Question:

Beginer guitar?

by  |  earlier

0 LIKES UnLike

i wanna play the guitar but i nothing about it?

wat kind of guitar should i buy?

i want an acoustic one but i wanna play the eletric guitar later on.......is it the same fingerings?

and hows the bass guitar in all of this?

 Tags:

   Report

4 ANSWERS


  1. I first learned on an electric Fender, and learned with the 12 bar blues. Easy easy...

    http://www.guitartricks.com/tutorial.php...


  2. Well if you are starting,start on a acoustic as it is more easier to learn on and it is also much better because it makes your playing ''naked'' which means no fancy effects just your old playing electrics are fancy there is always that urge to turn the delay or distortion up a notch to if you wanna be gud start with acoustic even if you want to be a metal hardcore.Bass is a little complex as it involves thorough knowledge of notes and scales.If you wanna know wat is bass it is a kind of guitar with a  bassy sounds,instead of a normal six strings it has 4 or six.Boom boom ind of thing listen to a bass solo you will know what i mean and it is bassically a backing intsrument with.So i would suggest start with a acoustic guitar.

  3. You don't really need to know anything about it when you're a beginner. That's the point of being a beginner. After years and years of practice and playing, you start to understand the guitar bit by bit.

    Well, I'd say go with an electric. It's a lot easier to play, the frets are closer in, the strings are easier to play on, the body is very small, in general it is better to learn on an electric  than an acoustic in my opinion.

    Electric guitar and Acoustic guitar are the same when it comes to notes. However, they both have different techniques, sounds, and shapes.

    The bass guitar is nothing like an acoustic guitar or an electric guitar. The bass guitar is tuned down an octave lower than a regular guitar (You'll understand that later). The bass is a lot harder to play, it tends to toughen up your fingers, it hurts a lot in the beginning, it's heavy and big. Don't play it just yet. Learn to play the guitar, than you can play bass.

    You didn't mention anything about learning it, so I'll give you a few tips. NEVER learn from a book. It is a waste of money. Hire a professional teacher, they run on average about $60 - $75 an hour. Another thing I must mention is calluses. You need calluses to play guitar. When you first start to play the guitar, you'll notice your fingers start to hurt, that is normal for beginners. Beginners don't have calluses (Calluses are hardened areas of the skin, due to the body responding to the pressure, DO NOT file them off). Here's another good piece of advice, don't start off learning tabs, it's a bad idea. Learn to actually read music, you'll be better off that way.

    The guitar requires a lot of practice and devotion. If you don't have devotion, and you never practice, you'll never become good at the guitar. Just do 2 to 3 hours of practice a day, and you'll be fine.

    Most guitarists end up up having a disease called "Guitar Fever". I have it. Guitar fever symptoms usually are followed by: Spending a lot of your money on guitars, Becoming obsessed with guitars, Spending a lot of your time playing guitars, Building guitars, Getting a job as a musician or a luthier, Becoming a guitar tech, knowing every last detail about the guitar. That won't happen to you for a while. It usually comes within 5 to 6 years.

    Good luck!

    -Nakayama Akira

  4. Fingerings are the same, but there are techniques that are usually more geared towards one or the other. Get the guitar that you like the most. A bass guitar is a different instrument. Get lessons, look up tabs of the music you like.
You're reading: Beginer guitar?

Question Stats

Latest activity: earlier.
This question has 4 answers.

BECOME A GUIDE

Share your knowledge and help people by answering questions.