Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Love me two times...

Had the day off yesterday, was able to squeeze in two 15-minute practices in one day, for the first time.

Unfortunately, I feel like I'm hitting a plateau. I'm doing the chromatic and E Phrygian scales correctly, but slowly, and I've memorized the 6 chords I know so far. However, I'm playing the notes very, very slowly, and I'm not good at switching between chords yet. Perhaps it's time to go to Lesson 3 and learn some more chords.

For my "free practice," I worked on the lead part from "Day Tripper." It's really catchy, pretty easy to play by ear, and uses (at least) four strings of the guitar. So it's a good one to learn the strings and to learn the individual notes on the strings. It's also fun to play.

I also re-tuned my guitar yesterday. Since I don't have a guitar stand, every time I take my guitar in and out of its case, it gets a little more out of tune. But it was much faster to re-tune it now that I've memorized the string names. I can just plunk out the note on my electronic keyboard, and not have to take 2 minutes figuring out which string corresponds to which note.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Are the chords you are doing all open chords? I found that changing opens quickly when you are starting tends to be easier if you use a pivot finger common to the two chords, or change a single finger first and pivot on that into the rest of the chord. This allows you to move fingers without having to reposition the entire hand - like resting your hand on the table when you draw.

For instance D to Dm I would keep the ring finger on the D (B string) and rotate into the Dm. Or with G to C I would move the pointing finger from the B (on the A string) to C (on the B string)and then pivot around that finger to the C chord. Then say changing back from the C to G, i would put the unused pinkie finger on the G (high E string)and then pivot the rest of the hand to the G chord.

I'm at work and I can't download the practice you posted, so please forgive me if I'm giving advice below your level.

Carrie P said...

Yep, all open chords so far.

And your advice is just about exactly the right level. Slightly above where I'm at right now with guitar, but I understand exactly what you're getting at.

I should be able to apply it in a couple of weeks, as I play more songs and get a tad more coordinated. When I'm practicing and I'm pressed for time, doing songs is the first thing I drop.

I need to warn you about the practice--it's sloppy. It's like ten minutes of a fourth-grader learning the violin. You may be better off waiting until the next one I post, which will be before the end of the month. .

Anonymous said...

I wouldn't worry about sloppy - I'd shudder to hear myself at the moment. I've barely picked my guitar up in the last couple of years - I'm mostly working from muscle memory :)

I'll keep giving unsolicited advice for now then, but let me know if I start sounding like a tool.