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Octave Trainer

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Difficulty

String 6 → string 4 only (the classic bass-octave shape).

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Ready when you are

Pick a difficulty, then start the session. Answer as many as you like — your streak saves locally.

Drill octave shapes — the secret weapon for finding any note anywhere on the fretboard. The trainer shows a root note and asks you to click its octave on a specific string-pair.

How to practice

  1. Pick one shape, drill it for a week. Start with string 6 → 4 (the most useful for chord roots).
  2. Move the shape, don't reshape. The same shape works at every fret position — slide it up two frets and the octaves slide with it.
  3. Connect to the Note Trainer. Once you can find any A on the low E string, the octave on the D string is automatic.
  4. Apply to chord building. Build C major: C on the A string (fret 3) → E on the D string (fret 2) → G on the G string (fret 0). Then use octave shapes to add the next octave's notes for fuller voicings.
  5. Wesley shapes for double-stops. Wes Montgomery played most of his solos in octaves. Two notes, octave apart, played together — it's not just a teaching technique, it's a sound.

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FRETBOARD PRACTICE

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