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Guitar > .: How To Play The Guitar :.
Guitar scale and chord lesson learning By Frederick Noad
1.) The Blues
2.) Flamenco Guitar Vol 2 - method by G. Graf-Martinez
3.) Flamenco guitar lesson 1: How to play Rasgueado
4.) Latin Rhythms
5.) The Rasgueo
6.) Right-Hand Techniques
7.) Introducing Flamenco
8.) Folk and Country
9.) Elements of Travis Picking
10.) Independent Voices
11.) Music in Multiple Voices
12.) Tunes from Notation
13.) Accidentals
14.) Sharps and Flats
15.) The Scale
16.) The Music Staff
17.) Why Learn Notation?
18.) How to Read
19.) Chord Sequences
20.) Playing a Full Bar
21.) The Downward Slur (Pull-Off, Descending Ligado)
22.) The Upward Slur (Hammer-On, Ascending Ligado)
23.) More about Dotted Notes
24.) Counting Beats with Fractions
25.) The Eighth Note
Topics
A guitar is a musical instrument characterized by its visually dominant body and neck. Guitar strings are strung parallel to the neck, whose surface is covered by the fingerboard (fretboard). By depressing a string against the fingerboard, the effective length of a string can be altered, which in turn changes the frequency at which the string will vibrate when plucked. Guitarists typically use one hand to pluck the strings and the other to depress the strings against the fingerboard. The strings may be plucked using either fingers or a plectrum (guitar pick), thus creating the sound of notes or chords. The strings of a guitar produce little sound by themselves. Instead, their vibration must be amplified to audibly useful levels. In general, this amplication is achieved either mechanically or electronically, with the result being that there are two main categories of guitar: acoustic (mechanical amplification) and electric (electronic amplification).




