Guitar Theory Hour
Monday, April 20, 2015
Monday, November 10, 2014
Moved
Hi guys,
The website has moved to a new homehttp://jamesconlinmusic.com.
Still writing posts that can help you with your playing.
Hope to see you there.
The website has moved to a new homehttp://jamesconlinmusic.com.
Still writing posts that can help you with your playing.
Hope to see you there.
Wednesday, August 13, 2014
How Hard Have you Been Practicing?
I haven't posted in a while, I have been busy with things like obtaining a green card and some awesome work with a local Studio that I’m really excited about. Anyway, I’m not here to talk about me, what I’d really like to talk about is practicing.
My last posts had too much substance for my liking. Chord charts are fundamentally useless compared to an easily obtainable and comprehensive system of understanding the fretboard. I will therefore never post another page of chord charts. You’ve had enough! They might be easily digestible but why give you a fish when I can teach you to...
If you’re interested in how to build chords, you should probably check out the Introduction to chord theory post which shows a brief and easy way to figure chords out. I will of course expand further on how to build them but the truth of the matter is, you will come across chords as you learn songs from your favourite band.
On Practice
If you want to get anywhere with any instrument, you have to practice. This goes quadruple for guitar. Why? Because everyone who plays guitar is practicing more than you and it’s a competition to see who can complete ‘it’ first. Here’s a list of high scores from the current leader board, unfortunately only living players are permitted entry and everyone is judged on current ability.
Guitarist
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Points
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Guthrie Govan
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9,874,264
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Tosin Abasi
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180,050
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Nuno Bettencourt
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55,555
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Marty Friedman
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55,554
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Meanwhile at the bottom end of the leaderboard we have:
Guitarist
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Points
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Average Beginner ~1 yr Experience
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10
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Jack White
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6 (Good effort)
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Josh Klinghoffer
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3 (You are not John, get out)
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Lil’ Wayne
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-9
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For those of you still reading, I have a confession. That isn’t the real leaderboard. No, there isn’t actually one at all. No arbitrarily assigned points or competition really. I kind of like everything Jack White does but I am pretty sore about Josh being in the Chili Peppers, I just don’t think he sounds like he ‘gets’ what they’re about. One last word Ladies and Gentlemen, Lil’ Wayne.
My extremely long winded point is that it is so easy to practice guitar.
It takes no more effort than watching T.V. to practice low intensity guitar. As long as you’re not drilling bad habits into yourself, you should become familiar with the instrument through sitting with it as often as possible. As a beginner, the guitar is a mere funny shaped piece of wood with some kind of wiry stringy stuff attached to it.
Eventually with enough practice, it becomes a penis extension fully fledged musical instrument that can make some incredible sounds and is an exciting and rewarding pastime/hobby/profession.
Here’s a checklist of things you can do when you practice.
It’s probably best you space them out to focus on what most engages you but be sure to change things up for each different practice session. If you’re serious about the instrument, explore even the aspects of music which don’t jump out at you as being ‘flashy’ or provide instant gratification. Those parts usually help develop a solid framework…
Here’s a list of 10 ideas of things to work on while you practice guitar.
Aspect of Practice
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Guideline
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Warm up
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Stretch and massage your hands and fingers! You’ll be surprised how much more your hands will be willing to work after you get the blood flowing.
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Songs
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Learn a new song or practice an old song. Set a milestone like nailing a specific part or a song in its entirety.
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Scales and Arpeggios
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Widdly widdly, diddly diddly learn and play scales until you’re blue in the face (the same face you just melted off… you just melted your own face off. Seek medical assistance. This is not a drill).
But seriously when you practice scales and things, pay attention to the sounds you are making, not just the shapes your hands form as you make them. Watch for ‘avoid’ notes and play the scale without them! Make sure these things ring out with a quality that only practice brings.
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Chords, Harmony and Theory
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Research things like I guess you’re doing right now by being here. Immerse yourself in the language of music theory. You have to know your I, IV, Vs from your II, V Is.
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Ear Training
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You can do this online or even on your phone or tablet. Learn to recognise intervals and sounds with simple interval ear training exercises… Seriously google it or er, click here.
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Posture/Technique
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Make sure you practice in ways which reinforce good habits. ‘What habits are good?’ You might ask. Well that’s complicated in this day and age. I would just advise that you make things easy for yourself and try to make your playing efficient and your movements effective, oh - and be comfortable.
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Improvisation
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Make something up on the spot. Chord progressions, or phrases. Unaccompanied or with backing tracks that you can search the internet for. The important part is being engaged in the processes you enter unto when you are translating your ideas into sounds with your instrument.
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Listen to other musicians
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Even ones from ‘genres’ you don’t normally listen to or people playing other instruments. Especially horn players and drummers. These instruments specialise in phrasing, breathing and rhythm. Guitar is a jack of all trades kind of instrument; make sure to master at least one aspect.
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Compose
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Write some music. Find one of those phrases you created in the improv section and expand upon it. Use chord theory to create progressions suited to the key and resolve tensions that your phrases create within the key.
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Jam
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Invite your friends around (who are musicians) and play together. Scientists estimate that guitarists progress approximately 7x faster when they play with other musicians. Also many statistics are made up on the spot.
But seriously, I can’t stress how important it is to just forget your hang ups and play together. I’m at least somewhat certain that music is in large about community and not just playing alone in your bedroom until you can play Yngwie Malmsteen tunes.
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Practice is important because you are never going to get better if you don't do it, and if you don't use it, you lose it. How else are you going to get better? Practice. You can't know how good you are if you don't practice. And if you don't feel like practicing, then do one of the activities outlined above - you know, trick yourself into thinking you are not practicing even though you are.
Monday, April 28, 2014
A Brief Introduction to Chord Theory
You find chords everywhere.
Not just chords but the theory chords represent: Harmony.
A concept of layered sounds separated by specific distances known as ‘intervals’.
What is a scale?
As far as you need to be concerned, a scale is a starting point known as a root followed by notes located at specific intervals. Here is the Major Scale.
To observe the typical ‘do re mi’ major scale that you have most likely been exposed to, play all eight notes of the scale from the root until the octave. Each fret is the same distance apart from those preceding and following.
We call this distance a ‘Semitone’. Therefore the distance between two frets is known as a ‘Tone’. Between the Root and 2nd note of the Major Scale there lies a Tone.
| A Tone |
This numeric naming process is present throughout each ‘degree’ of the scale. Since this particular scale is the Major scale, they are occasionally prefaced with the word ‘major’ when it is important to make the distinction.
Play the Root and 2nd note of this, the C major scale. You will be alternating between the notes C and D. You are playing a major 2nd interval.
Where do chords fit in?
An appropriate question to ask at this point, knowing that this post is supposed to address a player’s first introduction to chord theory. The answer is that chords take place over specific intervals in the scales from which they are derived.
This table is a handy tool which highlights the individual distance between each note in the major scale. The scale consists of the following intervals:
Tone, Tone, Semitone, Tone, Tone, Tone, Semitone.
Each note in the scale can be the basis for a chord. The degree of the scale on which you're basing the chord will affect the tonality of the chord. At this point in your learning (~<6 months), Major or minor are the only real tonalities of a chord that you should be concerned with.
By this point you can probably play some songs that you have learned from chords or tab and can maybe work a few things out by ear. Now let’s take a look at building chords in the C Major scale.
C Major:
To build the first chord in the scale, simply take the first note, the third and the fifth from the scale. In this case the notes are C, E and G and the chord is C Major.
But how do we know it’s major (other than being aware of the name of the scale)?
Well, the distance between C, the 1st note and E, the 3rd is two Tones.
Two tones distance is a Major 3rd interval and is the first interval of a Major Triad (Also known as Major Chord).
The distance between the third and fifth in a major chord is one Tone and one semitone.
The second chord in C Major begins from the note D. It follows the same pattern as the first chord only this time, counts from and uses D as the root. This chord has the notes D, F and A.
The distance between D and F is a Tone and a Semitone, that’s a minor third and this is a minor chord.
The distance between F and A, the 3rd and 5th of this chord is two Tones.
See how the intervals are reversed for Major and minor?
As an exercise, try to work through the entire scale, when you get to B, start again at C and continue throughout the next Octave. This will allow you to work out any three note chord which is either minor or Major one of them however is different but which one and why?
Thursday, April 24, 2014
Guitar Chords: A Major, D Major, G Major, E Major
These chords and the two mentioned in "On Learning Chords" are as far as one should progress in studying guitar before being introduced to basic chord theory.
A major
D Major
G Major
E Major
To progress with basic chord theory, click here.
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
On Learning Chords
On Learning Chords
As you go off on your adventure to learn the guitar, chords are an essential part of the musician’s vocabulary. It is important to learn a lot of them. At first you will learn them as shapes and places to put your fingers, eventually you will learn codes to create the shapes for yourself.
Here are some basic chords that are easy to learn.
How to read chord charts
A chord chart is a visual representation of a section of your guitar’s fretboard. It commonly consists of a matrix of strings and frets as pictured below.
A black circle will show you where to place your fingers.
A white circle will show you which strings to play, even if you aren’t pressing any strings down.
If a string has nothing on it, don’t play anything. Easy.
To get started, let us take a look at the chart for a C Major chord…
Not only do chord chart tell you where to put your fingers, they also show you which fingers to place at each position through the chord.
Your first to little finger are labelled numbers 1 to 4.
It should look something like this however it is unlikely that when you first start to play, it will sound anything like how you wish. It’s difficult to compress the tense wire with the fleshy pads of your fingers but as you persevere and you gain a greater degree of control, you will be able to manipulate the sound as you please.
Your fingers will hurt
It’s not just that they’ll hurt, your fingers are going to harden. If you’re serious about learning to play the guitar, you must be willing to be in pain a decent amount of your first 3 - 6 months of playing depending on the hardness of your skin.
In order to fret the string properly, use the tip of your finger. The most sensitive and vulnerable part a few millimetres beneath the nail. It’s the only way to ensure that you are only fretting the strings needed while allowing the other strings the mobility they need in order to ring out.
After you get to grips with the shape of C Major, why not branch out to your first minor chord.
A minor
These two chords are related to each other. I won’t go into how until later but if you’d care to practice them until you can switch between them smoothly you can hear their similarities even though they are very much unique.
Hint: Use the note on the first fret of the B string as an anchor for the changing chords.
The rest of the beginner chords in the series can be found here.
Monday, April 21, 2014
Learning Guitar: On beginning and Reflection
Now I know what you're thinking:
The Guitar Theory Hour manifesto is completely without substance and specifics.
It’s common sense that learning an instrument contains specific places of where to place your fingers, anyone could tell you that. I will most certainly get to the actual places you can put your hand sausages [read: fingers] but my intention is not to give a man a fish. You may be hungry for chord shapes and scale patterns but there are underlying concepts which upon reflection will provide you with rod and bait.
Full credit goes to http://powderedwigcouture.com/ for the image
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All you need to bring is a willingness to learn and an understanding that almost anyone can pick this stuff up.
In the next hour we will reflect on the notion that when learning an instrument, reflection itself is a vast slice of the pie.
In reflection, your openness and willingness to see things as patterns and frameworks rather than unique occurrences will allow you to progress. Nothing exists in a vacuum.
What happens when I start?
When you first begin your musical education for guitar, you will notice that songs you learn are made of repeated chords grouped together in what is known as a chord progression.
As you continue to learn more pieces, similarities between progressions and songs will prompt you with the revelation that some songs aren’t unique in quite the way you thought.
Chords, notes, intervals and rhythms are building blocks regurgitated through time. We play them in orders devised by people we call composers and songwriters, named for the song or piece we are attempting to recreate. Learning other people’s compositions is a valid way of furthering your ability.
You can never accurately repeat something.
At least, not on an analogue instrument such as the guitar. You are always approximating, at most; a part and at least, a sound that you wish to express with your ability. In playing the guitar you enter into a dialogue with yourself, a feedback loop of listening and adjusting to the sounds you make and the feel of making the sounds. Part of being able to express the sound you want is a notion of preparedness.
On beginning to make a sound
If you are not sure of where the notes you need to play are, the sound will be unsure. Conversely, if you are overly aware and conscious of playing only the appropriate places, the sound may take on a mechanical texture. To “learn” or “know” a piece of music as a beginning guitarist you must pay attention to the feedback loop between what you play, expect and hear. Do not let how you want it to sound pollute your ear’s comprehension of how it does sound. It is never going to be perfect, no; you aren’t looking for perfection, only purposeful expression.
Are you fully in control of how you sound? Do you sound fully in control, is control a facet of sound you even wish to achieve? Nothing is set in stone and you can do what you like, but don’t.
Here are some chords it will come in handy to know.
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