Chord Guitar
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Guitar Chords Poster Print, 22x34
$3.99 Decorate your home or office with high quality posters. Guitar Chords is that perfect piece that matches your style, interests, and budget.... |
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Guitar Chords Poster Print, 22x34
$4.98 AllPosters.com is the world's #1 seller of posters, prints, photographs, specialty products and framed art. We're dedicated to bringing our customers the best selection of high quality wall décor that is perfect for their home or office. Browse our catalog of over 300,000 items that include entertainment and specialty posters, decorative prints, and art reproductions. Whether you're looking for y... |
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Guitar Chords (Key Progressions) Music Poster Print - 24x36
$3.46 Guitar Chords (Key Progressions) Music Poster Print - 24x36... |
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Danny Gatton: Strictly Rhythm Guitar
$14.32 In Hot Licks: Danny Gatton 2 - Strictly Rhythm Guitar, Danny Gatton presents a comprehensive study on rhythm guitar styles and playing technique with lessons covering everything from blues/jazz chord substitutions, rockabilly and country power chords, R&B and Motown rhythm, and even some acoustic country/bluegrass guitar ideas! Gatton shows you how to play the rhythm parts slowly at first, before ... |
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Ronnie Earl: Blues Guitar With Soul
$14.34 Inspired by Muddy Waters, he has mastered a variety of blues techniques which he demonstrates in the styles of Little Walter, B.B. King, and many more blues greats. On Blues Guitar with Soul, Ronnie's lessons cover question-and-answer phrasings, turnarounds, and string bending while getting the maximum sound out of the minimum notes! The man B.B. King called "one of the most serious blues guitaris... |

How can I make guitar chord changes smoother / easier?
I'm teaching my guitar and the problem I have is to change chords. Do you have any tips to make it smooth can also recommend songs that would be useful for these repititions or chord changes easier?
Well, practice and repetition is the key. It's called muscle memory. You have to train your brain and fingers to remember the chords. Boring as it sounds, doing the same movements over and over again will burn the tracks in your brain and make the movements become second nature. This is where you want to be with chord changes ….. do not even think about them. Choose a couple of songs with the basic chord changes and play to death. Start slow and build up great speed, for the sake of memory muscle is more important to be precise. Speed will come later. When changing chords, analyze where your fingers and goes from. Some chord changes of a position common, which can become a pivot … ie a finger that does not have to move and provides a reference point. One example is to change C Am Only a finger is actually moving. With C D7, which revolve around your index finger (2nd string, first fret) chord Other similar geometry, but in adjacent chains. E, Am, for example, are the same the fingering, but a chain of more. If you learn to play G using your pinky on the high wire, then the change in GC is very efficient. Move the two fingers under more of a string and a pointer thud down on the second string. Also the strumming practice. Keep pace with his right hand and do not let your left, while changes chords. Once again start as slow as you need. Bottom line: find the most effective way of making changes, then repeat until your fingers know the road without your help. Best of luck to you.