Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Guitar Solo Contest

I entered a guitar solo contest! You can see and hear my entry at the link below. Enjoy!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=miU_9kFobAE


The song is called "Reaching For You" by Christian music artist Lincoln Brewster (who is a phenomenal guitarist). I composed and played my own lead guitar solo over Lincoln's track for this contest.

You can search for and view other entries on YouTube too. Many of them are quite good.


Bookmark and Share


Play Until Yer Fingers Bleed!
Mr. Desi Serna

Website: http://Guitar-Music-Theory.com
Facebook: http://facebook.com/guitarmusictheory
Twitter: http://twitter.com/MrGuitarTheory
YouTube: http://youtube.com/GuitarMusicTheoryTab
Podcast: http://bit.ly/ac4cDk

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Fretboard Theory Amazon Kindle

Fretboard Theory is now available for the Amazon Kindle!

http://www.amazon.com/Fretboard-Theory-ebook/dp/B004ASNACS

You can now download my best-selling guitar theory book from Amazon.com and view it on your Amazon Kindle portable reading device. Within minutes you can start learning about scales, chords, progressions, modes and more. The ebook is a complete guitar theory course with tons of references to popular songs.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

New Guitar Facebook Page

Hey blog followers!

I have a new Facebook page devoted entirely to guitar lessons and music news. Visit the link below, click on "Like" and stay tuned!

http://www.facebook.com/guitarmusictheory


Bookmark and Share


Play Until Yer Fingers Bleed!
Mr. Desi Serna

Website: http://Guitar-Music-Theory.com
Facebook: http://facebook.com/guitarmusictheory
Twitter: http://twitter.com/MrGuitarTheory
YouTube: http://youtube.com/GuitarMusicTheoryTab
Podcast: http://bit.ly/ac4cDk

Barre Chords Are a B*tch!

“I’ve been trying to play bar cords for about 2 years But I have arthritis in my hands and I cant straighten my index finger so all the strings don’t get pushed down. Do you know of anything I can do about this? I was thinking about taping something to my finger to make it straight but I don’t know what that would be. I’m 70 years old and I would like to be able to play bar cords. Thanks. I bought a lot of your stuff, I think is very good If I could only do it.”

GUITAR BARRE CHORDS
There are a few things you can do to help with playing guitar barre chords.

PARTIAL CHORD SHAPES
The first thing is to work with partial shapes. Experiment with just fretting and playing pieces of the chord instead of the whole thing. For example, with barre chords along string 6 you could just finger strings 6, 5 and 4 and play power chords. Or you could just finger strings 5, 4 and 3 (this would be a fifth, root and third which makes a full chord). Be sure to only strum the strings you’re fretting on.

"F" CHORD
Another partial example is the common “F” chord played in the first position. It’s actually just part of a full barre chord with strings 5 and 6 omitted. You can move this shape around the neck and use it in place of full barre chords (just be sure to only strum the strings you’re fretting on). Jimi Hendrix was famous for using this partial shape and then wrapping his thumb around the neck to fret the root on string 6. For many players, including me, this fingering is not so hard and quite comfortable.

"A FORM" BARRE CHORD
With an "A form" barre chord you don't really need to barre. You can just grab the root on string 5 with your index finger and then flatten your ring finger out for the rest. Just be sure to avoid strumming the first string.

Here are a handful of pictures that demonstrate some fingering possibilities.




CHANGE UP
I have found that there is no perfect barre chord fingering. I end up using them all depending on what kind of sound I want and what makes my hand comfortable. If I have to play barre chords through an entire song with little or no breaks, then I change up my fingerings just to prevent my hand from cramping.

PLAY THROUGH SONGS
Be patient, start with simplified shapes, and give yourself time to get comfortable with something before you try to take on more. For example, in lesson I used to make students play through every song they knew just using the “F” shape and moving it around the neck. Sometimes it would take weeks for them to play through everything. By then they were pretty good at it and were ready to move on and try more.

Partial chord shapes for common barre chords plus the entire CAGED chord system with arpeggio patterns is taught in my book Fretboard Theory Chapter 3 and also my DVD entitled CAGED Template Chord System. Click the links and sign up for free previews.


Bookmark and Share


Play Until Yer Fingers Bleed!
Mr. Desi Serna

Website: http://Guitar-Music-Theory.com
Facebook: http://facebook.com/guitarmusictheory
Twitter: http://twitter.com/MrGuitarTheory
YouTube: http://youtube.com/GuitarMusicTheoryTab
Podcast: http://bit.ly/ac4cDk

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Guitar Tab and Learning Songs

This is just a reminder that my books and DVDs will NOT teach you how to play songs, but rather the *theory* behind songs.

With that said, I give away free guitar tab that corresponds to my free videos on YouTube.

TAB
http://guitar-music-theory.com/tab-mp3.html

YOUTUBE
http://www.youtube.com/user/GuitarMusicTheoryTab

These tabs make a great study companion to the materials I sell because I reference these songs throughout the course.

WHAT MAKES UP A SONG?
If you want to become a better guitar player and a good musician, then it's important to not just memorize songs but also understand what makes up a song and why.

GUITAR THEORY
Developing a good working knowledge of guitar theory, including what scales to use, why chords go together and how to properly visualize the fretboard, can dramatically improve your ability to learn and remember songs, use things you already know, improvise and compose your own music.

And knowing the *inside secrets* makes music more interesting and enjoyable too!

GET THE THEORY NOW!
http://bit.ly/aJoij7


Bookmark and Share


Play Until Yer Fingers Bleed!
Mr. Desi Serna

Website: http://Guitar-Music-Theory.com
Facebook: http://facebook.com/guitarmusictheory
Twitter: http://twitter.com/MrGuitarTheory
YouTube: http://youtube.com/GuitarMusicTheoryTab
Podcast: http://bit.ly/ac4cDk