That's a good thing to do. Great many people know their scales across the frets in one position, but it's good and important to know them up and down the frets, too.
I've been planning to do that, but I really don't know where to start. At the time, it was really easy to do SVG with Javascript in Firefox, and just a non-starter in IE, but now I've seen some far-ahead stuff that works in IE, and I don't know where to start.
Well, it started off as a tool to chart the progress of Kenski, a guitarist who gave himself a year to get into a band. Now, it's turned into another damn guitar blog!
Come on in, have a look around. You never know, you might find something interesting in here...
4 comments:
That's a good thing to do. Great many people know their scales across the frets in one position, but it's good and important to know them up and down the frets, too.
That's why I wrote a tool to help with that.
Which might not be so helpful if the power is out....
Shame that it doesn't work in Explorer Dave. Can you tweak it?
I've been planning to do that, but I really don't know where to start. At the time, it was really easy to do SVG with Javascript in Firefox, and just a non-starter in IE, but now I've seen some far-ahead stuff that works in IE, and I don't know where to start.
There's a standalone (portable) Firefox executable you can download somewhere (ie won't conflict with IE).
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