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Fretboard Intervals

Same interval, five shapes

Pick an interval and see how its shape changes across each adjacent string pair. Four pairs use one shape — the G→B pair shifts by one fret because the tuning narrows there.

EA+2 frets
AE123456RP5
AD+2 frets
DA123456RP5
DG+2 frets
GD123456RP5
GB+3 frets
BG123456RP5
Be+2 frets
eB123456RP5

Root note sits on fret 3 of the lower string in each diagram. The offset label above each diagram (+5 frets, +4 frets, etc.) is the distance from the root to the target on the higher string. Notice how G→B is always one fret different from the other four.

What an interval shape is

On guitar, an interval shape is the geometric pattern that produces a given interval between two notes on adjacent strings. A minor 3rd is "down one string, down one fret" — except on the G→B pair, where it's "down one string, same fret".

These shapes are the building blocks of every chord, arpeggio, and melodic phrase. Once internalised, you can spell any chord on the fly without thinking about note names.

Why this trainer is harder than it looks

The B string. The cursed B string. Five of the six strings are tuned a perfect 4th apart — but G→B is a major 3rd (one semitone narrower). Every interval shape gains one fret on that pair.

The visualizer above shows all five string-pair shapes for any chosen interval side by side. Four pairs look identical; the G→B pair sits one fret over. That's the rule you're memorising.

The "+1 across G→B" rule, in one table

Interval Standard pair offset G→B pair offset
m3 down 1 string, down 1 fret down 1 string, same fret
M3 down 1 string, no fret change down 1 string, +1 fret
P4 down 1 string, same fret down 1 string, +1 fret
TT down 1 string, +1 fret down 1 string, +2 frets
P5 down 1 string, +2 frets down 1 string, +3 frets
m6 down 1 string, +3 frets down 1 string, +4 frets
M6 down 1 string, +4 frets down 1 string, +5 frets
P8 down 2 strings, +2 frets down 2 strings, +3 frets

That single +1 is responsible for 90% of the "why does this chord shape look weird" frustration on guitar.

How interval shapes build chords

A major triad is just root + M3 + P5. On guitar, that's:

  • Root on the A string
  • M3 on the D string, no fret change (just down 1 string)
  • P5 on the G string, +2 frets

Boom — C major from a root on A string fret 3: A:3 + D:2 + G:0 (well, actually it's E:3 wait let me restate). Either way, every chord is just a stack of interval shapes. Learn the shapes, build any chord from any root anywhere on the neck.

Shapes lead to "shell voicings"

A "shell voicing" is a chord stripped down to its essential intervals — usually root, 3rd, and 7th. Jazz guitarists use them as harmonic skeletons, then add tensions on top.

  • min7 shell: root + m3 + m7
  • maj7 shell: root + M3 + M7
  • dom7 shell: root + M3 + m7

Build these using interval shapes and you can spell any 7th chord in any key, anywhere on the neck, without ever looking up a chord chart. That's the unlock.

FRETBOARD PRACTICE

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