Find the root first
Start each shape from a root you can see clearly. The rest of the arpeggio makes more sense from there.
Choose a chord type and see its arpeggio tones, notes, and intervals across the guitar fretboard.
Current arpeggio
C
Major
Fretboard
C
Arpeggio tones
Root tones stay distinct while the remaining chord tones fill the neck as supporting notes.
Chord family
Triad
Arpeggios are chord tones laid out on the neck. Start small and make each note sound like part of the chord.
Start each shape from a root you can see clearly. The rest of the arpeggio makes more sense from there.
Notice the 3rd, 5th, 7th, and any extensions. These tones give the arpeggio its chord sound.
Work in a small neck area before running the whole fretboard. Clean shifts matter more than big patterns.
Play the arpeggio over a matching chord or progression. Listen for how the notes lock into the harmony.
Scales show the larger note pool. Arpeggios show the chord tones, which are usually the strongest notes to target over a chord.
Yes. It helps you see the notes that outline the current chord, which is useful for making solos sound more connected to the harmony.
Notes help you find the pitches on the neck. Intervals help you understand the chord structure, such as root, 3rd, 5th, 7th, and extensions.