Originally Posted by: bounceeSo dving into triads and chord voicing.[/quote][p]I have an entire collection of tutorials that cover all possible major & minor triads & their inversions across all sets of adjacent strings.
https://www.guitartricks.com/collection/triads-and-inversions
Originally Posted by: bounceeThen while practicing moving various shapes around the neck I came to think of the CAGED system.[/quote]Yes, the essence of CAGED is that there are static chord shapes you can move up & down the fretboard to play any given chord by moving a shape to a different root note. And many of the triads & their inversions are contained in the CAGED patterns.
However, this is one reason I think that in some cases CAGED can hinder more than help. It makes more musical sense (conceptually to understand & perceptually to see chord tones) to simply understand the basic triads & inversions as fundamental units.
Originally Posted by: bounceeCould it be that the various chord shaped was more for navigating the neck for partial chords ie triads and scales more then actual using the full CAGED finger setting?Yes, you've got the right idea. :) This tutorial covers CAGED for rhythm guitar in detail & explains exactly this concept.
https://www.guitartricks.com/tutorial.php?input=2614
[quote=bouncee]If I use close triads I will be able to play the chord progression with minimal movement.
Yes, that is covered in detail in the triads tutorials I linked above.
[quote=bouncee]And in every position there should be a scale close by too, yes? So that fills can be played rapidly in the pocket and not wasting beats moving hand up and down the fretboard?
Yes, I explain that in CAGED for lead guitar. :)
https://www.guitartricks.com/tutorial.php?input=2619
If you are not a full access member a couple of brief versions on my YouTube channel.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xuObeNjBg2Y
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tGbNmLqLfzM
Hope this helps!