Free Online Guitar Tuner

A Free Online Guitar Tuner That Will Help You Learn And Master Your Guitar

It’s a free and pretty cool online guitar tuner – even with the ads… Please give it some time to completely load! Refresh your browser if it doesn’t work the first time.

A Free Chords Finder Helps You Learn And Master Your Guitar

This free widget is a great help to learn and master guitar chords

How it works:

Guitar Chords Finder gives you the possible names of a chord. Simply place the fingers position by clicking on the guitar neck, click play to hear the chord. The chord names are automatically shown on the right. (Please give it some time to completely load! Refresh your browser if it doesn’t work at first.)

Learn And Master Your Guitar: Finger Exercises

These Finger Exercises will help you develop ‘muscle memory’

If you’re just getting started playing guitar or if you’ve been playing for a little while and wish you were a little faster or a cleaner player, check out these exercises to get your fingers in shape.

These exercises are designed to use all your fingers to develop a balanced strategy to get you playing better!

Play these every day at least 20 times each.

It won’t take as long as you think.

Also, use a metronome when you feel comfortable and every note is clean.

These exercises are written on the 1st string, however you’ll want to practice these on all six strings.

For demonstration purposes I’m playing these exercises in 7th position.

Play these exercises in all positions and on all strings.

Ex. 1………………….Ex.2……………..Ex.3

E |–1–2–3–4–3–2———–1–3–2–4———–2–1–3–4-|

B |————————————————————-|

G |————————————————————-|

D |————————————————————-|

A |————————————————————-|

E |————————————————————-|

Ex.4 ……………….Ex.5……………..Ex.6

E |–2–3–1–4————–4–3–1–2————4–2–1–3—|

B |————————————————————-|

G |————————————————————-|

D |————————————————————-|

A |————————————————————-|

E |————————————————————-|

These six exercises aren’t going to hit the top 40 charts anytime soon, therefore it’s important to mix these up and be as creative as you can.

You can also try creating your own exercises from these and mix them in to get something totally different!


Learn how to carve up your fretboard with razor sharp precision, lightning speed & complete control with the help of Speed Guitar Techniques.

This course gives you the techniques you need to double, triple or quadruple your guitar playing speed. The course has 83 audio and video clips plus tabs for each exercise.

For most examples you are even given a slow version and full speed version so you can see exactly what is being shown.

You find it at http://www.guitartips.com.au/speed-guitar/


Guitar Finger Picking Basics: Learn Groove Style Slap Percussion

One of the most popular percussive techniques used in playing acoustic guitar is the Right Hand Slap

Usually this technique is used to emulate a backbeat on a drum. It sounds great in a rhythm guitarists’ arsenal as well in solo work.

Simply raise your wrist above the strings and allow your thumb to slap on the lower strings (either 5th or 6th string) and the knuckles just above your nails to follow simultaneously.

Don’t be to soft with the slap, you won’t break your strings. You should hear a defined attack on the strings.

Keeping your right hand in playing position at all times is very important also so that you can transition from the slap technique to fingerstyle seamlessly.

Below are 2 examples of the Slap.

Example 1 applies the technique to fretted chords, example 2 applies the technique to open chords.

Example 1

E |——————————————————-|

B |–5—x———–3—x—5—5—x————3—x—|

G |–5—x———–4—x—5—5—x————4—x—|

D |–3—x———–5—x—3—3—x————5—x—|

A |–5—x——————–5——x——————–|

E |———–0—5————————-0—5———|

Example 2

E |————————————–|

B |–0—x—0—x—0—0—x—0—x—|

G |–0—x—2—x—0—0—x—2—x—|

D |–2—x—0—x—2—2—x—4—x—|

A |–3—x————3——————|

E |———–3–x———————–|


If you’ve always wanted to learn finger picking on your guitar but didn’t know where to start we’ll give you all the tools necessary to perfect the technique of finger picking without tearing your hair out with frustration during the learning process!

When you learn how to finger pick on your guitar it will open a whole new world of skills to you. It is a great challenge but it will bring you much satisfaction for years and years to come.

http://www.guitartips.com.au/fingerpicking/


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How To Learn Guitar Fast By Practicing Right

Your guitar instructor tells you to practice. Practice – what and how exactly should you practice?

Does this mean to go home and play everything that you covered in your lesson in one day? Maybe it means to dig out your most impressive song or riff and play it over and over.

Practicing guitar is an art form all to itself. Everyone has their own way of guitar practice, and what works for one student will not necessarily work for another.

Like most guitarists, you probably have a few things in your tool belt to work on: scales, arpeggios, chords, picking technique, soloing, exercises, songs, theory, etc. How do you juggle everything and feel like your moving forward and not stepping backward?

Plan a Learn Guitar Practicing  Strategy

What do you want to accomplish today? If you can set aside 30 minutes or an hour and focus on 1 or 2 of these tools you’ll be able to focus better than thinking of a dozen things you need to cram into your practice session.

The operative word here is “Focus”. You can “play” for 3 hours and get nothing accomplished because you’re just “playing” guitar and not committing yourself to a “focused practice” routine.

What happens if you get to a couple notes on that 2nd string that don’t sound right? Play ONLY THE 2ND STRING. This is so important because many, many students will play the WHOLE passage or exercise again. This wastes A LOT of time because you already know the rest – it’s just the 2nd string that’s a concern.

After practicing the 2nd string problem, back up and play a note or two before the problem area to transition smoothly. Another big problem now is working transitions, so after working on any problem area – practice transitioning INTO the problem area. Practicing slow will teach the fingers exactly what they need to do.

Ok, so DAY 1 maybe you work on scales and exercises. Memorization might be on your list. If the scales are 2 octaves, just focus on the 1st octave and memorize that part.

Be sure you can play smoothly through the exercises and/or scales you are practicing even if it’s only 1 or 2!

Day 2 – Attempt these scales and exercises with a metronome. Start slow and write down the tempo you can play comfortably.

This tempo marking will only be temporary because you’ll be getting more comfortable with the fingering. You may also want to start creating melodies with these scales today.

Mixing them up and making music is the best way to understand these scales. This is also a good time to work in your arpeggios if you have them.

Day 3 – Review scales and exercises and get into your reading. The only way to be a better reader is to practice reading.

Read anything you can get your hands on. If you’re still working out the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd string notes in open position – read them and write your own ideas that use these strings. Writing your own ideas and playing them is a GREAT way to relate to the notes quicker.

Day 4 – Review what you’ve been doing this week, maybe spend 15-20 minutes on review and jump into a song you’re working on. If there is an area in the song that you have problems with, begin there. You don’t have to start at the beginning. Start at the end and work backwards if you want.

Day 5 – You know you have chords to work on.first, review everything to this point. It doesn’t have to be laborious like previous days, just run through your tools so you don’t forget them. Start with some easier chords and work your way to the difficult chords. When dealing with complicated chord progressions, take your strumming hand out of the equation and just focus on what your fretting hand is doing.

Observe each finger as it transitions to the next chord. Do this many times until you see the responsibility of each finger. With this knowledge, you can minimize the movements of every finger resulting in a smoother transition because the fretting hand is now moving as a precision tool.

Day 6 – You guessed it, quick review. Cover everything in roughly 20 minutes or so and work on your theory. You may have written work to complete or apply to the guitar. Spending time with the written work will give you new perspectives into the fingerboard, so really take your time here! This is a vast subject, so take your time and make sure you understand each phase because everything builds from the basics.

Day 7 – Oh, it’s your lesson day! Depending on the time of your lesson you may be able to practice and you may not. If you do, great! Go over everything thoroughly and touch on any problem areas a bit longer.

Ok, this is a nice way to organize your practice sessions, but what if you don’t have the time to commit to a 6-day practice schedule?

Any teacher who is worth your time will be flexible. If you have 3 or 4 days to practice and you can only realistically practice one – three concepts or tools, than that’s what you work on in your lesson. Believe me, you won’t be working on EVERYTHING in a typical 30 or 45 minute lesson.

Usually the teacher selects 1 or 2 tools to work with. You may even have a couple questions that take up 15 minutes of the lesson, which leads to examples and discussion if necessary!

The above schedule is only a suggestion and will hopefully give you a great guide to tailor for yourself on your musical journey.


Do you play the acoustic guitar and want an in-depth course just on the acoustic technique?

Acoustic Guitar Methods gives you the tools you need to be an acoustic guitarist.

The information in the course covers both finger style guitar & playing with a pick plus there is something for all level of guitarists.

Acoustic Guitar Methods is a great learning platform to branch off and learn acoustic guitar.

You find it at http://www.guitartips.com.au/acoustic


Learn Chord Progressions For The Acoustic Guitar

In this lesson you will learn a couple chord progressions.

Songs are full of them! This is simply a series of chords that sound good with each other played over and over again.

Below you’ll see 3 chords: G, C and D.


The idea here is to play these chords in any sequence you want and create a “Chord progression“.

Why do these chords fit so well together? They all belong to the key of G major.

……G……C……D

E |—3——0——2—|

B |—0——1——3—|

G |—0——0——2—|

D |—0——2——0—|

A |—2——3——x—|

E |—3——x——x—|

-
Down stroke


- Up stroke


This lesson was taken from Acoustic Guitar Methods.

Learn how to play the acoustic guitar in an easy step by step format with audio, video and easy instructions to guide you.

Acoustic Guitar Methods shows you how to play the acoustic guitar, strumming techniques, notes, scales and a lot more.

With video and audio clips that play instantly, you’ll learn with ease as you play along with the instructor and start jamming on your acoustic guitar within minutes of completing the material.

Check it out at: http://www.guitartips.com.au/acoustic/


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10 Easy Ways To Improve Your Guitar Playing Today

One of the most frustrating aspects of playing guitar is when you reach the point where you are not improving.

Whether you are a novice or a seasoned musician, we all face the same problem when we learn guitar and ask the question, “Why am I not at the level I want to be and how can I get there?”

To add insult to injury, we see our guitar heroes in magazines and on TV everyday and it seems as if they are constantly inventing new tricks and improving their skills.

When we read about them in Guitar World to try to emulate their skills and learn their tricks only to leave more confused. Becoming the ultimate guitarist is far harder than it looks.

So what is the key to success?

While there is no one answer that can solve everyone’s problem, there are a number of concepts and theories that can help you break through the barrier that keeps you from reaching your full potential to learn and master your guitar.

The one thing that you need to realize is that you don’t need to be a genius to become a great guitarist. The two key things you need to have in your possession are interest and commitment.

You’ll never meet a great guitarist who isn’t passionate about music.

They didn’t get to the level that they are at by being apathetic and lazy. They took the initiative to go out and try to learn something new.

The guitarist who dares to challenge himself takes the risk of failing. This is where many musicians lose their battle with low self-esteem and quit.

It’s not that they didn’t take the risk, rather, that they failed and couldn’t pick themselves up again. If you realize that failure is a part of growth and that it takes many jam sessions to get some tricks down, you have just acquired the first skill you will need to become the ultimate guitarist.

I have compiled a list of concepts that I believe every guitarist should try out. Unlike other articles you will read, these short and simple steps ask you to do, rather that simply read. Thoughts and attitude are important but in the end it’s what you do that counts to your audience.

Let’s get started with the top ten things you can do to obtain maximum results as a guitarist.

Top 10 tips for success…

  1. Learn something new - Educating yourself is the first step to becoming a better guitarist. Whether you choose to believe it or not, there’s always something new to learn and master. If you are currently studying music in a conservatory, at school, or in college, you will find that learning will come more easier to you. If not, I highly recommend that you get in a program. While I believe in teaching yourself, I also know from first hand experience that motivation and encouragement from a teacher is priceless. Once you conquer the subject that you were learning, push yourself to learn something that you’re not quite comfortable with. Learning within your comfort zone often results with you running around in circles.
  2. Make your time count – Practicing does not make perfect, it makes permanent. That makes the time you spend playing your guitar all the more important. Don’t waste your time fiddling around on your guitar. Dig in and learn something that will aid you on your quest for musical success. Set goals and work towards achieving them. Whether it’s technique, tricks, or a new song, you can become better just by using your time more wisely.
  3. Listen to more music - The more music that you are exposed to, the better guitarist you will become. Listen to the bands that you enjoy most and draw inspiration from them. Take note of what the musicians are doing in their songs and make a list of the techniques you want to learn. This can be the motivating force that gets you to play your guitar more often.
  4. Surround yourself with excellence - When you play your guitar with people who are better guitarists, you not only learn from them but feel motivated to push yourself to keep up. At first this idea seems obscure. Why would you expose yourself to that kind of stress? Let’s face it, if there’s one thing that will make you get motivated quickly it’s the fact that people are counting on you. Don’t play with musicians who are arrogant and rude. Embarrassment doesn’t foster self-esteem and will only get you down. The people you want to learn from are patient and understanding. Eventually you will find yourself at their level. It happens faster than you might think.
  5. Ask yourself what will you do when you obtain the skills you want – What do you want to do with what you learn? Perhaps you want to make a CD or join a band and play at some local venues. Start planning for it now and use what you currently have. This ties into setting goals but is not to be underestimated. Knowing how you want to use your talent is important. Create a vision and use goals to act on it. Whether you want to play for others, or to the wall in your bedroom, the choice is yours.
  6. Teach someone how to play guitar - To teach is to learn. If the only chord you know how to play is a G chord, show someone that. Why? Because it reaffirms what you know and solidifies your knowledge. I can tell you from personal experience that I have learned more through teaching than I ever learned through being taught. It forces you out of your comfort zone and when questions are asked, you need to know the answer. I’m a firm believer that anyone can teach someone something if they want to. Give it a shot and see the results for yourself.
  7. Believe in your ability - Yes, I know how cliché this sounds. However, you need to hear it. You can do anything you put your mind to and if you choose to play guitar well, chubby fingers or not, you can! Don’t listen to what others say and be true to yourself. This can be hard seeing as we live in a critical society that doesn’t realize how much words can hurt. Keep at it and surround yourself with supportive people. More of a life lesson than a guitar lesson, but as far as I’m concerned music is intertwined with daily living.
  8. You are incomparable - In case you haven’t picked up the hint yet, you are the ultimate guitarist. There is no one like you and there will never be anyone who even comes remotely close to being like you. Integrate who you are into your music and you will never have a shortage of material. Your music will soon form into your own tone and style.
  9. Learn what worked for others - Whether you research your favorite guitarist or talk to your guitar teacher, ask others what worked for them. I don’t claim to know all the answers but when everyone puts their heads together, some really neat ideas start to flow. Networking allows you to give and receive at the same time.
  10. Crush your weakness - We all know where we lack the most in the guitar realm. For me it’s in technique and finger picking, for others it’s something different. Whatever it is, don’t ignore it while enjoying your recent victory. Keep attacking your weak points and you’ll soon see improvement. The secret is that you never stop seeing problems and you continually get better over time. You’ll never be stuck without something to do. Take out a sheet of paper and write them down. Then find the resources you need to help you destroy them. It’s not unlike a war, but in the end you always win.

Don’t Believe The Popular Myths

You may be surprised to hear that a lot of the common advice distributed amongst guitarists couldn’t be farther from the truth. There are myths and tokens of advice that get passed along and guitarists like yourself use them. Try as hard as you like, but you’ll end up realizing that what meets you at the end of the road is failure.

To avoid that, let’s look at some of the most common myths floating around:

All good players can play all styles: While great in theory, it doesn’t work out in practice. Throughout the history of this newsletter, I have consistently pushed trying various genres of music and becoming a more cultured guitarist. However, no where will you ever hear me, or any other teacher, say that you should be able to master all of them.

The fact is that it takes a lifetime to master one style. Some take up two genres that mix well together, such as blues and rock, but those genres are the exceptions. You will never hear a neoclassical shred guitarist play country. Many jazz musicians take decades to perfect their craft and even then they still see areas that need improvement.

If you want to be a great guitarist, take the genre and style that you’re passionate about and focus on it. Don’t get distracted with other music. Your guitar heroes are heroes because they mastered a genre. Very few will ever play outside of their specialty and that’s just the reality.

You either have “it” or you don’t: Let’s face it, some understand music more easily than others. That doesn’t mean that you can’t be as good as them. Everyone can play guitar, it just depends on the effort and time you want to put in.

There are dozens of specialties within music and no one knows all of them from the time they are born. Perfect pitch is developed, as is technique and originality. Look at where you started from as opposed to where you are now. Would you say that you are just as original as you were when you first picked up the guitar? I know I’m not.

While things may come easier to others, remember that we all have our own struggles within music and that we are in it together.

To sound good, you need the best gear - The best gear is nice, and yes, you do sound better. However, it’s unnecessary for those who aren’t interested in professional music or are just starting out.

Beginners love to see the rack of guitars at their local music store and say, “I want the $2000 one.” That was me for years but the truth is that a guitar of that caliber is useless to someone who can’t play it. Learn on something modest and work your way up.

Not only will the experience be more rewarding, it’s also nicer on the instrument and your self-confidence. In the end, the guitar is only as good as the person who plays it.

I have heard crappy guitars sound half-decent when played by someone who knew what they were doing. The same applies to you. For those who can afford $5,000 guitars, my advice is go for it.

For the rest of us, I say save your money and work towards being the ultimate guitarist. Think about it, if you sound good on a crummy guitar, how much better will you sound on something that can really produce a good tone?

You need to be the most talented to succeed- All too often, as mentioned above, we tend to compare ourselves to others. The ultimate guitarist is you meeting your goals and making progress.

There will always be others who sound better in certain areas but who cares? Be the person you want to be and music will be far more enjoyable. Success is measured on a personal level, not n how many CD’s you sell.

The famous musicians in today’s society often find themselves wishing they weren’t so pressured by record labels. They want to be in your shoes where they have the choice to do what they want to do. Enjoy yourself and the rest will fall into place.


See how fun & easy teaching yourself to learn and master guitar really is with the help of Guitar Secrets.

Did you know the reason why most beginner guitarists put learning guitar in the “too hard basket” is because they choose lessons without structure.

These beginner guitar lessons cover the basics and move into more intermediate topics in the correct order.

This article is courtesy of http://www.guitartips.com.au


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Download A Free Report How To Improve Your Playing

The other day, I came across another great website: Guitar Tips.

You can instantly download a really good free report “50 Ways To Dramatically improve Your Playing Today”.

You can also sign up for an email newsletter once a week with excellent tips on how to improve your playing.

They sell a couple different learn guitar courses that I haven’t tried yet. But I’m really enjoying their free stuff :o ).

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