Music Banter

Music Banter (https://www.musicbanter.com/)
-   Talk Instruments (https://www.musicbanter.com/talk-instruments/)
-   -   Best place to self teach guitar? (https://www.musicbanter.com/talk-instruments/31027-best-place-self-teach-guitar.html)

cabangbangq 06-13-2008 09:38 PM

I'm a ****ing huge Jane's fan, glad to find another. Have you seen the acoustic version of Ain't No Right on youtube before?

mr dave 06-14-2008 08:21 AM

not yet, but i had this biography about farrell and jane's called 'whores' and they talked about how they would do an acoustic version of their sets before every show. so i wouldn't be surprised to learn that you can find an acoustic version of all of their tunes if you dug hard enough.

ScarletPimpernel 05-09-2009 09:46 AM

I'd say buy a good book in your music shop..
I did that, it was a book (in my language Dutch, but it
was translated from English) where you could
learn the guitar step by step.. I've been playing for 3 years
now and a lot of people don't believe that I learned all of
this just from a book..
You can also learn on your own tempo, that's pretty useful

Freebase Dali 05-09-2009 10:27 PM

I would assume that even Youtube would have some basic instructional videos.

Blue 05-16-2009 11:03 AM

The internet is incredibly helpful, whether you're using google, youtube, or anything really; there's a lot of information on techniques, theory, and everything else you're looking for in terms of actual music knowledge (finding your own voice is your own pursuit though).

One thing I will say though: tabs can be helpful yes (especially at first), but if that is your mainstay on how you learn, I think you could get yourself in troubles in some ways. Your ears are the most important part, and it's best if you train yourself to learn simply with them. Eventually you really realize how much everything really overlaps and it's really not too hard because a lot of music uses really simple musical concepts. I guess I just feel that mimicking some numbers on a tab doesn't help your musical knowledge in any sense, because you're not understanding anything, you're just mimicking and memorizing. I think it's best if you go about it to understand what it is you're playing. Not that you have to learn the theory behind it per say (though that definitely helps), but so that you actually have some basis of musical knowledge. For example, Hendrix didn't know "theory," as theory I don't think, he just had great musical knowledge. In a sense he was using theory (just like anyone who plays guitar is, whether you know it or not), but he didn't know it as some textbook form of theory; it was simple musical understanding if that makes sense.

Dr_Rez 05-16-2009 03:15 PM

Thanks for the reply, but this thread is over a year old now. I have moved way past where I was.


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 01:50 PM.


© 2003-2025 Advameg, Inc.