Navigate All Collections Scales Guitar CAGED system Major scale family
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Chart to help you visualize how each of the 5 CAGED shapes of A-Minor pentatonic scale connects to the next one like a puzzle.

One of the diagrams highlights the 5 CAGED shapes without repetition and takes as much horizontal space of the page as possible to appear big and bold while the other one features CAGED shapes across the entire fretboard, repeating all 5 patterns almost twice and thus unlocking all shapes' connection points and not just in the first half of the fretboard.

The numbers inside the circles and squares represent intervals (scale degrees relative to the major scale). Root tones have a stronger visual emphasis to provide soloing landmarks and a better overview of the shape's primary "anchor points" to help you memorize and internalize all 5 patterns.

Pro tip: since these diagrams have relative degrees (intervals) instead of concrete note names you can view this chart as a recipe for any minor pentatonic scale, not just A-Minor, the shapes will be identical for all minor pentatonic scale roots.

For example, to get CAGED shapes for the G-Minor pentatonic scale you just need to align the E-shape's (pattern 1) root tone with the 3rd fret of the lowest 6th string.

CAGED shapes are always ordered as the CAGED-word is spelled. So for our G-Minor pentatonic example the next shape towards the guitar's bridge would be the D-shape, and the previous shape towards the guitar's nut would be the G-shape.

These relative scale degrees (or intervals) may help transform your entire approach to soloing. How? You no longer look at a "pool" of notes to choose from—instead, you focus on specific tones that add specific color to your playing. That is only possible if you are aware of what relative degree you are playing and what effect each of its intervals has to the underlying harmony. And this is exactly what these diagrams can help you with.

Notice that the A-shape on the 12th fret repeats the A-shape of the 0-fret. CAGED is a 5-pattern system—the whole series of patterns repeat every 5 patterns, like a loop, and the second diagram shows that very clearly.

Why is this relevant?

Well, that tells you that you don't need to memorize notes across all 24 frets of the guitar fretboard—you just need to learn what's in the 1st half (12 frets) of the fretboard and the 2nd half mirrors the first one.

Furthermore, it tells you that this half is split into 5 distinct "slices"—not 4, not 8, but 5. So, the idea here is—the fewer patterns, the easier it is to memorize the scale(s) across the entire fretboard. Take your time to observe this for yourself on the full-fretboard version of this chart.

Details

Poster type electronic
Poster language English
Paper size format A4 (ISO 216)

What is included

Poster, printable PDF 2 pc
Poster, grayscale (B/W), printable PDF 2 pc

Meta

Date added July 12, 2022
Date last updated July 15, 2022
Version 1.1

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