Locrian Target Notes: Degree 3

7 interactive exercises that drill start and end note targets by degree, teaching you to shape phrases that land on your chosen degrees with intent.

Locrian Target Notes: Degree 3 guitar fretboard preview cycling 7 exercise sequences from this lesson, with note targets and position guidance.Locrian Target Notes: Degree 3 guitar fretboard preview cycling 7 exercise sequences from this lesson, with note targets and position guidance.

In This Lesson:

  • 7 Exercises
  • 7 Hand Positions
  • Scale family: Diatonic

Lesson Focus:

7 exercises designed to train start and end note targets by degree.

Exercises

  • Diatonic Locrian P1 Degree 3 StepRun

  • Diatonic Locrian P2 Degree 3 StepRun

  • Diatonic Locrian P3 Degree 3 StepRun

  • Diatonic Locrian P4 Degree 3 StepRun

  • Diatonic Locrian P5 Degree 3 StepRun

  • Diatonic Locrian P6 Degree 3 StepRun

  • Diatonic Locrian P7 Degree 3 StepRun

FAQ

What do Locrian Target Notes: Degree 3 train?

What do Locrian Target Notes: Degree 3 train?

It drills Locrian scale positions inside 7 hand positions so you can navigate the neck without losing the center.

What keys are available for this lesson?

What keys are available for this lesson?

This lesson is available in any key. Set a specific key for focused reps, or switch to Random Key mode to cycle keys automatically.

How do I make this scale sound musical?

How do I make this scale sound musical?

Pick an End Note target by degree (often a chord tone), then build a short line that lands there cleanly. Practice cue: Practice cue: treat the b5 as tension; resolve to 1 or b3.

What does Locrian sound like?

What does Locrian sound like?

Locrian has a b5 (unstable tension that wants resolution). Use the practice cue below to highlight the characteristic color, then resolve to stable targets.

How can I incorporate this lesson into my playing?

How can I incorporate this lesson into my playing?

Use Jam Mode to generate a computer-backed groove (bass + chords), then loop this lesson in time. Keep the End Note target consistent and practice landing cleanly on beat 1.

What is the difference between this system and other teaching systems?

What is the difference between this system and other teaching systems?

Some systems (like CAGED or 3-notes-per-string) group the same fretboard information differently. ScaleMode.Pro uses Hand Position Organization (Position 1–7 and Position 1–5 for pentatonic/blues) so your labels stay consistent.

More Diatonic Target Note Lessons

More Courses

Pricing

Pro Yearly

$6
billed annually $72per month

Best value: 25% savings with yearly

  • Learn guitar without getting lost on the fretboard
  • Get instant note feedback through your microphone
  • Follow step-by-step lessons that keep you moving
  • Practice with backing grooves that make it stick
  • Save your best drills and come back to them fast
  • Track your progress and stay motivated to improve

Pro Monthly

$8
per month
  • Learn guitar without getting lost on the fretboard
  • Get instant note feedback through your microphone
  • Follow step-by-step lessons that keep you moving
  • Practice with backing grooves that make it stick
  • Save your best drills and come back to them fast
  • Track your progress and stay motivated to improve

Pro Yearly

$6
billed annually $72per month

Best value: 25% savings with yearly

  • Learn guitar without getting lost on the fretboard
  • Get instant note feedback through your microphone
  • Follow step-by-step lessons that keep you moving
  • Practice with backing grooves that make it stick
  • Save your best drills and come back to them fast
  • Track your progress and stay motivated to improve
AboutWritten by Stephen Magreni • Last updated February 6, 2026
  • Play Position 1, Position 2, Position 3, Position 4, Position 5, Position 6, Position 7 using Hand Position Organization (not shape-system labels).
  • Default targets: Degree 3.
  • Use Jam Mode to loop a backing groove and drill the same resolution in time.

Credentials: BA University of Pittsburgh — Music Theory. Focuses on musicianship, composition, electronic music, and jazz guitar.