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Guitar Lessons Beginners Will Love


by Derrick Vanago

Are you one of the many beginners that is search of guitar lessons online today? Are you looking for the guitar lessons beginners, like yourself, can learn quickly? There are some goods choices out there as long as you know what to look for.

Online guitar lessons are a hot topic these days. The problem here is that a lot of programs out there tend to over complicate the learning process causing many would be guitar heroes to lose interest quickly. A program that focuses on making the learning process fun and interesting is key.

A lot of individuals are coming online to learn to play instruments of all kinds because of the quality of instruction and flexibility. Online guitar lessons is quickly becoming a very popular method of learning. Learning to play guitar in front of your computer is just flat out nice.

What is the main point to consider when choosing your online guitar lesson program? It should be fun and enjoyable so you will like learning.

If the program you choose is fun and enjoyable then you will want to practice therefore learning more, faster. The program you choose should intentionally start your learning process with having fun while teaching the very basics. This is were a firm foundation of the basics can be fostered.

Once you have a good foundation in the basics you can then move on to the more technical aspects of the guitar. If you are having fun while learning the better you will feel and if you are feeling good then the more you will want to practice and move ahead. Not long after this you will be playing in your own band.

Really, how many of us like doing something that makes us feel uncomfortable or lost? A good guitar program should instill a sense of enjoyment, confidence and progress in every beginner.

There are so many programs out there with so much knowledge that it can cause you to have an “information overload” and lose interest quickly. Try to research and choose a program that can “teach” you, in a fun and easy style, the knowledge you need to become an accomplished guitarist.

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Guitar Lessons DVD: Learn Without Frustration


by Chris Ghiaciuc

Make sure you are practicing efficiently. Do you really know how to practice the guitar? Are you focused on setting daily and weekly objectives and then practicing in such a way that you will be working towards those goals?

I have written an article on this exact topic titled: Choosing a Teacher. I can’t stress enough how important it is to find the teacher that is right for you! Your teacher (or Lessons DVD) should always be Goal Orientated. If its not look for another teacher or school to study with! You don’t need a teacher to simply give you information or things to practice – you can get those things anywhere, what you need is a teacher who knows what your goals are, Cares about helping you reach your goals, and knows how to help you reach your goals.

These are questions you should ask yourself. The two biggest practicing mistakes I have seen in students (besides not practicing enough) are: 1. Practicing is not goal orientated. 2. Not understanding the difference between playing one’s guitar and practicing one’s guitar. If you are having any difficulties with practicing, talk to your teacher about it. He/she should be able to help you.

You should be able to play all the techniques of the guitar. Van Halen did tapping but not with all his fingers as others have done. He didn’t play finger style much either, but we still regard him as an important guitarist, the same thing can be said for Vai and many others. Classical guitar master John William’s probably doesn’t play well with a guitar pick (I am assuming this to be true, I have no proof of it), but he is considered one of the greatest classical guitarists alive today.

They started to feel like that song by Al Yankovich, “Everything You Know Is Wrong”. They realize that even though they may have been playing for 25 years, there are certain really fundamental things they have never known, and if they did know them from the beginning, everything would have gone differently for them in their growth as guitarists.

Absolutely spend a good amount of time in practicing reversing that habit. Practice in a new way, where you make sure you do what you weren’t doing before. Analyze the essence of that bad habit, extract it from it’s musical context, and perhaps make up “auxillary exercises” based on the essence of it. Use all the practice techniques that I teach to effectively begin this process of reversal.

In fact, it makes learning things like bar chords an orderly, if still somewhat demanding process. And the result is a very comfortable feeling while doing them, and the proper basis for more advanced techniques, such as keeping a bar down while the other fingers do all sorts of things that demand great control.

For instance, the process may go like this: I notice I have trouble with a fast scale passage in a piece I am playing. I notice a particular note starts disappearing when I reach a certain speed. The note is being missed. I notice the finger responsible for playing that note is the third finger. It is not getting to the note because it is going up in the air in reaction to the second finger being used right before it in that particular scale passage. In other words, it is tensing in reaction to the movement of it’s neighboring finger, and I have not been paying attention to it. I realize this is a bad habit that pervades my playing, a third finger that tenses up in reaction to the use of the second finger.

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The History of the Guitar


by A. Nutt

The guitar is perhaps one of the most recognized musical instrument apart from the piano. What many people dont realize is that this symbol of rock and roll has been around for over 4,000 years, in some form or another.

Origins The first real guitar-like item to be discovered was the tanbur. One of these was actually found in Egypt, near Queen Hatshepsuts tomb. The tanbur was built of polished cedar and had a soundboard made of leather. Though featuring just three strings, it resembles a crude guitar. The tanbur can be seen in the Archeological Museum in Cairo and is about 3,500 years old.

Shortly after the tanbur was popular in Egypt, the lute was developed in Europe. This instrument was made up of a rounded body with a very short neck. Many historians say that this developed into a completely different line of musical instruments and has nothing to do with the guitar, while others claim it does.

What we do know is that there are a number of inventions throughout history around the world that utilized the basic idea of a soundbox body, long fretted neck and varying numbers of strings, including the sitar, setar, and the chitar, a four stringed musical device that was renamed ‘chitarra’ or ‘guitarra’ when it reached Spain.

Early Guitars The original versions were rather stumpy in appearance, with just 8 frets above the soundbox and most had only four strings. These were popular during the 16th century, but by the following century, the instruments had evolved to have six strings and 12 frets along the neck.

During the 1800s, the guitar was in essentially the same form we see it today, only smaller in size. The form of the body was fairly curved. In the 1850s, a Spanish instrument builder named Antonio Torres took the initiative to create a larger body, changed the proportions, and invented the top bracing pattern that gives todays guitars more volume, in a fan shape. However, just a few years later, a German by the name of Christian Frederich Martin designed a version with an X brace. When steel strings began to appear in 1900, the older, fan shaped brace was unable to stand up to the tension provided by the steel strings. Martins design took hold, as it was far stronger and held the guitar together very well, withstanding the far louder steel strings. This version has changed very little in the intervening decades, the design was finally settled.

Altering a Classic Once the basic form was established, people began to come up with their own versions. Orville Gibson developed an arched top guitar with sound holes, Lloyd Loar altered that design further to create the jazz guitar with f-holes, cello tail and a floating bridge.

Then, in the 1920s, the electric guitar was built, without the need for a soundbox since it had electrical pickups. This form didnt become popular for another couple of decades, but then a number of variations were made on this, as well.

The guitar has a long and varied history. Still, it has fascinated people for centuries and we probably havent seen the end of the variations on the basic form.

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Acoustic Guitar DVD Lessons: Your Next Step in Learning to Play the Guitar


by Carl Baker

As rock and roll continued to take over the world in the nineteen seventies, the plectrum-wielding lead guitar player became fixed in the minds of music lovers. This style of guitar playing originated in the nineteen thirties with jazz guitar players like Eddie Lang and Django Reinhardt, and reached a wider audience through prominent guitarists like Charlie Christian, Les Paul and Hank Marvin.

A simple example is to hold a C chord in the first position and pick the C note on the fifth string, now use your plectrum to strum the other strings. Next, pick the E note on the fourth string and strum the rest of the strings again. Once you have done this a few times you will recognize the familiar bluegrass sound that you hear on CDs emerge from under your fingers.

You owe it to yourself to be the best player you can be, so make that choice right now and say to yourself, “I commit to practicing my instrument in a consistent manner that leads to me learning how to play the guitar in a snap.” A little tip for you here: If a string breaks on your guitar, I would recommend you change the whole set, other wise you will end up with spare strings lying around everywhere, and for some reason, I always find there is a difference in quality of sound when I only change one string. Maybe I’m just a perfectionist, who knows? As far as practice is concerned, there are a couple of ways to approach it.

It is never a neutral experience and that can lead to us “forgetting” to record our guitar playing. You will be really doing yourself a favor by disciplining yourself to record yourself once a day. Using backing tracks is one of the great benefits of modern technology.

Blues Guitar Lessons FIRST rule: It’s ok to be sad. Really. Gotta pay your dues if you wanna sing the blues and you know it don’t come easy, as Ringo Starr once sang. If there’s one thing universal about human nature is that we all experience the blues, we all have our own share of sadness and heartbreak.

Second, there are larger sites that offer a wide range of different types of educational tools to assist you in learning guitar online. For example, these sites might offer to you video presentations that can assist you when it comes to learning guitar, including such techniques and practices as finger picking.

In the brick and mortar world, you might want to turn to one on one lessons if you really are intent at improving your ability to play guitar. While these types of guitar lessons can cost you more than other types of guitar lesson options, for many people one on one lessons are ideal ways to learn guitar initially and then to master the instrument to a greater degree on down the road.

The first step to learning your guitar in a snap is the most obvious. Sit down and actually practice. By actually practicing I mean not always playing what you enjoy, or are familiar with. You owe it to yourself to be the best player you can be, so make that choice right now and say to yourself, “I commit to practicing my instrument in a consistent manner that leads to me learning how to play the guitar in a snap.

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