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How long does it take a complete beginner to learn to play a guitar properly? My pat-ready answer is 'not very long'. For a more detailed one, it depends on what you mean by 'properly'.

There are a few stages of guitar learning that everyone goes through and each one of these relate to different levels of skill. Certain things you will learn quickly and others will take longer. For example, if your final destination is the ability to strum sing-a-long songs on the beach or around the fire you'll reach your goal faster than the guy who wants to play speedy metal solo's.

Here's a breakdown of the stages of guitar learning and the approximate time it might take you to get there.

Playing Basic Chords - This is usually the first benchmark most new players reach: The ability to strum and switch between the basic guitar chords. At this point you don't necessarily have the chords memorized and aren't able to play many songs, but you're managing to fret and strum them. This level can be reached within one week.

Playing easy songs - You've mastered more guitar chords and have been practicing them enough that you've got most of them memorized and are able to strum and switch between them without too much hassle, and without looking at the fretboard when you do. This means you can play songs! This level can be reached in two to three weeks of daily practice, though for many it might be longer.

Playing Barre and Power Chords - We're moving right along and you're advancing to a level where most self-taught guitarists never go. Barre Chords are much more difficult than open chords and learning these takes extra practice and a whole new set of strength in your fretting hand. It's possible to play most barre chords in two months, quicker for some who practice a lot.

Fingerpicking - The ability to pluck individual strings and play simple riffs (short solo pieces on individual strings) is a new skill your strumming hand needs to learn. This can usually be achieved in two to three months if you start to learn and play easy guitar tabs.

Lead Guitar - A Lead guitarist is the person who's got the audience at his beckoning. Playing solo's and using techniques like slurring, sliding and vibratois a whole new set of rules and I'd give it three to four months. This might be way off depending on what kind of music we're talking about - playing acoustic solo's might take less time, but metal solo's will take significantly longer.

The improviser - A guitarist that can improvise riffs and solos in the middle of a live song, has moved from the realm of amateurship to being a semi-pro. Depending on how much talent you have and what your musical background is, this might take anything from six months to a year.

Please note that these time lengths are given as a very broad estimate and aimed at people with little musical experience. If it takes you longer than a week to learn the basic chords, don't get upset. These times are not set in stone and you have to learn and develop at a pace that's natural and comfortable for you!

Leon Potgieter is a musician with many years of live performing experience. His website http://www.pluckandplayguitar.com is the ultimate online portal for absolute beginners wanting a no-fuss, hands-on approach to learning the world's favourite stringed instrument.

Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/music-articles/learning-guitar-how-long-does-it-take-1449815.html



www.nextlevelguitar.com Click the above link to get three free jam tracks from Next Level Guitar. Totally fun and FREE! In this lesson we teach a standard minor 2-5-1 jazzy rhythm and also how to play lead guitar using the Harmonic Minor Scale over the rhythm to create a more exotic sound. Many more lessons on the full on video instructional website at: www.nextlevelguitar.com

Lead Guitar

What sort of cable do you use to make a guitar lead?

I have made a few guitar leads but I have always done it with 2 core cable, if anyone would be able to tell me the name of the correct cable used to make guitar leads that would be great.

Any good quality shielded cable that's flexible will work. My favorites are made by Canare and Mogami.

You're going to want something without a lot of capacitance to it (specified in pF per 100 feet). The more capacitance, the more high frequency energy gets lost in the cable itself.

Don't get too hung up on terms like "Oxygen Free" or "Balanced Bandwidth"...they're just buzz words that some manufacturers use to justify a higher price.

Single conductor shielded cable is what most folks use to make guitar leads.

Good luck.

Greetings from Austin, Tx

Ken

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Many thanks for reading our Lead Guitar article

Playing lead guitar seems like the next logical step to getting some skills in rhythm playing. You might need to focus more on the quality of your playing when you switch to single note solos and lead guitar licks. To start playing lead guitar you will need to be familiar with the notes on the guitar fretboard. This might seem like a big job but it only takes a few minutes a day of finding the notes and playing them in all positions.

You will need to add sessions of alternate picking using scales to your daily guitar practice. Your picking technique is the basis of your lead guitar playing but there are other techniques like string bending and skipping as well as hammer-ons, pull-offs and string tapping.

If you are a rock or blues guitarist you will need to know the minor pentatonic and the blues scale. The blues scale is only the minor pentatonic scale with an added flattened fifth. You can also add a flattened third or seventh.

If you can make or download a twelve bar blues backing track to play in front of, just play the notes of the scale in any order, experimenting with your blue notes. You will gradually get the feel of playing solos as you start to break free from the scale structure and use licks to make your guitar speak.

Another way of practicing playing lead guitar is to focus on the notes you find in the chords. Start by making sure you have the notes firmly in your head, and play them in any order with your backing track playing.

You could devote some time each day to discovering playing lead guitar using arpeggios. This simply involves fingering chord shapes and playing them as single notes. You simply hold the chord shape and play the strings up from the sixth and down from the first, then in random order.

If you have not already learnt to read guitar tabs, you should start now. It only takes half an hour to get the basic idea, and learning tab will allow you to tap into all the lead guitar solos that other guitarists have written in tab and shared on the internet. You can find tabs on tablature archive sites, and you could also check out forums to see if the members post tabs of their work. And don't forget that guitar magazines are still alive and well, so take a look at any regular tab features they might be running.

Do you want to learn to play the guitar? Learn How To Play A Guitar For Free is a constantly updated blog which contains all the resources you need for: learning to play solo guitar, how to learn guitar chords, how to learn to read and play easy acoustic guitar tabs, finding a free online guitar tuner, looking for free guitar lessons online, and how to learn guitar scales.

Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/music-articles/playing-lead-guitar-the-first-steps-1013732.html

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