Fretboard atlas · electric guitar
A draftsman's view of the neck. Scales, positions, and vocabulary drawn as one connected map — then metered routines and recall drills to make it second nature.
Focus on one shape or see them all in an overview grid. Pick a key and system — fret numbers reflect the real neck.
The whole neck at once: all 7 positions across 3nps, CAGED, and symmetric systems, paired or merged into one view.
Zakk Wylde's three-notes-per-string approach — each modal position paired with its pentatonic box.
Two harmonic-minor shapes built around the raised 7th, for neoclassical runs.
Five scale formulas in any key — names or notation, with reference and exercise modes.
Triad intervals (root, 3rd, 5th) mapped across all 5 boxes — see how they connect over position boundaries.
Box 1 of the minor or major pentatonic, layered with color notes from Aeolian, Dorian, Phrygian, Lydian, and more.
The recurring two-string shapes inside every pentatonic position. Diagram and flashcard modes, major and minor.
All 5 CAGED shapes for major, minor, and seventh chords — root, 3rd, 5th, and 7th color-coded across every voicing.
Chord-tone positions for the 5 CAGED shapes — exactly where root, 3rd, 5th, and 7th land for each arpeggio.
An interactive circle with diatonic chords for any key you land on.
Your daily routine: major scales, triads, pentatonics, and broken intervals across all 12 keys. Based on Alex Rockwell's method. Do it every day.
A six-step routine for total pentatonic command — memorize, place, transpose, connect, then improvise. With metronome, timer, and key drone.
A standalone practice station: a big beat-dial metronome with tap tempo, a tempo trainer that ramps for you, a timer, and a key drone.
Curated lick packs by style and technique. Learn, loop, and internalize real vocabulary you can use on stage.
A running history of your practice, filled in automatically as the timer runs. Time per day, per tool, per section.
Name the highlighted fretboard note. Build instant recall across any string, fret range, and note type.
Read treble-clef notes on the staff, from C4 to B5 across naturals and accidentals.
Name the degree of each highlighted note in a scale shape — pentatonic boxes, blues, and diatonic positions.
On the drawing board
Fretboard Fluency
A structured course for internalizing the neck from the ground up — notes, intervals, and positions as one connected map.
Ear Training
Interval recognition and melodic dictation, calibrated to your current level.