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-   -   Tips for a beginning guitarist... (https://forum.dvdtalk.com/music-talk/523959-tips-beginning-guitarist.html)

DaveWadding 01-31-08 12:55 AM

Tips for a beginning guitarist...
 
We seem to have an awful lot of musicians here and I just got set up and going today so I figure its worth asking:


What do you think I should know as a beginner that I might not? could be anything really...I have a sheet with 16 chords on it that I've been practicing all night (can nail all of em, woohoo) (in case you're curious they're A, Am, A7, Bm, B7, C, C7, D, Dm, D7, E, Em, E7, and F)

Easy songs to attempt (besides Smoke on the Water...) Anything in general.


Thanks for your help!

Rypro 525 01-31-08 01:08 AM

Brain Stew by green day is really easy (its mainly bar chords)

porieux 01-31-08 03:50 AM

You should add the open G major chord to that list, it's really easy :)

You should be able to play quite a few songs with those chords.

If you can play B minor that should lead to playing barre chords.

DaveWadding 01-31-08 12:52 PM

DOH! G and G7 are already on my list.

DVD Josh 01-31-08 12:57 PM

Learn the chord name and shapes, that's a good start. Learn how to tune your instrument properly and restring it. Spend a few weeks getting your hand comfortable on the neck and learn to shift chords.

But nothing will teach you better or quicker than playing along to songs. Go to ultimate-guitar.com and get some tabs of your favorite songs and pop in the discs and play along. Pay attention to the names of the notes and chords so you can build a vocabulary. Then start playing along WITHOUT the tab.

What equipment did you get Dave?

wishbone 01-31-08 01:09 PM

You will know you are getting good when you start recognizing these chords in songs.

Congrats on nailing the F chord; I still have problems with it...

DaveWadding 01-31-08 01:16 PM


Originally Posted by DVD Josh
Learn the chord name and shapes, that's a good start. Learn how to tune your instrument properly and restring it. Spend a few weeks getting your hand comfortable on the neck and learn to shift chords.

But nothing will teach you better or quicker than playing along to songs. Go to ultimate-guitar.com and get some tabs of your favorite songs and pop in the discs and play along. Pay attention to the names of the notes and chords so you can build a vocabulary. Then start playing along WITHOUT the tab.

What equipment did you get Dave?


Epi LP Standard (Trans Blue)
box of stuff that came with it (mostly useless minus the 15W amp)
other little things (strap, locks case blah blah blah)

bunkaroo 01-31-08 01:21 PM


Originally Posted by DVD Josh
Learn the chord name and shapes, that's a good start. Learn how to tune your instrument properly and restring it. Spend a few weeks getting your hand comfortable on the neck and learn to shift chords.

But nothing will teach you better or quicker than playing along to songs. Go to ultimate-guitar.com and get some tabs of your favorite songs and pop in the discs and play along. Pay attention to the names of the notes and chords so you can build a vocabulary. Then start playing along WITHOUT the tab.

What equipment did you get Dave?

Heartily agree here. Train your ear by learning how what you see on your fretboard sounds.

I spent my first year or so on my instrument (bass) learning and memorizing every note from Metallica's first four records. I did not stop until I could play them note for note all the way through without stopping between songs. If I messed up in a song, I started over from the beginning. It was a little intense, but it helped me get up to speed very quickly, and soon I was playing in bands with guys that had been playing 2-3 times as long as I had been playing. Learning keys, scales, and how the interchange is also very important for me. Recognizing intervals by ear is also an essential skill IMO.

To me the most important skill for any musician is learning how to produce on your instrument what you hear in your head, especially if you mean to write or play original material.

Good luck!

islandclaws 01-31-08 01:25 PM

Metallica is a great starting point. Lots of classic riffs that are easy to learn. Same with Slayer.

My big tip: learn how to alternate pick. It sounds like a no-brainer, but so many kids don't properly learn to alt pick that they can never achieve any level of speed while playing.

bunkaroo 01-31-08 02:17 PM


Originally Posted by KillerCannabis
My big tip: learn how to alternate pick. It sounds like a no-brainer, but so many kids don't properly learn to alt pick that they can never achieve any level of speed while playing.

+1

Practice scales while alternate picking to a metronome.

TheMadMonk 01-31-08 02:40 PM

Take your time. The bad habits you learn now will be with you for a lifetime.

[email protected] 01-31-08 03:05 PM


Originally Posted by DaveWadding
Easy songs to attempt (besides Smoke on the Water...) Anything in general.
Thanks for your help!

Not sure what you usually listen to. Tom Petty's "Mary Jane's Last Dance" is pretty simple, and moves slow enough that you can catch on to chord changes.

The opening and verses are Am-G-D-Am, and chorus is Em-A.

There are lots of Chuck Berry-like riffs that are easy to play along with. A song like the Georgia Satellites' "Keep Your Hands To Yourself" is simply A-D-E over and over. (What we'd call the basic 1-4-5 chord change...)

cungar 01-31-08 04:10 PM

So you want to be a rock 'n' roll star?
Then listen now to what I say
Just get an electric guitar
Then take some time
and learn how to play
And with your hair swung right
And your pants too tight
It's gonna be all right

zombiezilla 01-31-08 08:25 PM


Originally Posted by KillerCannabis
Metallica is a great starting point. Lots of classic riffs that are easy to learn. Same with Slayer.

As far as Metallica, I'll agree that the later stuff (90's and beyond) is fun and easy to play, but the early stuff? Battery? Damage, Inc.? Nuh-unh. And Slayer?!? Some of their stuff is quite easy (again, the slower material). But I defy anyone to know every track on Reign In Blood. It's possible, but not bloody likely unless you are in Slayer.

Anyway, my best advice would be to buy a decent guitar asap, as long as you plan on continuing. Nothing too outrageous, maybe an Epiphone (which have great quality for the $).

EDIT: By the way, I've played for over 30 years. I'm much more Angus Young than Yngwie Malmsteen, though I listen to everything guitar-oriented. Which is another good piece of advice, by the way; listen to everything, even jazz and classical and country; though it wouldn't hurt my feelings if no one ever listened to rap "music" again. Remember: R.A.P. = Retards Attempting Poetry.

DaveWadding 01-31-08 09:34 PM


Originally Posted by zombiezilla
As far as Metallica, I'll agree that the later stuff (90's and beyond) is fun and easy to play, but the early stuff? Battery? Damage, Inc.? Nuh-unh. And Slayer?!? Some of their stuff is quite easy (again, the slower material). But I defy anyone to know every track on Reign In Blood. It's possible, but not bloody likely unless you are in Slayer.

Anyway, my best advice would be to buy a decent guitar asap, as long as you plan on continuing. Nothing too outrageous, maybe an Epiphone (which have great quality for the $).

EDIT: By the way, I've played for over 30 years. I'm much more Angus Young than Yngwie Malmsteen, though I listen to everything guitar-oriented. Which is another good piece of advice, by the way; listen to everything, even jazz and classical and country; though it wouldn't hurt my feelings if no one ever listened to rap "music" again. Remember: R.A.P. = Retards Attempting Poetry.

That's what I got was an Epi LP...and I do listen to pretty much anything with a guitar.

Chrisedge 02-01-08 02:27 PM

ultimate-guitar.com has lots of great info on it.

Learn some Johnny Cash too...


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