April 30, 2007

Guitar Lessons - Physical Limitations

Tip! I hope you find my advice useful when you’re deciding whether you should take guitar lessons or not. It’s certainly not a requirement to being a great guitarist.

Learning to play guitar when you have a physical disability can be frustrating and may seem down right impossible. The fingers are the most important part of playing the instrument. When I was 5 years old (1967) my sister slammed the door of my parent’s car. No one told me to pull my finger away. The top of my fret hand index finger was crushed down to the knuckle. The doctors removed the crushed bone, stitched me up with the flap of skin that had the nail still hanging. As a result my index finger is about ˝” short and has a claw “hook” for a nail. To make matters worse I have no feelings on the tip of my finger.

When I was senior in high school my girlfriend bought me a Gibson Les Paul guitar for Christmas (used and in bad shape). I also purchased an acoustic guitar and signed up for classical guitar lessons at my local junior college. I played a number of musical instruments in Junior High and High School band (one time in band camp….) so I thought this would be easy. The school did not have classes in Rock Guitar, there was no internet, and I don’t even think there was such a thing as tab back in those days. Imagine trying to learn to play classical guitar with a stubby claw finger with no feeling. Some of the spreads in those chord forms were just impossible. I became depressed and quit playing after two years.

Tip! The acoustic guitar magazine is for acoustic guitar players, from beginners to performing as a professional. The magazine usually contains free acoustic and electric guitar lessons, tutorials and videos for both beginner and professional.

One day my wife dug up that old guitar and asked me what I wanted to do with it. So I took it to a local guitar store and had them look at it, and they gave me $20. So newly rich with my $20 I started looking around at the guitars and picked up a Fender SRV Stratocaster. As I was looking at the guitar the guy running the store quickly showed me how to read guitar tab and play a basic power chord. To my wife’s delight (NOT) I came home with about $2,500 in new equipment.

I signed up for guitar lessons, but struggled with my mangled index finger and was about to give up again. Then one day my instructor looked at me and told me the only disability I had was in my head. I was so pissed at that punk, but I kept doing what he told me, exactly the way he told me. Today I don’t even worry about what my hands are doing I just play by instinct and ear.

Tip! For some in depth lessons with audio examples and exercises in rhythmic palm muting and more, see the heavy metal guitar lessons section on Mike’s website.

The moral of the story is simple 90% of playing guitar starts by what’s going on inside your head. My physical limitations were nothing but an excuse. If I can learn to play anyone can. Playing guitar is the single most satisfying thing I do with my clothes on. It’s worth the effort.

Bill McRea is the publisher of Guitar Warehouse the best place to Buy Guitar and learn Guitar Playing Techniques. Both sites offer free lesson and product sales.

Tags: guitar, guitar instruction, beginner guitar, how to play guitar, guitar lessons

Permalink Print

April 29, 2007

Guitar Lessons - Notes on the fretboard

Tip! It may be that you can even play a little bit already, but taking guitar lessons can still help to improve your playing abilities and your confidence.

The diagram bellow shows the position of notes on the fretboard in standard tuning. This illustrates the frets of the guitar with string 1 the High E and string 6 the Low E. Open string tuning is just right of the number and the || symbol indicates the nut of the fretboard. The | symbol represents a fret. I am only showing the whole notes not the flats and sharps.

The interval between whole notes works as follows: A Full step, B Full step, C half step, D Full step, E Full step, F half step. G Full Step, and back to A with a Full Step.

Another way to show this is: A BC D EF G A.

1-E—||-F-|—|-G-|—|-A-|—|-B-|-C-|—|-D-|—|-E-|
2-B—||-C-|—|-D-|—|-E-|-F-|—|-G-|—|-A-|—|-B-|
3-G—||—|-A-|—|-B-|-C-|—|-D-|—|-E-|-F-|—|-G-|
4-D—||—|-E-|-F-|—|-G-|—|-A-|—|-B-|-C-|—|-D-|
5-A—||—|-B-|-C-|—|-D-|—|-E-|-F-|—|-G-|—|-A-|
6-E—||-F-|—|-G-|—|-A-|—|-B-|-C-|—|-D-|—|-E-|

For a sharp note find the whole note and move up a half step. For Example the first A# (sharp) on the Low E would be on the 6th fret. There is no such thing as a B # or E#, nor is the such a thing as a C flat or F flat.

Flat notes are a half step down from a Whole note. Fore example an A flat on the Low E is the 4th fret. By the way that’s the same note as G #.

Don’t make this harder than it needs to be. Memorize the intervals and you’ve got it made.

Bill McRea is the publisher of Guitar Warehouse the best place to Buy Guitar and learn Guitar Playing Techniques. Over 60 Free Giutar Lessons and product information.

Tags: online guitar lessons, guitar tricks, beginner guitar, professional guitarists, guitar tab

Permalink Print

April 28, 2007

Guitar Lessons - Amazing New System

Have you grown frustrated with trying to learn from books, software, or cheap introductory videos with little useful content? Learn & Master Guitar is serious guitar training. It is by far the worldÂ’s most complete video instruction course for guitar. (PRWEB Aug 23, 2006)

More: continued here

Permalink Print
Made with WordPress and an easy to use WordPress theme • Sky Gold skin by Denis de Bernardy