The acoustic guitar is used to create musical accompaniment in everyday life. According to the majority of fans of this popular instrument, it is quite easy to learn how to play it. The most important thing is to be able to link theory with practice.
Instructions
Step 1
Be aware that acoustic guitar is played in several ways. The first way is brute force. It is especially typical for classical guitar playing. While busting with your right hand, you pick sounds one by one in a specific order. The numbers in the score indicate the numbers of the strings. Enumeration is very suitable for playing melodic classical pieces.
Step 2
The next way: solo is a lot like brute force, with the only difference that here the sounds are also extracted one by one, but without observing the sequence. If you are singing and playing a guitar solo at the same time, then you should do it at the same tempo. The combination of solo and brute force is called mixed mode. This method is used by professional guitarists who create a rich, rich melody with its help. Mixed mode is most commonly used when playing acoustic guitar.
Step 3
When playing rock compositions, guitarists use another method in which sounds are extracted from all strings at the same time. It's called a fight. If several guitarists perform at once, then for greater expressiveness they can demonstrate all of the above methods of playing at the same time. When playing a six-string guitar, for greater convenience, the index, middle, ring and pinky fingers of the left hand are designated by the corresponding numbers 1, 2, 3, 4. The thumb, as you know, does not participate in the game. The fingers of the right hand, except for the little finger that does not participate in the game, are conventionally designated in Latin letters - P (p), I (i), M (m), A (a). These marks are used when writing the score and should be remembered. A piece of music must have a certain size. For example, a measure is a piece of a piece of music. It can be 1/4, 1/8, 1/12, 1/16, etc. There are several notes in each measure. The ratio of their number in a measure to the measure itself is the time signature.