Despite what many people may say it is possible to learn to play guitar easy. It will take a lot of practice if you plan to do it in a short amount of time. The need for discipline and a good memory is essential to learn to play guitar easy.
Using condensed lessons
The best way to learn to play guitar easy is to condense smaller sessions into 2 or 3 larger sessions. It is possible to learn guitar in a few days if you are willing to put aside the time. One 8 hour lesson is better then 8 individual 1 hour sessions. During this session you will retain more information and move to more advance riffs and chords easier.
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Locate a great teacher
If you want learn to play guitar easy, it is important to have a great teacher. The power of a great teacher lies in their eye for detail and easy teaching method. A good teacher will constantly correct your mistakes and give you hints and tips on how to improve your skills.
You must have discipline
When you learn to play guitar easy it is essential to have a high level of discipline. To learn to play guitar easy you will need to compact years of lessons in to only a few days. This can be done, however you need to be in the right frame of mind and want to learn.
Be sure and get enough rest and relaxation
You must be well rested and relaxed to get the most out of your practice. Learning to play guitar easy is not necessarily a highly physical activity, but it is definetly mentally challenging. The brain is a virtual muscle and should be treated like any other muscle in the body. Relaxation and rest will ensure your brain functions to the highest standards so you will retain the most amount of what you have studied..
Passion and motivation rule
To learn to play guitar easy you will need to draw motivation from your passion for music and guitars. This will be your driving force when you reach the point when you feel you can go no further. Trust me you will reach a stage where you are mentally and physically exhausted and will feel like throwing in the towel. As long as you understand it is not and easy thing to learn to play guitar easy and have a love and passion for music, you will get through even the toughest moments.
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Maintaining your discipline and using your passion for music will be your driving force when you learn to play guitar easy. Don’t give up!
Randy Bachman Interview
by Rick Landers.
Before Randy Bachman’s show at the Birchmere in Alexandria, Virginia, this past summer, Modern Guitars dropped by backstage for a brief chat. Randy and crew were relaxed and easy going giving me an opportunity to ask him a few questions about his guitars and music, as well as Vinyl Tap, his coast-to-coast radio program that’s broadcast across his native Canada. Resting next to a wall was Bachman’s gold top Gibson Les Paul, his axe of choice and one that he said nailed the Guess Who sound, better than any other guitar he’d played for years. The LP’s a sub-eight pounder that he can play night after night without irritating the rotator cuff that he had repaired in 2007. But, it was clear that Randy loved the guitar and its gritty crunch…
Yngwie Malmsteen Interview (2008)
by Matthew Mills.
During the 1980s, guitarists were stunned by the innovative riffs of a new herd of guitarists, including those with their pedal to the metal playing that entailed ripping fretboards to shreds. But, no single guitarist of the time had more shock impact on the guitar world than the Swedish sweep accelerator, Yngwie Malmsteen.
In late 1982, Mike Varney, owner of Shrapnel Records, brought the demon shredder over to the U.S., touting Yngwie’s amazing grip on sweep picking arpeggios and high velocity harmonic minor scale runs. Having listened to a tape Yngwie had given him, Varney pushed to have Malmsteen play solos with the group Steeler. The guitarist eventually left Steeler and moved in with the group Alcatrazz. It didn’t take him long to roll out on his own to record 12 studio albums and two live albums that serve as inspiration to guitarists who aspire to not only shred, but to play the guitar with turbocharged melodic intent…
Slash Interview
by Rick Landers.
Slash…the name alone conspires to attract and enthrall a cult following of guitarists and fans. Add the nonchalant tilt of a black top hat, a skull and bones talisman, a classic Les Paul, exotic good looks and voodoo charm with monster music talent and you’ve mixed the cauldron with a roll of the dice to conjure a rock god. Oh, okay, so during our interview I suggested he joined the “soccer mom” league, not with disrespect, but to highlight the tectonic life altering shift he’s experienced from that of a singularly focused rock star to husband and father. Life changes and Slash [Saul Hudson] is now the father of two boys, London Emilio and Cash Anthony, and married to the lovely Perla Ferrar. His paternal love shone bright in his recent autobiography Slash, and it seems he’s handling the father-rock god balance with finesse…
Wayne Henderson Inteview
by Rick Landers.
Modern Guitars had the good fortune to catch master bluegrass guitarist and guitar builder Wayne Henderson while at a gig in Maryland. Henderson has played all around the globe and getting an opportunity to see him in an intimate setting was something we didn’t want to miss. Bluegrass and guitar lovers sat quietly in a church, while Wayne and his long-time partner, Helen White, pulled out their instruments for a delightful set of bluegrass. Henderson guitars are superbly and painstakingly built by hand in Rugby, Virginia, a speck of a town in southern Virginia with a population of 7. Wayne’s lived in the Appalachian region his entire life, but his his guitars are considered masterpieces throughout the world. Guitar players lavish praise on their craftsmanship and tonal qualities and ache over the ten year wait to own one. Wayne’s guitar building craftsmanship gained worldwide interest in 2005 when Allen St. John’s book, Clapton’s Guitar: Watching Wayne Henderson Build the Perfect Instrument, was published…
John Petrucci Interview
by Brian D. Holland.
Guitarist John Petrucci calls it fate that he and bassist John Myung happened to run into drummer Mike Portnoy at Boston’s Berklee College of Music in the mid ’80s. Though the convergence led to the formation of Majesty, the name was eventually changed to Dream Theater because of legal issues. Enduring the typical yet untimely inconveniences that many rock bands go through, creative differences leading to member changes in particular, these three have sustained that common bond for almost twenty-four years. Add into the picture Canadian vocalist James LaBrie, who joined in 1991 for the recording of Images and Words, and Julliard-trained keyboardist Jordan Rudess, who replaced Derek Sherinian in 1999, and it’s the Dream Theater brew of excellence that fans have come to respect and adore…





