I explained to Max my problems with the fourth fret notes and he told me I was over complicating things. I was right to use the third finger for the fourth fret notes if I used my fist finger for the second fret notes. This meant that the one finger per fret rule was not broken. My problem with changing notes would be solved by me moving my next finger to the note after the next one before I played it. This meant that I was now thinking 2 notes ahead rather than one note ahead as I had been. I found this hard at first but I’m sure like everything else it will be a lot easier after practising it many times.
I was given another Rock School Grade One piece which I played OK but a little too fast and rushed through a couple of sections. Max reminded me to slow it down until I could play it correctly. It’s a golden rule when learning the guitar, when learning any musical instrument I’d imagine, and a previous lesson learnt, but it’s so important that it needs repeating: play slowly because if you can’t play a piece/chords/notes slowly then you will never be able to play them quickly.
I was also given the scale of G major to practise, as this is a good exercise that involves all 4 fingers and all 6 strings of the guitar. Other than that I told Max that although I felt my picking and note playing at improved fairly quickly, I was still struggling with chord changes. He told me to look at different ways of changing chords and suggested using different finger positions, for which he showed me G to C chord change as an example.
So I decided that in this week’s practise I wouldn’t spend as much time as usual on picking, and instead focus on chords. I strummed the A chord and then looked to change to the C chord. Previously I would have taken all 3 finger s off and then put them down again. This time I noticed one of my fingers was already on the correct string and fret (E note, fourth string, second fret) so I kept that finger pressed down as I moved my other two fingers. Voila – instantly quicker chord changes from A to C and C to A.
IMAGE: The A and C chords. Ignore the numbers. On both chords the note of E (fourth string, second fret) is already in place, so when changing from C to A or A to C, keep this finger pressed down while you move your other 2 fingers.
I strummed away on C and A for a bit and then added the G, D and E chords. This sequence – A, C, A, C, G, D, E, G, D, E sounded good, so I kept repeating it and varied my strumming. Pleased with my improvements in playing these chords I tried adding some sus 4 chords, as a major chord to a sus 4 chord is an easy change – you generally just add your fourth finger to a fret higher than one of the exsting notes. With this I came up with a riff – A, A sus4, A, A sus4 A, D, D sus4, D, D sus4, D, E, E sus4, E, E sus4, E. It sounds quite rocky. Pleased with the major and sus4 versions of the key 3 chords for beginners, I then had a go at strumming the minor chords. Starting with D minor, I then went to A minor and finally E minor before repeating again. For both the minor piece and the sus4 piece I varied my strumming.
I played all of these chord practices on both my electric and acoustic guitars – with growing confidence and ability I was now more comfortable playing chords on my acoustic. It’s perfect for practising as there is less room for error with an electric. Once you can play something quite well on an acoustic, then it is easy to play on an electric.
My guitar music discovery continued this week and for the first time it didn’t involve music from the 1990’s. I watched the 2 hour Queen documentary – Days of Our Lives – and was compelled to buy their Platinum Collection – Queen’s Greatest Hits I (the biggest selling album in the UK of all time), Greatest Hits II (my favourite of theirs) and III which has a mixture of live tracks, remixes, solo tracks, and post-Freddie releases. Upon watching David Bowie perform Queen Bitch on a Top of the Pops 1970s and hearing that instantly memorable guitar riff, I also downloaded his famous Hunky Dory album. I looked up the tab and had a go but soon gave up and returned to my practise of traditional songs, Rock School Grade One pieces, and major and minor chord changes.
I also had another guitar dream – I dreamt that I was onstage with Radiohead and I was playing the A and C chords on a black Les Paul Gibson, for which I had no guitar strap so had to hold the guitar and try and play it at the same time. What do you make of that then Freud?
Lessons learnt: E Sus4 chord, A7 chord, play slowly and correctly, look at different ways of changing chords.