Thursday, April 30, 2009

Guitar Lesson Week 6

Guitar Lesson- Music


Music
This section of each lesson is entirely devoted to playing. Very little will be provided as to the "why's and wherefore's" of what you will be doing. This will be covered in future theory lessons.

At this point, I just want you to learn the material and try to sound "musical" when playing it.



Anatomy of a chord diagram: (CLICK)




Below are 8 chords for you to learn. These 8 chords are often referred to as "the cowboy chords". This is because they are easy to play while riding a horse (hey...just foolin'). These chords are called "cowboy" chords because a billion songs have been written using these few simple chords. Many of these tunes are they type of song that you see somebody strumming while sitting around a camp fire in those old "cowboy" movies. But don't let that fool you. These are the "bread and butter chords" that EVERYBODY uses. If you don't know these chords, you can't call yourself a guitar player.

The chords:
(CLICK)






(CLICK)








(CLICK)










(CLICK)










(CLICK)








(CLICK)







(CLICK)








(CLICK)








Here are MIDI examples of what each chord sounds like:




1.EMAJ-http://www.zentao.com/guitar/lesson1/emaj.mid
2.DMAJ-http://www.zentao.com/guitar/lesson1/dmaj.mid
3.AMAJ-http://www.zentao.com/guitar/lesson1/amaj.mid
4.GMAJ-http://www.zentao.com/guitar/lesson1/gmaj.mid
5.CMAJ-http://www.zentao.com/guitar/lesson1/cmaj.mid
6.Emin-http://www.zentao.com/guitar/lesson1/emin.mid
7.Amin-http://www.zentao.com/guitar/lesson1/amin.mid
8.Dmin-http://www.zentao.com/guitar/lesson1/dmin.mid


The hardest part of playing chords is getting all of the notes in the chord to ring. The culprit is most often the finger that is trying to play a note on an adjacent string. That other finger will sometimes touch the string that won't ring and be the cause of your problem. The trick is to use the tips of the fingers and to make sure that each finger is touching only the string that it is holding a note on.

Also, check to see that you are not playing any of the strings that do not have a circle.

Practice each chord in the same manner as demonstrated in the MIDI files. Pick each string individually and then, strum the entire chord.

Once you can play each chord correctly, then it's time to practice changing from one chord to another. The idea here is to change to another chord without stopping. Pick any two of the chords and practice changing from one to the other and then, back to the first. Try to play the chords in time with the metronome MIDI. Strum once per click, four strums per chord. For now, just use down strums and concentrate on switching to the next chord and staying in time with the metronome.

Once you can go from any chord to any other chord and stay in time, try stringing three or more chords together into CHORD PROGRESSIONS.

Here are just a few possibilities:





DMaj - CMaj - GMaj - DMaj

GMaj - CMaj - DMaj - GMaj

EMaj - DMaj - AMaj - CMaj

AMaj - EMaj - GMaj - DMaj

Amin - Dmin - Emin - Amin

Amin - Dmin - GMaj - CMaj

Emin - Amin - DMaj - Emin





I'm sure you have noticed the Maj and min attached to each of the chord names. We will learn what this means in a later lesson. For now, all you need to keep in mind is that Maj chords sound bright and cheerful, while min chords sound dark and moody.



These chord progressions may not sound like your rockin' out, but there's a lot you can do with a few basic chords. If you add some rhythmic variation and a lead lick or two, you'el be amazed.

You'el probably have the best luck if you practice these chords with a clean sound on your amp with a bit of reverb. Once you get the chords down you can experiment with some distortion, but these chords don't always sound so good with a lot of distortion until you learn a few right and left hand techniques.

When it comes to playing OPEN POSITION chords, I will usually use the baseball bat hand position. This is so I can use my thumb over the top of the neck to keep the E and A-strings from ringing on the chords that don't require those strings.

Best of luck!


*http://www.zentao.com/guitar/guitar-lessons.html* This lesson was done by zentao

Guitar Lesson Week 5

Guitar Lesson - Right Hand Technique For now, we will work each hand separately. When you're working on one hand, don't worry about how the other is doing it's job. Just concentrate on getting the hand you are working to do what it is supposed to. If you start right at the beginning and make yourself practice correct technique, you will NOT run into any of the road blocks that a lot of guitarists encounter after they have played for a few years. Most tend to learn the hard way. They opt for sloppy technique instead of spending the time and effort to get it right from start. I've seen this time and time again. A player reaches a certain level only to have to start back at the beginning and re-learn such things as hand position or picking. This is because improper technique will limit your ability to play like a "mother". In the beginning a player is usually more interested in learning to whip out a few cool songs, but when they try to step beyond that and really play, they find that they can't get the "high performance" that they need out of their hands. Technique is based on efficiency and economy. Correct positioning and use of the hands is essential in order to maximize your ability to get at the notes that you need to play. I can't stress this enough. Take the time to get it right. In the long run you'el save yourself a lot of back-tracking. Right Hand: As far as how to hold the pick is concerned, There's really no "one way" to do it. Unlike the left hand, most people just do what comes natural. I hold my pick like this I pick from the wrist with my palm lightly resting on the strings. The angle of my arm insures that I'm not resting my palm on the string that I'm playing. The most important thing about the picking hand is that it is as relaxed as possible without fear of dropping the pick ( I still drop mine once in a while). There are a lot of subtleties to the techniques that the right hand is required to perform. We will address these as they become important. For now, just hold the pick in whatever way feels comfortable, relax and concentrate on hitting the right string at the right time. Here's an exercise for your picking hand. It's good to practice this after your left hand gets worn out from doing the other exercises. You're not going to use your left hand at all, just the right hand picking the open strings. Below you will find a MIDI file that is just a steady click. What you are going to practice is note groupings in time with the click. This is the foundation of RHYTHM and TIMING. The exercise goes like this: Pick an open string (perhaps the B-string, but any string will do). Play the MIDI file. Using only down strokes of the pick try to hit the string at the exact same time as the click. Try this with only up strokes, as well. Practice this until you can stay in near perfect sync with the click. Once you get that down, then you're going to play two notes for every click (think 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 & etc...). These two notes must be evenly spaced. Later on, we'el work on uneven spacing of notes. Play these notes using ALTERNATE PICKING. That means that if you start with a down stroke on the first note, the second gets an up stroke then, down, up, down, up etc... Most people find starting with a down stroke to be most natural, but you need to be able to start with an up stroke as well. Practice both. When you get two notes per click down, then try four (think 1 e & a 2 e & a etc...). Again, you want to practice this starting with a down stroke AND starting with an up stroke. When you get to the point where you can easily play one, two or four notes per click, then practice going from one group to another without stopping:

EXAMPLE
(http://www.zentao.com/guitar/lesson1/notegroups1.mid)

Here's the practice file
(http://www.zentao.com/guitar/lesson1/metronome.mid)



*http://www.zentao.com/guitar/guitar-lessons.html* This lesson was done by zentao

Guitar Lesson Week 4

Guitar Lesson- Left Hand Technique


For now, we will work each hand separately. When you're working on one hand, don't worry about how the other is doing it's job. Just concentrate on getting the hand you are working to do what it is supposed to.

If you start right at the beginning and make yourself practice correct technique, you will NOT run into any of the road blocks that a lot of guitarists encounter after they have played for a few years. Most tend to learn the hard way. They opt for sloppy technique instead of spending the time and effort to get it right from start. I've seen this time and time again. A player reaches a certain level only to have to start back at the beginning and re-learn such things as hand position or picking. This is because improper technique will limit your ability to play like a "mother". In the beginning a player is usually more interested in learning to whip out a few cool songs, but when they try to step beyond that and really play, they find that they can't get the "high performance" that they need out of their hands.

Technique is based on efficiency and economy. Correct positioning and use of the hands is essential in order to maximize your ability to get at the notes that you need to play.

I can't stress this enough. Take the time to get it right. In the long run you'el save yourself a lot of back-tracking.



Left Hand:
There are two basic left hand positions:




Classical



Baseball Bat



The most versatile left-hand position is the classical position. This is the position we will concentrate on. The baseball bat position is very useful but also very limiting. It will come into play later when we deal directly with string bending, vibrato and certain chords. But, for now, the classical position will allow you to develop the ability to use all of your fingers with equal control and agility.

Try this test:

Place your thumb in the center of the back of the neck, as per the illustration for classical position. Now, spread your remaining fingers out as wide as you can (With a little practice and relaxation, you will eventually be able to cover 6 frets easily, without moving your hand!). While keeping your fingers spread, slowly move your thumb up and over the top of the neck until you have it hanging over the fingerboard, as in the baseball bat position. Notice what happens to the rest of your fingers. There's just no way to keep them spread out with the thumb hanging over the fingerboard. This fact limits your access to three or four frets at a time with little or no mobility if you flop your thumb over the top of the neck.

Another way of thinking about position draws from driving a car. If you've ever taken a driver training course, the first thing they make you do is to put your hands on the wheel at 10 o'clock and 2 o'clock (10-2 position). This is the best hand position for being able to control the vehicle.

Now, nobody in their right mind would go cruising for chicks using that hand position. You'd look like a dork. Instead, you slump down in the seat, crank the stereo and hang your elbow out the open window. Now, you look cool and the babes just can't resist. Right? (My apologies if you take me too seriously here) But, what happens if you're so busy watching for chicks that you find yourself about to get in a wreck? As a reaction, your hands will automatically go to 10-2.

Or, have you ever seen a stock car racer whipping around the track at full speed without having both hands on the wheel?

When it comes to playing guitar, especially the rock star variety, nobody wants to look like a dork. So, a lot of players have the guitar hanging down at their knees and grab the neck in the manly, baseball bat fashion. But, with the possible exception of Steve Vai, most of the newer "high performance" players (as opposed to the older "cruisin' for chicks" variety) tend to wear their guitars no lower than waist level, and when they want to tear up the fretboard, sure enough, they pull their thumb back to the center of the neck and stretch their fingers out.


Example




In order to make full use of the classical position, a few points must be observed.

Notice in the illustration (refer to "classical" picture above) that the knuckle where the index finger joins the hand is NOT touching the bottom of the neck. Many people, when first trying this hand position, WILL anchor this knuckle. Until you develop the musculature of the wrist and hand, it will feel as though you lack any strength in the classical position. Realize that it takes very little actual finger pressure to push the strings to the fret. Most of the tension that a beginner applies with the left hand is directed onto the fingerboard itself and has very little to do with actually fretting the note. To this end, bracing the hand against the neck at the first knuckle of the index finger gives one a feeling of having better leverage with which to "strangle" the guitar. This is unnecessary as, the muscles of the hand will develop in a very short amount of time (usually within the first two weeks).

The thumb should be just a little higher than dead center on the back of the neck and directly in line with the middle finger. (If you take your left hand and touch the tip of your middle finger to the tip of your thumb like those Indian Yoga people do when they meditate, you'el get the idea. Only, don't bend the knuckle of the thumb. Keep it hyperextended like when you push in a tack with your thumb.) Don't allow your thumb to point off to the side like you're hitchhiking as this will destroy the hands natural ability to apply pressure to the strings.

Sitting or standing can make a difference in your ability to assume this hand position as well. When standing, you may need to adjust the length of your strap. If your guitar is too low, it forces you to have to bend your wrist way too much. I tend to wear mine at stomach level, but then, nobody ever tells me how cool I look. I do receive regular compliments on my playing, however.

If you are sitting down, the most common thing to do is to rest your guitar on your right leg. When I first started playing, I found that, if I practiced this way, when I got together with my band, the guitar would be in a different position (I was now standing) and that I couldn't play all those things I was practicing. I started practicing with my guitar sitting on my left leg and propped my left foot up on a book like those classical guitar players do. It made a dramatic difference. Not only was my guitar in the same relative position as when I played standing up, I found that I was able to play things that seemed impossible before.

Whew! There's a lot to consider, but details make a difference.

What follows is an exercise for developing correct hand position and learning to use of all four fingers.

Recall the exercise that I had you do in the section on theory. I had you play all the notes, in order, up and down a single string. We're going to do the same thing again only this time, we're going to go across the strings instead of up and down one string:

(CLICK ON PICRURE TO VIEW)






(CLICK ON PICTURE TO VIEW)




For the purposes of this exercise, the index finger will play any note on the 1st fret, the middle finger will play any note on the 2nd fret, the ring finger will play any note on the 3rd fret and the pinkie will handle notes on the 4th fret.

When playing ascending notes on a string, It's very important to keep any previous fingers that have played on that string holding their notes down.

For example:

If I play the F note at the 1st fret on the E-string with my index finger, I don't lift that finger off the string to play the F# with my middle finger. My index finger is still holding down the F note at the 1st fret. If I then play the G note at the 3rd fret with my ring finger, the index AND the ring will still be holding their notes down. The same goes if I then play the next note with the pinky. Now, all four fingers are holding down notes on the same string. This will most likely seem awkward until you gain sufficient coordination of the fingers. Keep practicing. It will come.

Once you have completed all the fingers that are going to play on a given string, then and only then, do you RELEASE the fingers to play on another string. Notice the word RELEASE instead of lift. To RELEASE the fingers is to simply relax the muscles that are being used to hold the notes. If instead, you lift the fingers, you are applying an opposite set of muscles to do a separate and distinct action. This may sound like "nit-picking" but it is very important. Lifting the fingers instead of RELEASING the fingers is one of the greatest causes of undue tension in the left hand. What happens is that the lifting muscles kick in at the same time that the pressing muscles are trying to do their job. This causes isometric tension in the hand that will slow you down, tire the hand, lead to sore knuckles (personal experience) and generally inhibit you from whizzing around on the fingerboard.

A tell-tale sign of this isometric tension is if you find your pinkie sticking way out there like those people who drink their tea in those tiny little cups, or if you use your pinkie to fret a note and your index finger goes sticking out.

Relax, relax, relax! That's the key.

If, on the other hand, you are descending on a given string, you don't have to worry about keeping your fingers down (that would be pretty hard to do any way), but you still must endeavor to keep the hand relaxed. Use only the amount of tension you need to play the notes cleanly (no buzzing or notes that won't stay ringing as long as you desire).


*http://www.zentao.com/guitar/guitar-lessons.html* This lesson was done by zentao