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john82Participant
thanks so much for posting this….
i love chuck berry, he invented rock n’ roll i don’t care what anybody else says… without him the music today wouldnt be what it is.
john82Participantthank you, this has been very helpful!
i know exactly what your’e talking about with the deciding thing…
i sometimes spend hours messing with fx for a guitar part, and constantly switching back and forth between effects cuz i can’t decide.
aside from wasting time this also really puts my creative side asleep and i lose my “muse”…
from now on i’m just going to have to get a second opinion on stuff that i can’t decide – never thought of that before!
john82Participantthanx for this,
i’d just like to note that bending is a very important element in my opinion,
so i would make this lesson is little more extensive – there’s alot one can
do with bending and lots of different styles…
anyway, it’s good for beginners – thanx again!
john82Participanthey,
this is a nice exercise, i’ve practiced it for about an hour now –
still not getting that nice rhythm but i’m getting there!!
i saw that i can change the sound of the palm strike alot if playing with the amp’s bass level…
i’ll try this on an acoustic guitar, should sound nice i think…
john82ParticipantI agree there’s no “rule” as to which kind of guitar a beginner should buy. i think the most important thing is to buy a kind which fits the kind of music you like and what you’ll probably end up playing the most. for example if your’e totally into metal you won’t have much to do with an acoustic guitar. if your’e more into playing folk rock or other easygoing stuff then an acoustic might be a better choice.
also don’t spend alot of money on your first guitar- first see that you really like playing guitar and will keep playing, or else you might regret it.
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