Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

From $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Strumming the Guitar: Guitar Strumming for Beginners and Upward with Audio and Video
Strumming the Guitar: Guitar Strumming for Beginners and Upward with Audio and Video
Strumming the Guitar: Guitar Strumming for Beginners and Upward with Audio and Video
Ebook138 pages39 minutes

Strumming the Guitar: Guitar Strumming for Beginners and Upward with Audio and Video

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars

()

Read preview

About this ebook

Strumming the Guitar Book 1 is a detailed course for beginners and upward, focusing solely on the subject of guitar strumming. Separate sections take on strumming, changing chords and coordinating chord changes while strumming, therefore maintaining a thorough approach throughout with components broken down at every level. With this incremental method, this guitar strumming book enables beginners to absorb everything important from the start and progress consistently as the difficulty level increases.

Guitar Strumming Techniques - Before anything else, the basics of strumming are covered from the ground up, assisted with professional hand drawn illustrations. Learn how to hold the plectrum for strumming, how to strum chords that require you to miss certain strings, pre-emptive chord changing, open strums and more.

Guitar Strumming Patterns - 70 different guitar strumming patterns that can be used throughout the book, all written with easy to understand, graphical, strumming diagrams.

Rhythmical Notation - Understand the common language of music by becoming familiar with rhythmical notation. Learn whole notes, half notes, quarter notes, eighth notes, their equivalent rests, dotted notes, ties and the basics of time signatures. All shown with clear charts and diagrams.

Chord Changes - Seven groups of chord changes, made up almost entirely of open chords. The book starts with the easiest chord changes in which fretting finger locations can be shared and works up to more difficult chord changes where fretting fingers need to relocate in independent directions.

Strumming Exercises and Study Pieces - Every section includes strumming exercises that combine chord changes with strumming, each section concluding with a musical study piece using the skills learnt in styles of Slow Pop, Spanish style, Grunge and Country Pop. In total there are 85 strumming exercises and 10 musical study pieces, while more combinations can be found by selecting from the 70 given strumming patterns to use with them.

Audio and Video - All exercises and musical study pieces are demonstrated with audio (downloadable 154 MB). All study pieces have a backing track for you to play over. Online videos (21 in total size of 775 MB) are also used to enhance explanations.

Please Note: The eBook includes musical pieces so is not suitable for smaller screens.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 14, 2019
ISBN9781912135530
Strumming the Guitar: Guitar Strumming for Beginners and Upward with Audio and Video

Read more from Gareth Evans

Related to Strumming the Guitar

Titles in the series (2)

View More

Related ebooks

Music For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Strumming the Guitar

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars
0 ratings

0 ratings0 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

    Book preview

    Strumming the Guitar - Gareth Evans

    Available

    ISBN 978-1-912135-53-0

    Written by Gareth Evans

    Copyright © 2019 by Intuition Publications

    www.guitar-book.com

    International Copyright Secured. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher

    Introduction

    Welcome to Strumming for Guitar. A guide, solely on the subject of strumming the guitar taking you from the ground up for beginners and towards intermediate level.

    The book has an incremental, detailed and methodical approach allowing the beginner to absorb everything important from the start. While not going too fast for a slower learner there is plenty of material to occupy a faster learner who will find challenges they’ll need to spend time on. The book contains 70 strumming patterns in total, all shown with easy-to-understand diagrams.

    As the general difficulty level progresses, separate approaches are taken on strumming alone, changing chords alone and coordinating chord changes while strumming, therefore encouraging a thorough approach throughout with components broken down at every level. Reading rhythmical notation is covered and further details, nuances and tips are given and assisted with professionally hand drawn illustrations as the book progresses.

    Each section concludes with a musical study piece using the skills learnt and practised. Exercises and musical study pieces are demonstrated with audio. For some parts, videos (21) are used, where it serves to make for a better explanation. The symbols for audio and video will appear as folllows:

    Some parts of the book refer to and are linked to other parts, to return to your previous location just use the back button on your eReader. Make sure your guitar is tuned to standard tuning EADGBE. A guide to tuning a guitar can be found here.

    The link to the Audio and Video files can be found at this link at the back of the book

    Chapter 1 - The Basics of Strumming & Rhythm

    How to Read Chord Diagrams

    First a quick primer on how to read chord diagrams. Chord diagrams provide a graphical representation of the fret-board. In the following example the parts and their functions are labeled.

    The Strumming Hand

    Let’s look at how to hold a plectrum. The way we hold a plectrum for strumming is very similar to how we would hold it for playing single note melodies (e.g. for a guitar solo). Curl the index finger around and place the plectrum between the side of this finger and the pad of the thumb. The plectrum should point in more or less the same direction that the palm faces.

    If new to strumming, you may feel like pushing the rest of the fingers together, almost like a fist, to get more control and hold everything in place, as shown in the picture below. This can make the hand a little too rigid for the fluid movements needed for strumming.

    With the other fingers not pushed together, even if they are still close to each other, strumming becomes easier, as shown in the picture below left. Another variation is with fingers spread out more, as shown below right. Either of these two postures, or anywhere between them, will work best to allow the strumming hand freedom to move fluidly.

    Enjoying the preview?
    Page 1 of 1