds to my ears like, finely in tune : ) It feels good to my ears.
I'm working on the major notes (A B C D E F G) first, and saving the # and flats for later.