I got an old used guitar today. I never had any natural musical talent but it was fun to strum it and try to find some sembelance of a tune amid the mostly random strumming. I enjoyed using it and want to learn a bit more about how to use it. I was hoping you guys could point me to some good guides and references to help me learn and maybe some advice. Also will probably need a guide on reading sheet music eventually.

  • brandon
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    1 year ago

    If you have the financial means, don’t hesitate to take some lessons, even if it’s only for a month or two as you’re getting started. A good teacher can help you identify bad habits early so you can learn faster. YouTube is an incredible resource, but it can’t replace someone physically showing you what to do.

    • Ziggurat@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      If you have the financial means, don’t hesitate to take some lessons, even if it’s only for a month or two as you’re getting started.

      The best thing for your bucks would be “group lessons” with 2-4 students. You can check if there is a music school offering adult beginner classes. You pay less per lessons, teacher earns more, so they’re less likely to drop you as soon as they have another project. And (not directly at the beginer level) you can play with other students like one plays the chord, the other the melody.

      On the other hand, you loose in flexibility both in term of time-slot and lessons plan.

  • Crisps@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Advice from Marty Swartz, lessons on YouTube, is to make sure to play at least 5 mins a day for 90 days. If you stick to that goal you’ll be good.

    The first week or two your fingers will be uncomfortable until you build calluses, so you may only play 5-10 mins. Eventually you’ll have days where you play an hour or so and others where you play 5 mins.

    I also second Justin guitar for lessons in general.

    He advises using a very light pick to begin strumming. It makes it hugely easier, then after a few weeks you’ll move to a better sounding thicker one.

  • bstix@feddit.dk
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    1 year ago

    The most important part is to get a good start, so you don’t give up as the first thing.

    Learn to tune it. Download any free tuner app.

    Learn a chord. I suggest G. From the thickest string and down it’s the frets: 3 2 0 0 0 3

    Learn a song. The absolutely simplest song is the nursery song “Are you sleeping(brother John)” aka “Frere Jacques”, because it has only one chord and everyone knows the lyrics and melody. This is how: Hold the G chord and play the thick string, then strum, play the open D string, then strum. Sing along. Do it step by step until you’ve got it.

    Congratulations. You can now play guitar.

  • Doran Wetzel@mastodon.social
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    1 year ago

    @Smokeydope Not that I’m an expert, but these things helped me:

    Find a teacher that has similar musical interests as you.

    Always practice with a beat. It’s annoying as hell for a while, but it pays off!

    Reward yourself while practicing by trying to learn a song you like between practicing scales and boring stuff like that. You did work, you get to play a little!

    Learn the note names on the neck, or at least all the ones on the 6 and 5 strings.

    Meet musicians at open mic jams!

  • xx3rawr@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    I am completely

    1. Get a tutor. Just makes most sense since they can give you more attention than just reading or watching

    2. Get a book or video course, physical or online, whatever you have access to, then ALWAYS stay on track. Discipline yourself, get a Youtube course and not skip or switch to “guitar hacks and tips” that YT recommends you (they’re helpful but there’s plenty of time for thosr later). I’m self taught and never finished a single Youtube course before being distracted to something else so I missed my best time to build the fundamentals. I could still get back to it, but it’s just not the same when I already have motor memories.

    3. Learn songs. A lot of them—songs you like, songs you’d like to play for others, songs you hate, etc. That’s just how it is. You learn and practice a lot, no other way. How you build not only your catalog but importantly, your muscle memory and musical vocabulary.

    4. Don’t care much about gear unless you like the tinkering aspect of it. They don’t get you far, most of the work is in the person. As long as it doesn’t block your progress and doesn’t sound like tincan, you’re fine. Scrub that. With the right attitude and creativity, you can make good music with a tincan.