Page 4 of 4

How do I teach myself guitar?

Posted: Thu Dec 06, 2007 5:57 pm
by madmanmunt_Archive
What is a "bat grip"? Is this where you hold the guitar wrong?

How do I teach myself guitar?

Posted: Thu Dec 06, 2007 6:34 pm
by Verbs and Nouns_Archive
Image

Sorry, that had to be done.

How do I teach myself guitar?

Posted: Thu Dec 06, 2007 7:25 pm
by scott_Archive
"bat grip" or "baseball grip" refers to where your thumb is wrapped around the back of the neck rather than being somewhere more near the middle of the back side.

How do I teach myself guitar?

Posted: Thu Dec 06, 2007 7:29 pm
by ubercat_Archive
Jesus, who knew discussions about guitar grip could be so difficult. I think that the need for a bat grip player to stretch beyond three frets forces the evolution into switching in and out. People who learn using the standard grip usually stick with it, no?

I guess I'm not sure what the fuck I'm saying. LOL. :)

How do I teach myself guitar?

Posted: Sat Dec 08, 2007 10:30 pm
by etch_Archive
I would learn most of the major and minor chords as well as the blues scale. The blues scale is easy and unlocks a lot of possibilities.

Once you get going you could learn tab and practice riffs and what not.

How do I teach myself guitar?

Posted: Sun Dec 09, 2007 9:00 am
by sparky_Archive
I've just remembered this marvelous interview with Rick Bishop of the Sun City Girls.

|Rick Bishop wrote: Years later I started messing around on guitar again and tried to learn what I could from records and the radio. This was a bad concept and I don't recommend it to anybody. I then started playing by trial and error, remembering the musical patterns and sounds that my grandfather and his friends used to play. I built on that until I felt I could go in any direction I wanted without any rules. After a while I began buying advanced guitar theory books, having no idea what they were all about, and started interpreting them in a way that made little or no sense to anybody else. I would seek out and try to invent chords and lines that were based on shapes and designs as opposed to those that are based on any standard musical theory. If certain invented chords or lines didn't sound good, I would change the tuning of the guitar instead of changing the chord design or the individual note patterns. I had my own highly personalized system of visual guitar geometrics and I convinced myself, with very little effort, that it was the correct way to approach the instrument. By doing things the hard way, eventually everything else became easy. Later on people started coming to me asking for guitar lessons, but I would never do that to anyone! Everybody is better off when they learn on their own.