The fretboard harmony method which emerges from these studies adapts this information to the particular exigencies and constraints of the guitar, resulting in a text which is intended for use in a full-year, upper-level undergraduate course. It comprises Chapter III and consists of a progressive arrangement of over 250 exercises along with written instruction. It begins with fretboard orientation and proceeds through single-note exercises, intervals, triads, chords, chord function and chord progression and modulation. The derivation of barre chords and “common” or “familiar” chords is explicated through a systematic method of chord formulation. Melody harmonization and figured bass realization are employed as pedagogical tools and are objectives in themselves in learning to actualize harmony on the fretboard. The harmonic scope of the method is confined to the vocabulary of the common-practice period. The use of secondary dominants, Augmented and Neapolitan 6th chords are final goals.
Chapter IV is a conclusion of the study with a discussion of potential areas of future research.
By Jeffrey James Mcfadden