Guitar chords can come about hard in favor of the beginner, nearby seems to come about so many chords to become skilled at and how make you remember all of them? Everyone who has endlessly tried to become skilled at the guitar long for remember, endless hard chord shapes, buzzing strings and unmusical sounds.
Try these four tips and you will be well on your way to overcoming the guitar chord blues.
Memory Cards
The superlative way to recall chord names and mix the chord last name with the correct chord mold is via data remembrance cards. Simply make use of a space indicator certificate with the chord last name on single part of the certificate and the correct chord mold on the other part of the certificate.
Use these data memory cards like question and answer cards, look at them each day adding new cards as you learn more chords. The concept is, you would have three piles of cards — a daily pile, weekly pile and monthly pile.
Once you get the answer correct place the card in a weekly pile, at the end of the week, test yourself with all the chords in the weekly pile, the data cards that you correctly answered from the weekly pile move to the monthly pile, the cards that were answered incorrectly go back to the daily pile.
You will be able to remember an enormous number of chords using this method:
Easy Shapes
Most of the chord shapes presented in commercially available guitar lessons are too difficult for beginners. The generic chord shapes contained in these books are technically correct however highly impractical for the guitarist, even an experienced player.
The solution is to re-design the chord shapes in a way that only requires 2 or 3 fingers with minimum finger movement between chords. Modify any chord shape so that you are only playing the first 3 or 4 strings. this will give you a good sounding chord without all the unnecessary stretching.
Chord Stamp
When you are changing chords take special note of how your fingers make up the chord shape.
The idea is to have all your fingers stamp down on the chord in one single movement, not two of three movements. Think of your fingers coming down on the strings like a rubber stamp.
Metronome
Once you know the chord shape you will need to develop speed and accuracy with your chord changes.
Use a metronome to monitor your progress. Start by setting the metronome to 60 beat per minute. Select a chord progression to practice, strum the chord on the first beat of the bar and listen to the metronome for the remaining three beats. The idea is to get the next chord change accurately on the first beat
of the next bar, if the chord change isn’t accurate, slow the metronome down.
We want to use the metronome to track our progress, don’t set the metronome and try to reach the tempo, rather use the metronome to monitor our daily progress. Gradually increase the tempo over time.
The on the whole imperative matter to keep in the field of mind is to tap your base and concentrate on on the increase your rhythm.
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