Archive

Archive for August, 2009
30 Aug

Beginners Guitar Lessons – Guitar Chords and Guitar Scales

All Guitar Chords – Beginners Guitar Lessons

All Guitar Chords and All Guitar Chords’s Guitar Scales Is two really simple apps, “All Guitar Chords” have a big listing of all the guitar chords and guitar scales you might want to learn. You just select the guitar chord or guitar scale you would like to learn and press the button, it will then display the guitar chords or guitar scales you have chosen, and where to put the fingers on the fretboard. They also have a left handed version.

You can also find other great tools here as songs, guitar tuner, guitar licks etc. And a guitar jammer where you can make your own chord progressions to play along with, and other good stuff.

Chordbook – Beginners Guitar Lessons

Chordbook Is also a good place to go to practice your own beginners guitar lessons. This is a Flash-based site. You select which chords you want to play, (you can also place your own marks/circles on the fretboard). It places circles on the guitar fretboard/strings to show you the proper placement of the fingers. When you find a chord you want to learn, just press the “strum” button to hear what it sounds like. You can chose between right and left hand guitar, and acoustic and electric guitar.

This place also have some of the extra tools All Guitar Chords have, but not quite as many, in the jammer section you can find some jamtracks to practice the guitar scales and guitar chords on. They even have an area with a guitar tuner and a guitar chords generator specially made for blind people, it’s in beta.

Recommended Links – Beginners Guitar Lessons

05 Aug

Guitar Tabs – What To Play In a Guitar Store

No “Stairway To Heaven”

Guitar Tabs For Beginners

It’s the grand faux pas for a guitarist, and at some point you’ve committed it yourself, or at the very least you’ve caught someone else in the act. The faux pas is, of course, playing”Stairway to Heaven” in a guitar shop. You would think by now it’s universal knowledge that playing “Stairway” is a big no-no-employees cringe, customers snicker-in some stores performing “Stairway” is explicitly forbidden (the “No Stairway” sign á la Wayne’s World).

This begs the question, “What should you play in a guitar store?” After all, trying out a guitar in a guitar shop is typically stressful for guitarists — especially beginners. To begin with, it can be difficult to think of something cool to play when you’re “under the gun” so to speak. Second, there’s always the fear of embarrassing yourself by stumbling  through your licks of choice — and guitarists do have a tendency to attempt parts that are beyond their ability because they try too hard to impress.

To help alleviate your anxiety, here are a few impressive-sounding, yet easy-to-play riffs that you can foist on your fellow guitar shoppers. Notice that the riffs that follow generally emphasize groove and attitude over speed and technical difficulty, because how you sound is primarily dictated by your feel and execution. Also, notice that no solo licks are included, because when playing unaccompanied, rhythm parts are more listenable than, say, blazing fast blues solos. Now, I can’t guarantee that you will look and sound cool, but at least you won’t be playing socially unacceptable material like “Stairway” or “Free Bird.” Rock on.

“Enter Sandman” Metallica

What better place to start than Metallica, a band that consistently delivers in-your-face heavy riffs. Not all of them are easy to play — the combination of blazing fast tempos, time signature changes, and James Hetfield’s downstroke-dominated rhythm style makes for a tiring and wrist-wrenching combination. This part is pretty simple and straightforward, though, and establishes the monster groove of the song. The “riff to end all riffs.”

PS. I’m not sure how good this is to play in stores anymore, but I leave it up.

enter sandman riff

“Oh, Pretty Woman” Van Halen

One of the most powerful guitar bits in rock history. Eddie played this Roy Orbison riff virtually verbatim, adding just a few personal touches in the form of palm muting, vibrato, and tremolo. Not particularly fast or flashy, but very memorable. Go ahead, give your local shop a party atmosphere.

Pretty Woman, van halen Riff

“Should I Stay or Should I Go” The Clash

Another attitude check — for this one you will need to adopt a punk gestalt. I’ve written the intro here, just simple D and G chords, played in the groove with plenty of conviction. Although you probably can’t fake being a punk, this song has enough rock elements to get away with performing it.

should i stay or should i go, the clash, riff

“Breaking The Law” Judas Priest

This song, taken form the British Steel album, was a big factor in breaking Priest worldwide. No surprise really; the part shown here is surely one of the heaviest riffs ever recorded. As this is the only 80s metal song on the list I urge you not to dress the part for this one. Regardless of what they say, image counts.

Breaking The Law Riff, judas priest, riff

“Frankenstein” Edgar Winter Group

This old rock riff should turn everyone’s head — even those too young to have heard it before. It rocks — what else can you say? Amd with a title like “Frankenstein,” how can you go wrong?

Frankenstein, Riff, edgar winter group

“Highway To Hell” AC/DC

I could have selected any one of a hundred riffs from AC/DC, the masters of hard-rock rhythm. The intro to “Highway To Hell” is included because it’s such a powerful opening statement. If you’re lucky it will not only get listeners to tap their feet, but also inspire older patrons to reminisce about their teenage years.

Highway To Hell, Riff, ac/dc

I Have Made All My Tabs With The “PowerTab Editor 1.7″ You Can Download Your Own Vv-FREE COPY HERE-vV

Guitar Tabs For Beginners