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2007-01-09 08:02:55 · 9 answers · asked by phil.bluesky 1 in Entertainment & Music Music

9 answers

If you learn barr chords in the E, Em and A, Am shapes then you can play any chord up the fretboard. Learn the pentatonic scale. This scale fits nicely around where the associated barr chord is located.

2007-01-09 08:13:13 · answer #1 · answered by Del Piero 10 7 · 0 0

In practice:
Practice,practice and more practice. Buy a good music theory book.
and learn all the notes in the guitar diapason.
Chords:
If you understand how the guitar diapason is compouse, this is going to be easy for example: G major
----3--
----3
----4
----5
----5
----3
A major is just two frets bellow G Major!:
A Major:
---5
---5
---6
---7
---7
---5
B Major is tow frets bellow A major, and so fort.
F Major is two frets avobe G Major.
(This is the measure: C-two frets between-D-two-E-only one-F-two-G-two-A-two-B-one-C)

Theoricaly:
A good way is learning the diatonic scale; Major and Minor Scales. The Chords are a naturally consecuence of the sacles

My recomendation: buy any books and if is posible, take some guitar lessons

2007-01-09 08:35:40 · answer #2 · answered by Física 2 · 1 0

The only way to understand them is to learn them by practicing.

You need to have an understanding of chord construction before you can even think about scales.

Learn to play the music you like and look to see what kind of chords are played. You learn those. As you get better, you expand your scope - then so on and so on. The same is true of scales. For rock music, 90% of the guitar solos are pentatonic scales because they were the easiest to learn and the guitarists didn't see any reason to learn more. Tony Iommi from Black Sabbath only plays those. Mick Mars learned by ear and doesn't even know what he knows. He just plays what he feels.

You can be as technical or expressive as you like, but you don't need to know it all to do any of it. Baby steps, dude. Baby steps.

2007-01-09 08:13:50 · answer #3 · answered by DA 5 · 0 0

If you like a cheap way to learn guitar at home, downloadable guitar classes certainly are a easy and apparent decision but for years, Jamorama, https://tr.im/MZZtH is a huge front-runner in that market, providing quality media guitar instruction as you are able to acquire to your computer.
Jamorama offers a great range of classes and is obviously a good select for a start guitarist. Jamorama's video content is all in great HD quality, and their major trainer, Mark McKenzie, does a great job covering the basics within an easy-to-understand and spontaneous way.

2016-04-28 22:15:50 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No. You just have to study and practice them over and over again. Learn every song that you can. Learn every scale and chord that you can remember. Eventually, you'll get to where whenever you hear a song, you can guess what scale they are playing in. Good Luck

2007-01-09 08:08:18 · answer #5 · answered by Answer Schmancer 5 · 0 1

Tab, is a good cross reference for this, but it you still have to just keep at it eventually it gets easier

2007-01-09 08:31:42 · answer #6 · answered by m_vampy 2 · 0 0

1

2017-02-27 20:48:31 · answer #7 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

practice, practice, practice

2007-01-09 08:14:36 · answer #8 · answered by HELEN L 4 · 0 0

tabs

2007-01-09 08:06:14 · answer #9 · answered by don't stop the music ♪ 6 · 0 1

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