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Archive for August, 2009

Learn to Play Guitar – Online or Offline?

Posted on August 4th, 2009 by guitarbiz in Music - Play Guitar
Ricky Sharples posted:

So you have finally decided to learn to play guitar. Have you decided to learn online or are you going for face to face lessons? Your average guitar teacher will wind up costing you about eighty to one hundred dollars every month. That is just for one lesson per week. On the other hand a nifty set of videos cannot give you personal advice based on the observation of your playing by a seasoned professional guitar player.

A live guitar teacher might offer you the chance to take a free lesson to help you decide whether to commit yourself to a course of lessons. You could sit down with your teacher during your free lesson and tell him how you want to progress with the guitar. He can tell you if your goals are realistic or if you need to rethink your dreams of the future. This will let you get an idea of how committed your teacher is to turning students into guitar players. A good guitar teacher will be listen to your plans for your guitar playing and his teaching methods and advice will be tailored to your specific needs. He can watch you play and see where you are going wrong and what you need to do to fix it.

If you lead a busy life it might not be practical for you to get to a guitar teacher once a week and devote half an hour, an hour or more per day to practicing the guitar as well as performing your professional and family duties. If you are one of these busy people the prospect of saving money on guitar tuition fees and transport fares or fuel costs you might want to think seriously about learning guitar online. If you decide to go for an online course then how do you know which one to choose?

The internet has archives of guitar tabs, sites containing free lessons, thousands of free videos and countless opportunities for us to watch videos of the best guitarists in the world, past or present, dead or alive. There are many forums with guys who have been playing the guitar for many years waiting for a chance to pass on their expertise and love of guitar playing to beginners. If you save a few of these guitar forums to your bookmarks in your browser you can visit a few every day and copy and paste any advice or tabs that you find useful.

There are guitar lesson websites that have the lessons set out in the correct sequence for a beginner guitar player’s progress. The formulators of these guitar courses are experienced guitar players who have extensive experience teaching the guitar and playing in bands. These online lessons are great for people who need a basic understanding of the guitar, how to hold it and play chords for easy songs. Free online guitar lessons get these people playing the guitar fast.

Here is a great way to make use of free guitar tools and tabs you find on the internet. You could organize your basic tools into groups like tabs, chord charts, songs, scales, articles and tools such as online guitar tuners. You create some folders on your computer for each of these groups so that you can get to your learning material easily during your guitar practice time.

Online guitar lessons also go a long way towards saving your dignity as well as your money. You can work quietly in your own room at any difficulties or misunderstanding about guitar playing without exposing your shortcomings to another person. You can do this at your own pace, seeking more advice from forums to help you with your problems. If you have only a little time to spend on guitar practice online lessons will accommodate you, and if you find that you have some extra time you will always find something new and interesting to learn.

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If You Lack The Time For Formal Lessons, You Can Learn To Play Guitar Online

Posted on August 4th, 2009 by guitarbiz in Music - Play Guitar
Evert DuToit posted:

In the same way as you can take educational classes online, you can now learn to play the guitar online. And as with educational classes, it takes dedication and self-discipline to be successful. Lots of people have hopes and dreams to learn things outside of work, but with the modern demands from work and family, it is often very difficult to make time for extracurricular lessons. Now, thanks to the wonder of technology and the Internet, it is possible to get multimedia lessons to learn to play guitar online.

The are several companies that offer you the opportunity to learn to play guitar online, by offering the lessons through the Internet. You can download the songs you have to learn for the lessons, practice playing them, and then record yourself playing the songs and send that back to the instructor, who will review it and give you honest feedback and criticism. Anybody can learn to play the guitar, and now if you have the discipline, you can learn to play the guitar online.

Since there is no instructor to look over your shoulder and make you play the piece over and over until you get it, your success completely depends on yourself to give each lesson the attention and time it deserves and requires. It will only be your desire to learn to play guitar that can make you practice and complete the lessons.

A major difference between personal lessons and online lessons, is the amount of personal attention you will receive from the instructor. While a live instructor can challenge you to play more difficult pieces by playing for you and getting you to try it too, a virtual instructor cannot convey the same challenge and urgency. Once again, it is important to realize before you start this venture that you must have a burning desire to learn to play guitar online, and you must dedicate the time necessary to each lesson.

Online classes are usually self-paced, but there is usually also a time limit in which you have to complete the course. This means that if you fail to complete the class in the time available, you would have wasted the money you paid for tuition.

All in all, if you do not have the time to take formal lessons, want to learn at your own pace and avoid any possible embarrassment from struggling in front of other students, learning to play guitar online is a good alternative.

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Learn To Play Guitar As Though You Are Learning A New Sport

Posted on August 4th, 2009 by guitarbiz in Music - Play Guitar
Iprwire Staff Writer posted:

Playing a musical instrument is a long held dream that many people nurse in their imaginations. They will attend concerts and live shows and dream of the day they can get on stage to perform themselves. These same people often do not believe that they have the ability to take on the challenge of music because they have the false impression that it is too difficult.

Learning a new instrument is no different than learning a new sport. With enough practice and the right instruction, anyone can master the skills that are required to perform really well. In fact, learning musical instruments is even easier than sports because they require less natural ability. This means that you can learn to play guitar even if you never believed it possible before.

In addition to those who have never tried to take lessons to play an instrument, there are also people who have tried learning, but have simply not progressed as far as they would have liked. Often this can result in a feeling of failure, or a desire to quit. But before you give into these negative thoughts, there may be a solution so that you can learn to play guitar like the pro that you dreamed of becoming.

With the right education program, anyone can master a skill so long as they are willing to put in the time and effort. The beauty is that with the right program, the time and effort will not even seem like a forced effort.

The difference between the amateur and the professional musician is not as much in their skill or ability, but rather the difference is in their hands. Every instrument requires that the musician have flexible, strong, and agile hands. This is why music and sports are actually very closely related. If you are looking to learn to play guitar or to improve your skills, then you need to work your hands.

We use our hands each and every day, but rarely do we pay much attention to them or how strong they are. People join gyms to work out and build muscles in their arms, legs, and stomach, but few trainers think to address the hands. When you are a musician, your hands are your greatest asset. If you want to learn to play guitar, then you need to start building up the strength of your hands.

There is a great music program available at http://www.guitarcoaching.com. Not only does Express Guitar cover all of the fundamental skills that a guitarist needs to master, it also comes with six exciting bonus books that take a student’s playing to the next level. In fact, one of these bonuses is a book designated entirely to finger exercises. The system was designed by a professional guitarist with over twenty years of teaching experience, meaning that it is tailored to the special needs of every student.

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Learning To Play Guitar By The Ear

Posted on August 3rd, 2009 by guitarbiz in Music - Play Guitar
Andreas Lillebo posted:

Learning how to play a guitar can be accomplished through different methods depending on your convenience and aptitude – taking private lessons from an expert teacher, using teach yourself books or videos that demonstrate the instructions to be followed or through websites that offer guitar lessons.

Irrespective of how you learn, the ultimate aim of learning to play the guitar is to play a song that you are fond of or familiar with. The song may be your favorite song from your childhood heard over the radio or CD or TV or in a concert and might have been played by your favorite band.

Whatever be the nature of the song, the usual way of learning to play it is to buy the sheet music and read from it and practice it. But a superior method of learning a song is to learn it by the ear i.e. to learn by keenly listening to the song.

This technique can be applied to practically any type of song and all you need is a CD player to play it. The instrument used to replay the song does not really matter. It is a very useful skill that you need to develop if you are interested in making a career in music. The following paragraph gives a few tips for learning to play the guitar by the ear.

Tips for learning to play guitar by the ear

Training the ears to listen to the music carefully is the first step in learning to play guitar by the ear. Having an ear for music need not be an inborn quality alone but can be developed through practice. You can prepare your ears to pickup different features of the music. You have to learn to identify different chords in the music and the changes in them even as a song is played. You should be able to distinguish between the major and the minor chords.

A deep interest in the type of music that is being played helps in quickly learning its finer points. Tuning the guitar so that it matches with the song you want to play is the next step. This step requires a little practice and patience and individual string may have to be tuned to match each individual note of the song.

With these basic tips, you can learn to play the guitar by the ear through regular practice. It is not as hard as it sounds as.

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Learning to Play Guitar – Frets and Promises

Posted on August 3rd, 2009 by guitarbiz in Music - Play Guitar
Ricky Sharples posted:

Learning to play guitar could possibly be the wisest thing you ever decided to do. But it will not be easy. Whether you aim to be a professional guitarist or a campfire guitar strummer, there will be pitfalls to cross. This article will touch upon a few of the more common bumps on the guitar playing road with the hope that you will benefit from being warned about what lies ahead.

The reason Learning to play guitar can be one of life’s disappointments is that many people do not know how to start. Spending a week or so stumbling through the first chords to “Blackbird” by the Beatles and laboriously picking out the “Iron Man” riff, then putting the guitar away in a cupboard is one of your classic urban tragedies.

If you are interested in just playing the guitar informally at parties or round the campfire, the best course of action is first, to learn what tabs are and how to read them, and second go online and pick tabs for songs that you know and like, and try to play them.

Usually I would not recommend lessons from your local guitar teacher because they are far more expensive than even the best courses on the internet, but if you are not going too deeply into guitar playing, a few lessons will eliminate some of the uncertainty from the first steps in Learning to play guitar.

One of the big issues for almost everybody who has started Learning to play guitar is which song to learn first. Your own preferences in music will help, of course but the best songs to start on are the ones that will impress other people at parties. “Smells Like Teen Spirit”, or “Smoke On The Water”. Something instantly recognizable. The thing with metal is the heavy use of power chords which only need three fingers to play. Twelve bar blues is good – you can learn different lyrics using the same chords.

Another simple solution is to think of albums that you like to play. Are there tracks that have stand-out guitar parts? Write down the names and hunt for the tabs on the internet. Failing that, just look for easy guitar songs. “Wish You Were Here” by Pink Floyd or “Horse With No Name” by America are good ones to start with. Go to about.com for a list of easy songs.

Let us move onto a problem that strikes the learner guitarist who manages to set a practice routine and actually learns two or three chords. Learning to make the changes between chords is one of the loneliest ways in the world to spend your time. Every day you seem to make a little progress, and the next day you always seem to be back to square one. Without an experienced guitar player to guide you, this is the time you could easily lose all hope of learning to play guitar. This is the beginning of the uphill climb that confronts all people who learn a new skill. Swimming, driving, guitar playing, they all need regular practice. If you do not have a friend who can help you with your guitar playing, seek advice from guitar forums or places like Yahoo Answers.

Finally, let us talk about the physical discomfort that can befall new guitar players. One of the first things you should ask an experienced guitarist about is how to hold the guitar. If you do not get it right, you are only going to make Learning to play guitar painful. Then there is the matter of making your fingertips hard. For a week or two, every time you start playing the guitar your left hand fingertips will hurt. Usually just for the first few minutes. This is a process all guitar players go through. Do not try dipping your fingers in stuff that is supposed to make the pain go away, just let it go away by itself.

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