kippy wrote: » I can play guitar but I have awful trouble remembering chords to songs and apparently have absolutely no ear for figuring out chords and how they form a song. I doesnt help that I am a crap singer. Learned the basics from a few mates I lived with in college and everything else from either Justin Sandercoe (http://www.justinguitar.com/) or Marty Schwartz ( http://www.guitarjamz.com/) via their youtube channels. They have tonnes of really really good resources on their sites/channel so would recommend them highly to anyone starting out. I generally pick up the guitar once a day and throw a few chords together, to try and make something sound "nice" as the amount of songs I can remember is limited. I've an electric and fancy pedalboard thingy as well but haven't used that in a while. It's defo something I wish I was more accomplished at but at the same time I know enough to be happy to strum away.
Kaycee2 wrote: » Have a guitar gathering dust in the attic, i had a few lessons b.c (before children) and then had another stab at it a few years ago trying to teach myself and as soon as I'd get it tuned and left it down for a minute the kids would turn the keys. I'm gonna hold onto it though i really wanna be able to play just need to make the time for it.
Herb Powell wrote: » Playing guitar since I was about 11, electric of course, and I've played bass since I was 16. Bass is absolutely incredible craic to play at a gig. I've been told I'm class altogether, but IDK, I jam with some incredible musicians. I think I have a long way to go. What I am proud of is my ear, I can tune from my head and it's almost always perfect, I can learn a song just from memory, and if I'm listening to something new trying to figure it out it usually only takes a few seconds. I remember being absolutely amazed at my guitar teacher's ability to do this so effortlessly when I started off! I have absolutely no bother mimicing the exact rhythm of a piece either, and it really annoys me when people play something with the rhythm way off, haha :o There's only so many notes, but the rythmic possibilities are endless! Despite this, I can't sing for ****, or play drums to save my life. I'd absolutely love to be able to drum, but I can't seem to.
kippy wrote: » That's a great statement, "there are only some many notes/chords etc but the rhythmic possibilities are endless". That's my main issue at this point. I know lots of chords, bits and pieces and can play them, but when it comes to making it sound like the piece you are trying to cover I fall down - even trying to remember how basic three chord songs go I fall down on. I just dont think I have an ear for it. So that is my question I suppose - do you think this can be "learned" or do you think its something you just naturally have - but you might need some time to hone it?
Savage Tyrant wrote: » I bought a guitar about a month ago. I've learned 6 or 7 chords... But I just can't for the life of me make an song out of them as moving between them takes too long for me to keep my strum pattern. It's getting a bit disheartening now as I hoped to be able to play a few bits within a month or so. Anyone any idea how long it usually takes to learn to move between chords at a decent enough speed?... I don't expect to be Hendrix or Slash, but I wanna at least sound "musical"
Herb Powell wrote: » I think it can be learned alright, I was absolutely awful when I started. Metal and blues in particular are very very rhythm-heavy, and practicing triplet rhythms (the galloping, Iron-Maiden type sound) is a decent way to learn some control, because it's not easy at the start. I don't really have any tips in particular though, I suppose just practice the living ****e out of loads of different-sounding songs til you can nail many rhythms. I think I easily clock up 2 hours a day messing around on the guitar, even more when I was younger :eek:
Knex. wrote: » Aye, there's no substitute for practice, really. That's the biggest disadvantage I find in people who are trying to pick it up later on in life, than those who start when in school and can viably spend 20+ hours a week playing at times.
MacBizzle wrote: » Took me 2 years. You a fan of Red Hot Chili Peppers? Their songs are fantastic for both practising chords and getting some rhythm going, sound just as good on an acoustic as they do on electric as well. If you're a fan I'd really really suggest learning some of their stuff.Helps that I'm a bit of a fanboy though Also, find a metronome if you've difficulty keeping rhythm, they're so helpful.
Maximus Alexander wrote: » The first song I ever learned to play was Scar Tissue. I've learned and forgotten a hundred songs since, but I can always play that no matter how out of practice I get. I must have practiced it for a hundred hours.
monkeysnapper wrote: » My real problem I have learning saxophone is it's such a noisy instrument to learn and I hate anyone listening to me .