Archive for August, 2008

Playing The Guitar - Helpful Training Tips

August 26th, 2008 | Category: Play Guitar Any Style

Music can change any mood, so imagine you learning to play it. Learning music is not rocket science. So go ahead and learn guitar the much sought out musical instrument. Learning to play guitar is one of the most wonderful experience. Most of the music genres involves guitar. Most of the people find learning guitar is like going to the moon, but its not so. Guitar is one of the most wonderful instruments that can be learnt even by reading books or going through DVD’s. Advice such as how to play acoustic guitar can be very helpful in your learning.

Firstly if you wish to learn to play guitar then you should buy one and learn to tune it. While you shop for a guitar, take a friend along who knows about it so that you don’t get ripped of your hard cash. Acoustic guitars are the best start off guitars. Their strings are less tensed and helps build callouses. Don’t forget to buy a tuner when you buy a guitar and always remember to pick up light ones as they are the best for beginners.

People usually give up when they don’t succeed, but as some great people say “Success requires no explanations and failure permits no alibis. Therefore don’t quit before you have reached a goal as you are not a quitter. A quitter never wins and a winner never quits.

If you decide that you wish to play the guitar then there are several ways in whcih you can learn to do so. A few of the more popular ways would be to attend a guitar class, get yourself a guitar tutor or learn online by buying a guitar training course. At the end of the day whichever you decide will no doubt be the right choice for you, but what it all comes down to is practice. If you practice playing the guitar everyday then no doubt you will start to see a major improvement in your guitar playing skill.

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Basic Guitar Chord: How To Play The Guitar

August 24th, 2008 | Category: Favorite Guitar Sites

The basic guitar chords are very important for the aspiring guitar player. That’s because without the basic guitar chords actually playing your favorite songs would be impossible and making music with someone else wouldn’t be that easy either. So, the basic guitar chords are where you should start if you want to play music, especially your favorite songs. Did you know that the majority of rock and pop songs can be played by only knowing the basic guitar chords? That means you could learn the basics and still play some of the most popular songs!

There is no standard list of “basic guitar chords” that every one agrees to. However, there is general agreement that there is a list of somewhere between 8 and 18 basic guitar chords (open string) that every guitarist must know cold. These chords are used in all musical styles from rock and pop to country, jazz, and classical. No matter where you are on your guitar-playing path, you should take the time to learn and master the basic chords. Getting these right will ensure you have the basic tools and skills to learn many songs and increase your playing enjoyment.

The problem with learning the basic guitar chords is that there is not an agreed upon list of what those chords are. There is, however, a list that includes up to 18 basic guitar chords that most everyone agrees upon. So, you should make it a goal to learn all 18 of these basic guitar chords. Doing so will ensure that you are able to play all the songs, almost, that you ever dreamed of and you will have more fun playing. The approved “basic guitar chords” come from keys A, G, C, and D. These chords are played by pressing down on one string while strumming the others. These are easier to play than other chords that are complex. Some of the basic chords are A, Am (A minor), C, D, Dm, E, Em, F, and G. You can learn the chords anyway you want, but the recommended way is to learn them by the keys, or chord families, so that you can start playing a bit as you learn. The chord families include the keys of A, D, G, and C. A is made up of A, D, E; D is made up of D, Em, G, A; G is made up of G, Am, C, D, Em; and C is made up of C, Dm, Em, F, G. Learning the basic guitar chords is not hard if you are dedicated to doing so. There are a couple of tricks, however, that might help you learn faster and start playing the songs you love. For instance, use a guitar chord chart as you are learning. This ensures you will learn proper finger placement from the start. Another tip is to master one chord family or key before moving on to the next. When you are an expert at one chord you can start “playing” already and learning the others will be a lot of fun! There are a lot of tips to learn to play the guitar, just follow the ones that seem most helpful to you and have fun!

Learning guitar chords is quite difficult but it does not have to feel impossible for you. If you apply yourself properly and dedicate your time to learning the chords in different ways then you will soon be on your way to a more professional sounding guitar and much better techniques than you ever had before. It will not happen overnight, practice, practice and more practice, Yes, practice, that is the key!

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Mastering lead guitar with the C major scale.

August 21st, 2008 | Category: Play Guitar Any Style

The C major scale is the easiest scale to understand, mostly because the entire music system is based on the C major scale note intervals. The advantage that a lead guitarist has over people who play other musical instruments, like piano for instance, is that the fretboard lends itself to patterns. By this I mean that if you learn how to play one scale, like A major for example, then the fingering patterns are exactly the same for any other major guitar scale, except that they’re played at a different place on the fretboard.

Lead guitar patterns make the learning curve on the guitar a lot faster than a lot of non fingerboard type instruments. The interesting thing about the major scale is that it’s also the minor scale, the only difference being where you start playing.

The major scale is easy to understand if you think of it in terms of fret distances. 1 fret = 1 semitone, and 2 frets = 1 wholetone, also referred to simply as a tone. Here then are the fret distances for playing it, and it should be noted (pardon the pun) that the first note of the scale is the key. Tone, tone, semitone, tone, tone, tone, semitone, tone, and then one more tone brings you back to the first note an octave higher.

If you have the note names for each string on the guitar, and you know that the C major scale is CDEFGABC, and that E and F are only a semitone apart, and so are B and C, there’s no reason why you shouldn’t be able to work out the C major scale all the way up the fretboard. Another quicker alternative is to check it with this page on the Major scale lead guitar patterns

Oh, and by the way, If you want to find the corresponding minor scale for any major key, it’ll be the note three frets back, as in lower in pitch.

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Music Furniture – Not Just For Your Grandparents Anymore

August 19th, 2008 | Category: Favorite Guitar Sites

I have a friend who has a house that I feel is second to none. He and his wife have not cut any corners when it comes to the finest decorations, they have the nicest furnishings, they also have the best taste in everything that they put into their home which makes it a lot of fun to see what they are up to on a regular basis. My wife and I always enjoy going to their house because we come back with some terrific ideas for what we might do with our house someday when the kids have moved out (which is still a long way away).

The last time we visited I went into his den and saw a new piece of furniture that I had not seen in a home before, any home. The beautiful handcrafted piece of furniture was a guitar display cabinet that allowed him to place up to 6 guitars in a cabinet. The cabinet had several advantages over a traditional music cabinet than keeping the guitars in their cases and extremely organized in the corner like he had them the last time I had visited his house. He said the advantage was that the guitar display cabinet was allowing the guitars to stay at a constant level of humidity (very cool) so the wood would actually last longer and the instruments would sound more like they had been initially built to sound rather than having a higher pitch as the wood dried. He went on to say that because the instrument display case was such a great addition to the room he found himself playing the guitar on a more regular basis. He even found himself playing his older guitars more regularly because they were much more accessible and he could put them back in the display case at a moment’s notice. He was very proud of his instrument display case.

That caused me to go look for other instrument display cases, in addition to the traditional sheet music cabinet that we see so often, that could be built for other instruments besides guitars. I have been able to find display cases for violins, trumpets, clarinets and many individual guitar display cases. As I researched the background of the cases I found that many individuals had purchased them from companies who make cases for museums and public displays. The items were cost prohibitive and always custom-made. There were no companies making them as products so that they could be produced as a product line and so that they could be made in a more affordable manner. As I made another round of phone calls I was able to find a few manufacturers who said they were interested in doing a line of products that could accommodate the part of the market who would want a high quality instrument display cabinet at an affordable price. All thanks to my friends who are trend-setters with their unique home furnishings. I have to have them over to our house next time.

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