BASIC-GUITAR-CHORDS

58
rate or flag this page

By Sam Lyons



Learning Basic Guitar Chords

Helpful Information On Learning Your Basic Guitar Chords

Learning guitar chords can be very complicated and even confusing at times, even for a more advanced guitar player. There are so many different guitar chord combinations that trying to remember all of them can really be a headache. It is going to take a lot of determination and dedication in order to achieve this goal. Learning these guitar chords is vital to your guitar playing ability and techniques. These different chords can give you the experience of performing great sounding solo acts as well as what you can achieve playing with others.

If you can just allow yourself the time that it will take to practice and learn these guitar chords, you will be prepping yourself for learning how to play many different amazing, rock n roll songs, to impress your family and friends with. They will be shocked at your new abilities of your guitar playing techniques, and they will definitely love it. Everyone loves a rock star and seeing someone play their heart out on any instrument is just aspiring and an overall wonderful experience. It might even motivate you to try and pick up learning a new instrument, perhaps even a guitar. Anyone can play the guitar and learn the chords if they really, really want it. That is all it takes. The desire and just going after what you want.

An actual chord is three different notes that are played together, so if when you strum any three guitar strings, you are then creating three different sounds at once. The highest amount of guitar chords is six. These guitar chords are placed into three different categories, minor, seventh and major. All of the chord groups will have their own sound and their own little feel to them, making them all different and unique. Major chords sound very stern and more complete, where seventh chords have more of an incomplete sound to them and more upbeat, minor chords can create a more solemn or mellow mood sound.

Break the chords down into little families, each one doing something different, then these can be combined in sequences with one another, creating a song. Breaking the chords down in such a way will prevent you from having to just rely on memorizing and getting bored with the whole idea of it. It keeps things fun and interesting for you, during this learning process. By learning how to play chords in this manner you will allow yourself the ability to master the goal at hand, instead of skipping around to new chords, doing that would only cause you frustration and confusion.

Learning guitar chords is quite difficult but it does not have to feel impossible for you. If you apply yourself properly and dedicate your time to learning the chords in different ways then you will soon be on your way to a more professional sounding guitar and much better techniques than you ever had before. It will not happen overnight, practice, practice and more practice, did I say practice? Yes, practice, that is the key!

  • The Beacon Is Booked, So Allmans Will Move - New York Times

    New York Times The Beacon Is Booked, So Allmans Will Move New York Times Bob Dylan plugged in his guitar. Kiss (temporarily) washed off its face paint. And now the Allman Brothers Band is leaving the Beacon Theater. ... and more » - 11 hours ago

  • Microsoft's EMG Controller Is the Perfect Guitar Hero Enabler - Softpedia

    MMORPG News Microsoft's EMG Controller Is the Perfect Guitar Hero Enabler Softpedia While we've seen some very talented guitarists playing the instrument in very strange manners, we've yet to see one play the guitar without the guitar. ... Microsoft Muscle Control System lets you play Air-Guitar HeroGadget Venue (blog) Microsoft Patents New Controller-Free Input DeviceGame Rant (blog) Microsoft files patent for muscular control of computersWired.co.uk Tom's Hardware Guide all 36 news articles » - 6 hours ago

  • Students remember teacher, guitar hero - Journal and Courier

    Students remember teacher, guitar hero Journal and Courier "In 1978, I had my $25 Music-land guitar and wanted to learn how to play it. He was kind of the edgy one back then, the guy with the ponytail," he recalled. ... and more » - 6 hours ago

Print   —   Rate it:  up  down  flag this hub

Comments

RSS for comments on this Hub

No comments yet.

Submit a Comment

Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.


optional


  • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
  • Comments are not for promoting your hubs or other sites

working