Tuesday 21 December 2010

Easy Guitar Lesson - Gaining The Basic Capabilities

By Frank Morris


The guitar has grown in popularity over the years, especially with the advent of music games. Games such as guitar hero and rock band have caused a rising the number of individuals looking to play the real guitar. Whether it's because they want a taste of the real thing or just wish for an alternative to dumbed-down plastic instruments, the guitar is a great place to start. It's incredibly versatile, it provides great potential and is easy to learn. Furthermore, it has enormous capabilities for mastering, meaning that the peak is very difficult to reach and there is always more to learn and combine. Here's an easy guitar lesson for now, focusing on the universal properties of scales and a couple of guitar-specific techniques.

Musical Scales

Scales are one example of a universal piece of music theory that applies to most instruments. Scales are basically musical frameworks that provide the musician with a set list of all the notes within the key. The key is the pitch in which the music is played, either for the whole song or just for a part of it. With a scale, it can provide notes that fit perfectly within the key and style and allow the musician to improvise on the fly.

This kind of natural movement takes time, however. Not just to learn and memorize the notes, but also to teach our muscles the foreign movements. Entitled muscle memory, it's a process of repetition that teaches your muscles foreign movements until they become natural. Once learnt, it's possible to jump from note to note without thinking and improvise as the music changes.

Slides And Bends

These are two further techniques, though these are mostly unique to the guitar and some other select stringed instruments. Due to the way the strings are designed, they allow a lot of manipulation to influence the kind of sound the guitar produces. One such technique is being able to bend the strings. This increases the pitch of the note without actually changing the fret. When combined with amplifier gain, you can create a squealing effect.

An additional technique is sliding. Using this, you can slide to and from different notes. You can vary this technique somewhat as it very flexible. You can create the illusion that you're sliding from nowhere to a note you wish to play or vice versa, where you slide to nowhere from the note you started on. Some guitarists use this constantly whereas others use it sparingly, ensuring that it makes for a create finale.




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