D'Addario Accessories Pro-Winder Guitar String Winder, Cutter, Bridge Pin Puller - All in One Guitar Tool - Black
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D’Addario Guitar Capo – NS Tri Action - For 6-String Electric and Acoustic Guitars – Micrometer Tension Adjustment for Buzz-Free, In-Tune Performance - Single Hand Use – Integrated Pick Holder - Black
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D'Addario Accessories Pro-Winder Guitar String Winder, Cutter, Bridge Pin Puller - All in One Guitar Tool - Black
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Jim Dunlop System 65 Body & Fingerboard Cleaning Kit (6503)

D’Addario Guitar Capo – NS Tri Action - For 6-String Electric and Acoustic Guitars – Micrometer Tension Adjustment for Buzz-Free, In-Tune Performance - Single Hand Use – Integrated Pick Holder - Black
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D'Addario Accessories Pro-Winder Guitar String Winder, Cutter, Bridge Pin Puller - All in One Guitar Tool - Black
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You're overthinking this. Go and get the guitar. You won't regret it. It's super easy and very common to be entirely self-taught. You can easily learn what the basic chord shapes are. There are tons of videos out there that help explain the correct way to play things. Annoyingly so a lot of the lessons I learned songs from I hate that they stop every 5 seconds to explain how to play a C chord for the millionth time as if we're going to learn to play the full song and not know how to play a C chord already.... Or any other random basic cord. The reason they do this is because if they don't the n**** angry comments from people who say they don't explain how to do it and they go too fast etc so they dumb it down which kind of sucks but at least you learn songs for free on the internet. Justin guitar, Guitar Zero to hero, Ryan Lendt, John Maclennan, guitar at work, learn guitar favorites. All of these are great channels on YouTube where you can learn hundreds of songs once you start playing. All you have to do is learn your basic chords. You can start rocking immediately once you learn a few basic chords. You might even have a guitar that comes with some sort of paper with basic chord shapes you can learn from. You can easily look all of this up on the internet. Just learn how to play these chords, A, A minor, C, D, E, E minor, F (there's an easy three finger way to play an F chord which you can find), G. Don't worry about the B chord yet because that's a bar chord which is harder. Don't need a B chord. Honestly most of the time instead of a B chord you will find songs using B minor which is also a bar chord. Don't worry about that yet either. You'll get there eventually. It will be very difficult at first to even get your hand to remember where to put your fingers. He will start by concentrating where to put each finger one by one which seems like it will take forever and you will feel like you'll never get it. You will. The best way to practice this when you're very very early be interstage is to just hold the guitar watching TV or something passive or you can just kind of practice where to put your fingers the right way. It will be very slow and difficult. Practice making your hand remember the correct shape of the cord. Try to see how fast you can switch between them. Don't concentrate on speed as much as accuracy. Better to be slow and accurate than fast and sloppy. Eventually you will notice that you can switch faster and faster very cleanly once your hand starts to remember what these shapes feel like. From what I've learned about muscle memory the brain needs a good 12 or 15 repetitions in a row done correctly before it starts becoming muscle memory. So if you can cleanly switch between a c chord, g chord and a d chord correctly like 15 times in a row your hand will start remembering how to do it without having to stop to place each finger where it needs to go. You'll learn how to do it's all at once and at this point you'll be able to play. Practice this with all your basic chords. At that point you are a guitar player. After that point the hard stuff starts. Eventually learn how to play barre chords. This is the major hurdle for every guitar player. If you can get to the point where you can play bar chords the world of music is your oyster. You will pretty much be able to play any song and at that point that wide Open door really starts getting much more fun because you start learning where to play all these different chord shapes all over the neck. Playing bar chords all up and down the neck and you start learning the names of these chords by necessity because you will find them throughout the songs that you're learning off YouTube. Get yourself a good clip on tuner. Not one of those crappy cheapo snarks that are less accurate and apparently tend to snap off and break quite easily from what I hear come and get yourself a good quality tuner. My top recommendation is something like the daddario . This one is fantastic.Nexus 360 tuner. I specifically recommend this one over pretty much anything else because it doesn't need a battery replacement when the battery runs out. It's rechargeable. You can just recharge it like you do your phone with the USB cable. Very easy. No fun playing with weird coin size batteries or anything. One charge last well over 6 months on this tuner. I think it says it has like 24 hours straight of charge time before it runs out however I tune my guitar a couple times every day and it's never really on more than a minute or two. This is why I only have to charge it once or twice each year. Fantastic battery life. Honestly this has become my go to video tutorial for beginners on acoustic . This has everything you need to know about how to properly restring your guitar. The best way to do it, even advanced things that are explained very easily like the correct way to set up your guitar. Correct way to clean things etc. This is a unbelievably great beginner tutorial that should make it really easy for you to learn things that can be intimidating like how to restring your guitar etc. Actually as I'm answering this question I just restrung my acoustic guitar about 2 hours ago. It looks like it's brand new again because I take a lot of care and cleaning the fretboard well. New strings and a clean fretboard and a little guitar polish to shine it up always makes it look like brand new and that absolutely love it. This should be something you take your time with and put a couple hours of care into. Much like taking the time to wax and shine your car. It's an enjoyable ritual of love and care for your instrument. Treat it well and you will play well.this has become my go to video tutorial for beginners on acoustic If you're looking for a suggestion for a guitar I actually personally have a Yamaha F-310 and it's still a very high quality instrument especially considering it's $200 price tag. If someone wants to try to prove me wrong by offering a good example with a nice video review showing I'm not right about this I welcome you to try to disprove me but if you look up video reviews for the Yamaha F-310 like this one even in the video review you can tell it as a very crisp great vibrant sound that really rings and resonates well. It's an absolutely great beginner guitar. I've got many compliments on this guitar and people are shocked that this guitar is only $200. In a lot of ways you can tell it's kind of a cheaper low-end guitar at that price point because that's exactly what it is. However it stays in tune very well. I never have issues with the tuning unless the temperature drastically changes which of course it will make it Go out of tune because every guitar does. It stays in tune very well. The tuning hardware is very high quality. No loose rattly tuners or anything. Very solid stainless steel no rattles or issues whatsoever. Excellent excellent hardware. The bridge and saddle, well it's a $200 guitar so you get what you get but as long as you're careful and take care of it I've had mine just over 25 years now and I just restrung it tonight and played a few songs on it. Still sounds absolutely excellent and I still enjoy playing it 25 years later. Get yourself a capo. Up to you which one but personally this is the one that I mostly use.. I used to use a shuub capo and those are very very great high quality adjustable tension capos that I still really like but the main issue I had was I couldn't clip it to my headstock. I really wanted to be able to quit my capo to the headstock and keep it with me at all times. If I don't need it it's on the headstock, when I do need it it's right there within arms reach. I now keep everything on my headstock at all times. My tuner, capo, and pick. The capo has a pick holder which works out real nice. At first I thought it was a gimmick I would never use but honestly it's fantastic to just put your clip into the slot and have a built-in pick holder. I never have to look around to find a pic. It's always right there on My Guitar. This is an old picture I randomly took one day when my guitar was dirty. It does not look like that today because I just got done shining it up so excuse the dirt but this is what my guitar is usually set up like.. Unfortunately you do need a few small items when starting out like get some good Dunlop 65 cleaner to shine up the guitar with. Get yourself some good fretboard conditioner cleaner or lemon oil fretboard cleaner. This works really well. Clean the fretboard like once every 6 months or so and it will be easy to keep it looking like new. Grab a diario string clipper peg winder tool. On the end of one of the handles it has a little pig winder and bridge pin puller hole. Very handy all-in-one tool. Allows you to easily pull out the bridge pins, wind your tuning pegs, clip your strings. This is the only tool you'll need for restringing your guitar..
D'Addario Accessories Pro-Winder Guitar String Winder, Cutter, Bridge Pin Puller - All in One Guitar Tool - Black
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D’Addario Guitar Capo – NS Tri Action - For 6-String Electric and Acoustic Guitars – Micrometer Tension Adjustment for Buzz-Free, In-Tune Performance - Single Hand Use – Integrated Pick Holder - Black
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Don't use any app to tune. Get yourself an actual tuner. They're super cheap.This is my recommendation. This thing is great, the biggest downside with tuners like these is the weird little coin sized battery that needs replaced from time to time. This thing is USB rechargeable. I just simply charge it once or twice a year and it lasts a good 6 months or so and I use it a little bit everyday so that tells you how long it lasts on a single charge. You can clip it right to your headstock. Mine never leaves my Guitar. I would not recommend cheaper tuners like snark. They have a history of snapping easily and breaking. They aren't as accurate either. Daddario has a couple good tuners with different sizes. They have a micro one too if that's more your preference but use a real tuner, not some goofy app. I know a lot of the kids find those popular convenient and easy but it's also convenient and easy if your tuner is literally on your headstock at all times ready to go. Here's what my head stock looks like. I keep my guitar tuned down to half step at all times because a lot of great songs I love from the '90s that I grew up on are in that tuning and I almost always practice by playing along with the actual album. I have a giant playlist with every song I've learned and I just put it on shuffle and start playing along with the band. I play all my standard tuning songs with capo on the first fret to bring it up to standard, obviously many songs use a capo various places anyway. Everything I need for a long Rock session is on that headstock. You should probably learn how to restring your guitar as well. If it's a hand-me-down guitar chances are those strings are very very old. It will sound much much better if you get some new strings. Your local music shop will be able to help you out. Personally I prefer 80/20 but a lot of people also use phosphor bronze. If you want to sing while playing you should probably go with 80/20 instead of phosphor bronze but that's up to you. You can look up videos about the sound difference between the two and decide from there. Here's a great video that will teach you the correct way to restring your guitar. Do not use a knot. watch this to learn the correct way to restring your guitar. Here's a great video explaining the difference between 80/20 and phosphor bronze strings. personally I lean heavily towards 80/20. Maybe if you're playing a loud lead you might want phosphor bronze for recording because it cuts through and is louder but 80/20 has that sweet spot dip in the mid-range where it's perfect for a voice singing along with it. If you're a singer-songwriter type you'll definitely want 80/20 instead. Since you're new you'll need a peg winder/string cutter like this as well. And if you care about the instrument at all you definitely want some goodpolish and fretboard conditioner. Lemon oil works fine.. I only do this about once every few months when I restring it. It gets dusty and dirty, take a few minutes and polish the fretboard. It makes an incredible difference and you'll be so happy with how great it looks every time you clean that fretboard. It does make a world of difference. Take care of the instrument. Not to give you a shopping list and rack up a big bill but all of these things are fairly cheap. Get them as needed I guess. Start with the tuner, maybe a capo, later the strings, cleaner etc. If you get into it you'll end up with all of this anyway.
D'Addario Accessories Pro-Winder Guitar String Winder, Cutter, Bridge Pin Puller - All in One Guitar Tool - Black
music

Jim Dunlop System 65 Body & Fingerboard Cleaning Kit (6503)

D’Addario Guitar Capo – NS Tri Action - For 6-String Electric and Acoustic Guitars – Micrometer Tension Adjustment for Buzz-Free, In-Tune Performance - Single Hand Use – Integrated Pick Holder - Black
music

If you're in a public place when you accidentally shart be careful with discarding the evidence. You definitely do not want to get caught with that item because it will be very embarrassing. When you start learning guitar, don't worry about anything at first except learning how to play a few basic chords. It will be hard enough just to train your fingers to remember the chord shapes but start with something very easy like an E minor, then in A chord because it's just an E minor down one string with a third string added. Then learn an E, then an Am because it's the same as an E but down one string. Slightly more difficult to learn is a D chord. Then try an F chord. There are several ways to play an F but start with the easy three string version which is the B string first fret, G string second fret, D string third fret. Slightly more difficult if you can do that you can probably play a C chord. Slightly more difficult still try a G chord. At first the three finger version of a G chord is probably easier but the forefinger version of a G chord ultimately becomes far more useful later because of its similarity to a Cadd9, usually it sounds a little better also, and makes it very easy to transition to a d chord without having to move your ring finger as well. Eventually you'll learn both versions of a G chord but start with the three finger one at first because it's easier. Most of us probably started with this regardless of which one we prefer later. I started with the three finger G chord but I definitely prefer the four finger G chord most of the time and it's my default go to when I play G unless I'm specifically aiming for the sound I want from a three-finger version. For the best YouTube channels to learn songs of all skill levels check out Justin guitar, guitar zero to hero, Ryan Lendt, Guitar at Work, not Marty music unless you double check and compare his lessons to more credible lessons from the ones I've already mentioned. Marty tends to show people the wrong way to play about a third of the videos he does so beware of him. He will often teach you how to play it incorrectly, fortunately for him most of his viewers don't know any better but those who do try not to use his channel unless no other source is available. Get yourself a good tuner like this. When you get to bar chords don't get frustrated because those will literally take you months. They take everybody months to learn. It will ultimately become easy but it's a struggle every player goes through. We've all been there. And if you eventually get good enough to perform on stage for the first time try not to get nervous because if you get too nervous you might accidentally have an unwanted Sharting incident...... In which case read the first part of my response again for advice. EDIT: Totally serious though. Expect it to be difficult. Here's something very easy that you can do to progress as fast as possible. It's not very hard. Just make sure you play a minimum of 30 minutes each day. It's extremely important that you don't skip any days if you can help it. If you practice like twice a week you will not improve. You must make it a daily ritual. Has to be daily to keep improving. The cumulative small improvements will be so minor you don't really notice but just putting your hands on the strings each day will help keep everything you learn fresh and it will accumulate very fast, it will be a lot easier if holding the guitar is something you're used to. Do this everyday, every time you have a few minutes to spare, play a little more, even small increments several times a day is really helpful. It will be difficult in bar chords will literally take you several months to master. Don't give up. I am happy with how good I have become currently and I did earn it I guess with literally hundreds, thousands hours of playing but it's always so fun it feels like no work at all. If you do this and make sure that you practice at least 30 minutes every day notice how much you improve the first 3 months, the first 6 months, one year. Looking back it will be amazing. You'll learn faster to start with than you ever will again. It's awesome. Have fun. Oh make sure from the start that you keep track of every song that you learn. Just make a numbered Google doc or something... Each song that you learn or memorize right down the name of the song. Currently I'm up to nearly 350 songs I've learned over the last 2 years or so. This will be helpful later you can make a playlist with all the songs you've learned on guitar etc. This is the primary way I practice guitar actually. I just put my giant list of a few hundred songs on shuffle and whatever it plays next I practice playing. Makes it very fun. I do this at least an hour or two each day.
Hour two should be finding a tuner. Okay seriously I read your post and I'm not going to criticize because we all have to start somewhere so I'm going to assume you're just beginning. You need to get a tuner. From the thickest string on top to the thinnest string on the bottom the notes are E, A, D, G, B, and E. There are two e strings, the lowest thickest one is an e, and the thinnest highest string is an e. There are tons of tuners out there but better to choose correctly so you don't have to use a bunch of crappy ones before you learn. Don't get any of those crappy snark tuners. They might be a couple bucks cheaper but they're notorious for easily snapping off and breaking, week, not quite as accurate, etc. I guess if you end up with a lot of random tuners or you lose them a lot etc maybe a couple of them would be okay in your collection however I recommend this one specifically because it has a USB rechargeable battery. You don't have to worry about those goofy little coin size batteries or replacing that which is a pain. Here's the tuner I use and recommend. One charge last 6 months or more. I only have to charge it once or twice a year. I use the tuner a little bit every day and it will last for several months on one charge. These things are great because you can clip them to your headstock and keep them with your guitar at all times. Makes it very easy to tune whenever you need to because it's on your guitar. You can twist and turn them to any angle you need but here's where I keep mine. obviously that's what the Nexus 360 name implies. 360° rotation. This will also help you a lot. Unfortunately there is a bad thing a lot of players do when changing their strings referred to as the knot technique. NEVER do this! EVER! It is not required or even a good idea to tie a knot in your guitar strings when restringing even though unfortunately a lot of guitar players think this is the way, this video will specifically show you why it's not a good idea to tie a knot. How old are those strings? Is this guitar handed down to you so you can learn? Has it been possibly years since the last time it had a fresh set of strings? You don't want the strings to get older than a few months or they start having no sound or tone left at all. If it's been months possibly years get a new set of strings. Your typical 80/20 strings are good. People at the guitar shop can help set you up with this. It's very easy to restrain your guitar if you follow the instructions in the video there. Get yourself one of those cheap little pig winder string clipper tools such as this. this is literally the only tool you'll need for changing your strings.
Keep going. The best way to improve quicker than you'll believe is possible is just very easy. All you have to do is simply make it a daily ritual. If you can be disciplined enough to make sure no matter what you play at least 30 minutes each day you won't believe how fast you'll progress. This is the only magic trick and shortcut, the rest is up to you. Like 20 or 25 years ago I would play two or three times a week and each time I would almost forget what I'm doing and the strings would feel uncomfortable because I wasn't used to playing daily Etc. Unfortunately I didn't know back then that the easy trick was I just had to do it every single day. This is the best way you'll progress faster than you even think is possible. It really is something of a magic trick but not surprising because you know you've put the effort in to get there so it feels really good once you do it. Try to never skip a day and make sure you play at least 30 minutes each day. It's very easy to have a half hour fly by when you're having fun playing guitar. If you can play longer play as long as you can. Always great. If you can't even do a half hour do 10 or 15 minutes, maybe later you'll be able to do another 10 or 15. Break it up if you need to but just keep picking that thing up and keep your fingers familiar with the feel of the strings. This is the biggest most important part. Once you start trying to learn bar chords do not quit. This is something very hard that will take literally months. Eventually you'll be able to do it though and once you do you'll pretty much be a full-fledged guitar player. Maybe things like picking can be improved, advanced techniques like sweet picking, Travis picking, all these different things you'll learn or maybe you won't but if you get to the point where you can competently play some Barre chords up and down the neck, you'll be a legitimate intermediate level guitar player. Good luck. Have fun, never stop learning. It's very rewarding and you'll enjoy it for a lifetime. EDIT: oh I want to leave this little gift as well. This has lots of fantastic advice for the correct way to restring your guitar. The strings will sound dull if they are old. Are those strings fairly new or have they been on that guitar for a long time? Is it a family member's guitar where they don't know the last time the strings were changed so here you can learn on this? Start with a new set of strings that will help the sound a lot.... The main reason your sound is weird is because you need to practice lifting your fingers and keeping them off of the strings around the one you're pressing down. This just comes with practice. You will eventually get good with this and it won't be a problem. Try not to let your finger overlap or partially mute any surrounding strings. Use the tips of your fingers trying to get a clean press on only the string you're trying to push down. You can't expect anything for one week. Sounds like you're doing great for one week only. At this phase you should just be practicing slowly changing your finger shapes between the different chords. Don't worry about sound really. Just try to make your hand form a G chord which is kind of tricky to begin with. Any minor is very easy with two fingers, and a chord is quite easy. A c chord can be tricky, very similar to a c chord is a easy three string three finger F chord with the B,G and D string on frets 1 2 and 3 respectively. Simply move that small F chord shape up to the a string and D string with the second and third finger leaving the G string open and keeping your index on the B string and you now have a c chord. These are the things you should be practicing for week one in my opinion. Just try to practice hitting the correct strings for the cords. Try to make your body remember what a d chord feels like, what a G chord feels like Etc. You will find it's hard to rearrange your fingers quick enough to hit the cord in time when switching between them. Just practice a basic rhythm pattern switching between the cords. Literally all you're doing is trying to learn how to switch between chords. This will become quite easy before you know it then you can start learning lots of cool songs that just use basic chords. Get yourself a capo. This is a cheap great device that you can clamp on the different frets up and down the neck so you can easily play songs in different keys which really helps when you're a beginner. Also get a good tuner. Lots of them just clip onto the headstock these days. This is the one I recommend. It's a great one from Dadarrio. This thing is rechargeable with USB and one charge last about 6 months or longer. I've had it for like 2 years and I've only charged it two or three times and I usually use it at least once a day to make sure I'm in tune. It's phenomenal, the battery will last forever and it's USB rechargeable so you never have to worry about those weird little coin batteries that you can never find. Here's what my guitar headstock actually looks like.. I play it literally every single day so I just keep everything right there so it's good to go as soon as I pick it up. My pic, capo, tuner, always on my Guitar.
