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Introduction to Tablature - Part 2

Introduction to Guitar Tablature - Part 1

Although we call it guitar tabs nowadays, tablature has been around since the a5th century. It was used to write for lutes, vihuela, ukelele. It was used in Renaissance and Baroque eras; there were many types of tablature for even for organs. Today it is commonly used for guitar and stringed instruments and the like. For us, we will solely focus on guitar tablature. Unlike music notation, tablature indicates the note to be played in numbers rather than musical pitches or notes on music sheets. Guitar tablature allows you to read and write the technical aspect of playing the guitar. Techniques such as hammer-on, vibrato, pull-offs, etc. are all easily demonstratable. Here's an example Add caption Guitar tablature is easily adapted into bass player's tablature as well. The diagram of a tablature as shown above is the view of the guitar if you kept it on your lap frets upward. The top most line is high 6th string and the bottom the lowest E. The numbers are the note you need to fr...

Barre Chords [MT-6]

According to the Wikipedia definition it states; "In music, a  barre chord   is a type of  chord  on a  guitar  or other stringed instrument, that the musician plays by using one or more fingers to press down multiple strings across a single fret of the fingerboard (like a  bar  pressing down the strings). In guitar chord diagrams we seen how they are demonstrated in our previous sessions. A bar chord is demonstrated in similarly diagram as shown above. The diagram is interpreted in the guitar tablature manner, where the chord diagram is flipped 90 degrees. If you keep your guitar flat on your lap, that's the view of the diagram in tablature. [A topic which will be covered more extensively in GT sessions later]. The most important factor is knowing what the root note of that barre chords is. Root notes, octaves and more of these will also be covered at GT when I go in-depth with music scales and its applications. The root note on first diagra...

Music Theory Fundementals: Note Values [MT-4]

Now that you know the parts to each note, we’ll take a closer look at those filled and open note heads discussed prior. Whether a note head is filled or open shows us the note’s value, or how long that note should be held. Start with a closed note head with a stem. That’s our quarter note, and it gets one beat. An open note head with a stem is a half note, and it gets two beats. An open note that looks like an “o” without a stem is a whole note, and it gets held for four beats. There are other ways to extend the length of a note. A dot after the note head, for example, adds another half of that note’s duration to it. So, a half note with a dot would equal a half note and a quarter note; a quarter note with a dot equals a quarter plus an eighth note. A tie may also be used to extend a note. Two notes tied together should be held as long as the value of both of those notes together, and ties are commonly used to signify held notes that cross measures or bars. The opposite may also happen...

Music Theory Fundementals: The Musical Note [MT-3]

The Musical Note Notes  on the staff tell us which note  to play on our instrument and how long to play it. There are three parts of each note; is the note Head, the Stem, and the Flag. Every note has a note head, either filled (black) or open (white). Where the note head sits on the staff (either on a line or space) determines which note you will play. Sometimes, note heads will sit above or below the five lines and four spaces of a staff. In that case, a line (known as a ledger line) is drawn through the note, above the note or below the note head, to indicate the note letter to play, as in the B and C notes above. The note stem is a thin line that extends either up or down from the note head. The line extends from the right if pointing upward or from the left if pointing downward. The direction of the line doesn’t affect how you play the note but serves as a way to make the notes easier to read while allowing them to fit neatly on the staff. As a rule, any notes at or above...

Music Theory Fundementals: Basic Symbols & Notations [MT-2]

I will be covering only the fundamentals of music theory at the Guitar Therapy classes. Nowadays we are blessed as guitar players that we have the guitar tablature, of which I will cover thoroughly during other GT sessions. Guitar tablature allows an advantage for guitar players over other musicians. We are giving the guitar player the ability to read music no matter how complex a piece and play it with ease. But however today, we look at basic classical musical notation symbols and what they mean. Music is made up of a variety of symbols, the most basic of which are the staff, the clefs, and the notes. All music contains these fundamental components, and to learn how to read music, you must first familiarize yourself with these basics. The staff consists of five lines and four spaces. Each of those lines and each of those spaces represents a different letter, which in turn represents a note. Those lines and spaces represent notes named A-G, and the note sequence moves alphabetically u...

The Hierarchy of Competence

The hierarchy of competence is sometimes also referred to as the stages of learning. These are the psychological stages of learning or acquiring a new skill. Mr. Noel Burch used it at Gordon Training International in the 1970s' as a training model for its employees. I came across this while reading a book by mental game coach  Dr. Jared Tendler  called  The Mental Game of Poker . I found it very interesting and realized that we could apply this in learning to play the guitar, because technically, what we are really doing is acquiring the new skillset of playing an instrument. As you can see in the diagram, acquiring a new skill is gradual progress that starts from being unconscious incompetent and ends at unconscious competence when mastery is achieved. 1]  Unconscious Incompetence This is the beginner stage. You have just come across the guitar or seen someone play, and you like it! You want to play it, yet you do not where to start though. Bec...

Say the Magic Words & You May Enter [T-3]

The first step for any guitar student is to learn the way the guitar is tuned. Majority of guitar players have their instruments to tuned to the standard tuning. The standard tuning is, starting from the top string, E, A, D, G, B, E. To remember this we use the time tested mythological phrase - "Every Able Dog Gets Beef Everyday".

The Anatomy of a Guitar - [T-2]

By the end of this post, you will be able to know the parts of the guitar. You will also understand the value behind knowing the mechanics and the parts of your guitar as the first step to building a solid foundation & learning your new instrument. Those of you who love racing would have seen the recent movie that came late 2019,  Ford v Ferrari . Not a bad film. More importantly, it shows the genius of British race car driver and mechanic, Ken Miles portrayed by Christian Bale in the movie. The pivotal reason for Ken Miles being such a legendary driver was also because of his mechanical background. See he helped develop the racing car Ford came up to battle Ferrari for the  Le Mans , his understanding of the mechanics of the car allowed him to be a super ace driver. Just like Ken Miles, if you know how the guitar and the mechanics and physics of the instrument, it would be a solid foundation for you to become an ace guitar player. Just as good as ken Miles was a dri...

The Road Map of a Guitar Student [T-1]

As a new aspiring guitarist, one of the first questions you will ask yourself is, "So, where do I start?" In this era of information, you will find loads of data on the web; on Youtube and online content, it easy to get lost in it. Why do we even need a coach when you can study online? Of course, you can, and if you have the talent for music, you will eventually learn as I did. When I grew up and was a teenager of 11 years when I started playing guitar, we never had the content freely available nowadays, all on your fingertips. There was a time my new guitar friends and I will visit an older peer who plays guitar well; we will do him favors or give him cigarettes so that he will teach us the new cool scale or the new Steve Vai fretting exercises that will 'super-speed up' your fingers etc. We would absorb any teeny tiny bit of information on guitar we could find, or anyone would teach us, and play it to shreds. Hell, I remember the first time I bought a full cou...

A bit about Myself and Guitar Therapy

Join   Guitar Therapy   today!!  - One to One classes I'm graduate from the International College of Music [ICOM] in Malaysia [the year 2006] and been in the Audio production field for 14 years. My primary instrument is the guitar and has experience of 29 years of playing and also teaching friends. I also have formal training in the pre-foundation of music theory, composition, and music production. My commercial works include audio post-production for TV ads, recording & mixing for local artists, and I also played guitar for band Kushehnooney's album 'Lah', which can be heard on Baiskoafu. I run my 0own audio production label called SellingKarma Productions [S.K Producitions]. I have had the privilege to work alongside with musical talents such as Meyna Hassan, Flu-Nashid, Affan, Dimba Ishantey, Kushehnooney, Appi, Kayano, and many more on various occasions. My biggest career milestone stone being working for a live gig as crew for James Brown concert,...

Welcome to Guitar Therapy - One to one Tutorship

Greetings all string-pulling, jumping, slamming, ass-kicking, ax-wielding musicians. This is for all of you guitar freaks out there! Don't be fooled so easily though, my private coaching sessions do not only cover guitar, but also music theory, learning pathways to advancing your music skills, composition, and basics of arrangements as well. So whether you want to shred out, or learn to write your own songs on your guitar, you are at the right place. It's in a long time we are making, and I think it's finally time to give it away for the new generation. First, before I go any further, I want to say that I'm not a guitar guru, nor a music maestro, I consider myself always as a student of music. Yes, my primary instrument is music, and I also play piano, drums a little bit, and the bass as every guitarist would or should. I've been playing for 29 years and have enough experience teaching not only guitar but music production as well. I have formal education in mus...