Voicings vs full neck — when to use each view
Two ways to read a chord on the fretboard, and how they help different practice goals.
Capo offers two chord display modes. Both use the same underlying theory — the difference is how much of the neck you see at once.
Voicing mode
Voicing shows a single guitar shape from the Sonid voicing catalog. This is ideal when you want a concrete fingering to learn or transpose.
- Best for learning a new grip quickly
- Works with standard guitar tuning (EADGBE)
- Multiple positions when the catalog has them
Full neck mode
Full neck highlights every instance of each chord tone across the entire fretboard. Root, third, fifth, extensions — all visible at once.
- Best for seeing voice-leading options
- Works regardless of tuning
- Great for improvisation and arranging
A simple workflow
- Start in voicing to learn a reliable shape.
- Switch to full neck to find neighboring chord tones for fills or bass lines.
- Tap any note to confirm its interval name against the root.
If you are studying jazz voicings or open-position folk chords, try toggling between the two modes — the same Cmaj7 symbol tells a different story depending on the view.