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Play Great Guitar: Brilliant Ideas for Getting More Out of Your Six-string PDF

255 Pages·2008·8.214 MB·English
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Play guitar text pages 7.qxd:Guitar text 12/2/08 21:16 Page i Play great guitar Play guitar text pages 7.qxd:Guitar text 26/2/08 12:04 Page ii “The guitar is a small orchestra. It is polyphonic. Every string is a different colour, a different voice.” Andrés Segovia Play guitar text pages 7.qxd:Guitar text 26/2/08 11:21 Page iii Play great guitar Brilliant ideas for getting more out of your six-string RIKKY ROOKSBY brilliantideas Play guitar text pages 7.qxd:Guitar text 12/2/08 21:16 Page iv Copyright © The Infinite Ideas Company Limited, 2008 Music copyright © 2008 Rikky Rooksby The right of Rikky Rooksby to be identified as the author of this book has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. First published in 2008 by The Infinite Ideas Company Limited 36 St Giles Oxford, OX1 3LD United Kingdom www.infideas.com All rights reserved. Except for the quotation of small passages for the purposes of criticism or review, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning or otherwise, except under the terms of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 or under the terms of a licence issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency Ltd, 90 Tottenham Court Road, London W1T 4LP, UK, without the permission in writing of the publisher. Requests to the publisher should be addressed to the Permissions Department, Infinite Ideas Limited, 36 St Giles, Oxford, OX1 3LD, UK, or faxed to +44 (0)1865 514777. A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 978–1–905940–56–1 Brand and product names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners. Designed and typeset by Baseline Arts Ltd, Oxford Printed in India iv Play guitar text pages 7.qxd:Guitar text 12/2/08 21:16 Page v Brilliant ideas Brilliant features.................................................................................................................xii Introduction.........................................................................................................................xiii 1. It’s a classical gas, gas, gas..........................................................................................1 You play guitar, so what is more important than choice of instrument? First brilliant idea: get a new guitar. Go on, admit it … you hoped I’d say this, didn’t you? 2. This machine kills boredom...........................................................................................5 Walk down a city street anywhere in the world and the chances are if you meet a guitar- wielding busker they will be singing to the backing of a strummed steel-strung acoustic. 3. Tune up, plug in, turn on...............................................................................................9 So you think electric guitars are only for unwashed youths in low-slung denim who like noise with a capital N and have band names like Unholy Doom tattooed on their knuckles? 4. Cop a capo.....................................................................................................................13 Think of Paul Weller’s ‘Wild Wood’, Oasis’ ‘Wonderwall’ and Travis’ ‘Why Does It Always Rain On Me’ … you’ll never get any of them to sound right on guitar without one of these. 5. A rule of thumb............................................................................................................17 They may be digitally challenged in the finger-length stakes – but hey! Equal rights for thumbs now! Your music might occasionally need a fretting thumb. 6. Going offbeat................................................................................................................23 Here’s a quick way to make your guitar playing take off. The clue to playing many songs in folk and blues fingerstyles is the offbeat (syncopated) pattern. v Play guitar text pages 7.qxd:Guitar text 12/2/08 21:16 Page vi Play great guitar 7. Flatpicking – best of both worlds..............................................................................27 You know about playing guitar with a pick or playing with your fingers. But why not do both at once? Think you can’t do both at once? Read on. 8. The art of strumming...................................................................................................31 As famed French hot-jazz guitarist Des Cartes once said, I strum, therefore I am. Strum well and the whole world strums with you (in an air guitar kind of way). 9. Learn some new chords...............................................................................................35 If harmony is a continent of sound and emotion, each chord is a village. So why not go travelling occasionally and find other places to make your own. 10. Get flat – stay sharp....................................................................................................41 Think of a piano keyboard. It has two colours, white and black. Chords are that way too, on piano or guitar. So come and meet the five flats and sharps. 11. Seventh heaven............................................................................................................45 It only takes one extra note to move from the vanilla world of major and minor chords to the chocolate chip tub of the sevenths … and in four flavours too! 12. Be diverted – get inverted!.........................................................................................49 Strum any major or minor chord. It’s a familiar sound. But did you know there are two more shades of the same colour contained in what you’ve just heard? 13. Exotic stacks.................................................................................................................53 If Idea 11 was seventh heaven, then step up now for cloud nine. Here are some ninths and elevenths – chords that are seriously stacked. 14. Triads you can trust......................................................................................................57 When it comes to chords, size isn’t everything. Three-string friends to beginner and experienced player alike, here are the triads – the harmony gang that’s on your side. vi Play guitar text pages 7.qxd:Guitar text 12/2/08 21:16 Page vii Brilliant ideas 15. New light on ‘power-chords’.......................................................................................63 Did you know that music harmony has its own neutral zone? It’s true – a strange dank realm of drooling zombie flesh-eating chords that emerge as neither major nor minor. 16. Lift a finger/add a finger.............................................................................................67 There’s one reliable fall-back for finding new sounds and ideas on the guitar. Sometimes all that is required is ‘adjusted original digital technology’. In other words, move a finger! 17. No holds barred, or no barrés held?...........................................................................71 Here’s your free upgrade to the ‘adjusted original digital technology’ of the previous section, called ‘digital removal software’ … otherwise known as lifting a 1st finger that’s holding a barré! 18. Move on up, move on back.........................................................................................75 One way to find new sounds on the guitar is to take an open string chord and move it up or down. Get ready for hideous, kinky, startling and terrific. 19. The one-note shift........................................................................................................79 Altering one note at a time in a chord leads you down new musical paths. Let your fingers reshape themselves into new chords and go places you haven’t been before. 20. Instant blues.................................................................................................................85 Blues is like a universal language. Everybody recognises it, everybody can follow where a blues is going, and for decades the guitar has been its main mouthpiece. 21. Sweet blues..................................................................................................................89 Woke up this morning … Dang! You know, my lover she ain’t gone! Must be celebration time, and to celebrate on guitar you need another set of five notes. 22. You hexy thing..............................................................................................................93 You’ve heard of that old black magic so many blues guitarists claim to know? Well, put aside that shredded bat wing and the voodoo doll, and grab some musical magic. vii Play guitar text pages 7.qxd:Guitar text 12/2/08 21:16 Page viii Play great guitar 23. The not so famous five................................................................................................97 There are five-note scales that don’t get played as often as those used in blues and rock. Here’s a chance to explore some of these not-so-famous five. 24. Seven up (and down).................................................................................................103 Is there life beyond pentatonics? Does everything go in fives? Will our caped guitarists escape the hex and find the missing two notes? Tune in to this section’s exciting episode! 25. Magic numbers, magic changes.................................................................................107 With a threeand a fourand a twelveand a … You might have heard people say that music has a mathematical element. Well, maths was never this much fun. 26. It’s the reel thing........................................................................................................113 Here’s a new musical avenue to explore that may see you in future years in the corner of a boisterous pub playing folk tunes with others, your fingers a blur. 27. The twang’s the thang................................................................................................117 Before Hendrix and Clapton, the guitar came to the forefront of popular music by doing what singers do: it carried a melody – but in its own twangy way. 28. Two notes from one...................................................................................................121 It’s 3 a.m. In the lounge bar the barman sets you up another drink. There’s no sign of her. You sigh, grab your guitar and play … octaves! 29. Two voices, two fingers.............................................................................................127 With only two notes you can create the illusion of two voices and even whole chords. Do what two singers do when they harmonise, but lay it on the fretboard. 30. Riffing out...................................................................................................................131 Heard of ‘carbon neutral’? Heavy rock wants to be tonalneutral. There are no major or minor chords in the lost, dark dimensions, just a two-finger fifth. viii Play guitar text pages 7.qxd:Guitar text 12/2/08 21:16 Page ix Brilliant ideas 31. A hand full of weather...............................................................................................137 The sky changes, the land stays still. Make a low open string your land and let your fingers make weather. Here is the dramatic foundation of the pedal note. 32. When a note stays the same.....................................................................................141 Imagine music where one note stays the same regardless. Where one note stays the same regardless. Where one note … Let’s hear it for the drone … drone … drone. 33. A touch of retuning....................................................................................................145 Let’s twist again … with those tuning pegs. They can do more than just keep things in tune. With a turn of even one peg, new music beckons in ‘drop D’. 34. A sneaky rocker..........................................................................................................149 ‘Drop D’ tuning is not just for folk-style fingerpicking and gentle acoustic singer-songwriters. It’s a motherlode of heavy guitar riffs. GrrrROWWLL! 35. Voyage to the bottom of the C..................................................................................155 Take the 6th string down even further but add a new dimension to the result by putting on a capo. Result: deep bass, and new sounds from common chords. 36. Top down a notch.......................................................................................................159 Guitar retrieved from baggage hold yields new music after long flight? Can it be true? Yes it can. Find some new chords with this one easy tuning change. 37. Through a harmonic rift.............................................................................................163 Remember those nasty sharps and flats? Time to seek out new musical ideas, and to boldly go into the harmonic rift and into the Kingdom of the Enharmonics! 38. Look Ma, no hands.....................................................................................................167 Wouldn’t it be great if you could just play guitar with one finger … no more struggling with four-finger chord shapes … but wait! There is a way … ix

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