Shape of C Major Scale on Bass

The above is the shape of the Major scale on the root note of C, i.e. the C Major scale, on the bass guitar. This is on the fretboard of the neck of a 4-string bass guitar, where the leftmost is the topmost part of the bass neck (i.e., the lowest pitch string) and the rightmost is the bottom part of the bass neck (i.e., the highest-pitched string) (refer to 20241215165631-Composite_Chordophone_Hardware_Components). It is read from top to bottom, left to right. The dots signify where fingers would be placed. The sequence of the C Major scale corresponds to the order of the dots, as is apparent when mapped to the notes on the fretboard. The vertical numbers on the left indicate the fret number (count starts from the headstock of the bass guitar onwards).
A given scale, like the Major scale, can be transposed by simply shifting the appropriate shape around the fretboard.
root_key root_note root_pitch C_major_scale C_natural_major_scale major_scale guitar_shape bass_guitar_shape bass_guitar string strings string_instrument plucked_string_instrument_neck plucked_string_instrument strummed_string_instrument strummed_string_instrument_neck plucked_string_instrument_frets strummed_string_instrument_frets dot sequences signification finger musicology composite_chordophone_neck plucked_string_instrument_neck composite_chordophone_frets plucked_string_instrument_headstock strummed_string_instrument_headstock composite_chordophone_headstock musical_scale musical_notes transposition
bibliography
- The Major Scale. Performed by Josh Fossgreen. Beginner to Badass. BassBuzz, n.d. 11:01.