After careful consideration I take it back, I don't think we need to know the song
Let's just say I'm not proud of what I done, but I ask that the reasons FOR learning it earn forgiveness in anyone who may learn the truth.
After careful consideration I take it back, I don't think we need to know the song
I feel like I've moved forward by leaps and bounds over the past 7 months, but I feel like the progress is slowing greatly. I'm hoping lessons get me out of the rut.
You know, I watched an interview of Keith Richards last week and he was talking about strumming. He said something to the effect that everyone gets caught up on what the chording hand is doing near the neck of the guitar, but the real magic is what your strumming hand is doing.
Of course, it depends on the style music you are doing, but it's definitely true. I took a song I've played for 1.5 years and changed the strumming on it and it was completely different.
I do that with some songs
our band does MTB's Can't You See. (edit, wrong song)
somewhere along the way I'll change the strumming to reggae, just to see the reactions of the local rednecks. it's hilarious
This will sound stupid, but any songs that aren't super lame, are easy to play, and can be done as a guitar/clarinet duet? I have young daughters...don't judge me...
Well there goes Aqualung.
Yeah...preferably no songs about pedophiles...
California Dreamin' by The Mommas and the Poppas?
I kinda-sorta learned the guitar part to "Glycerine" by Bush. It's super easy. The other stringed instruments are what make that song sound so nice. Otherwise, it's mostly four chords using one finger formation.
Pardon my back-to-back posts, but I really wonder if lessons would help me. I already have hand-eye coordination difficulties that make me rather proud to be able to play the guitar even poorly as I do, and the size of my hands seem to be a cause for concern, which bothers me. I am not a huge guy, and don't have huge hands. I see smaller women who can stretch their fingers & hit all the notes for some difficult chords, and chord-changes are a problem as well. For some chords, I am using my ring-finger instead of my middle finger like you are supposed to, because I can't make my hand do what it is "supposed" to do. Then, I see much bigger guys wailing on their guitar, they never accidentally mute strings or the like, where that is one of my problems as well. My hands aren't big enough, yet feel too big. I can't get past this, it's one of the two or three things really holding me back from playing better.
I will say this - once you start playing and build up your callouses, don't stop. You'll just have to go through the blisters & all the pain over again.
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Anyone going to buy anything guitar related for Black Friday? Guitar Center is going to have a couple things I may snag up, like a microphone, but nothing spectacular I need.
Recently I got into Blues music, so I've been playing around with some of that recently. I have a Tube Screamer pedal effect on my Peavey amp, and it's fun to play around with that.
Do they have 58s on sale per chance?
New guitar teacher taught me something last night that was so embarrassingly simple I was blown away.
I never quite got the "tuned half a step down" thing, even though I've done it before. I have zero music background...but can point to each note on a piano and tell you what it is (but I have to start at the C and count up or down to identify the note).
Teacher put down the guitar and went to his piano to show me simple things, like the fact that there is no E sharp note. He then picked up the guitar and showed me what "half a step" really meant, with each fret being half way to the next note...but the E string, fretted at the first fret, was an F because, as he demonstrated on the piano, there is no E sharp.
Again, embarrassingly simple but something I had no comprehension of before last night because I have never been exposed to music lessons. What is funny is that I asked my 7 year old daughter a few questions to see if she understood what I had just been taught. She looked at me like I was stupid...she assumed everyone knew this ****.
Yes the fingers towards the head rest at least one anyways gently on string giving that smooth correct sound. You slide up to over fret metal and just play scale as you know them. Fun really! Playing chords and slide at same time is tough. Its been awhile though i could be remembering wrong however i doubt it
On a side of note C sharp to f # change easier at 9th fret e string the fourth is righg there dorian mode scale with your slide
Strum with slide? Like in open tuning? I think the only time i have strummed with slide is really wild blues jam