
There are only two things that you need to have in order to learn how to play the guitar:
So are we ready to begin? ok. First things first. This tutorial
is designed to be fun. If you are having a really difficult time with
a certain part, just move on and come back to that part later. The best
way (in fact, the only way) to learn how to play a musical instrument
is through practice that you enjoy! Please don't slog your way through
musical scales until you hate them. Learn a song and then develop the
desire to learn the scales so you can then play the melody to that song.
What is most important is to enjoy yourself as much as possible. Picking
up a musical instrument can be a frustrating experience, but it can also
be a very rewarding one. On to the tutorial.
First, we need to take some time to get to know the parts of the
guitar. The guitar I will be referring to in the following sections
is an acoustic 6-string guitar. If you are right handed, you hold the
guitar so your right hand is the strumming hand (it rests on the strings
above the hole on the body of the guitar). Your left hand is then the
picking hand, which rests on the neck of the guitar.
The large wooden part of the guitar is referred to as the "body"
while the thin piece that is connected to the body is called the "neck."
The strings run from the "bridge" which is on the body of the guitar
(near the hole in the body)
and connect to the "tuning pegs" which are on the "head" of the guitar.
The metal pieces that lie along the neck at seemingly random intervals
are the "frets" and the neck is sometimes referred to as the "fretboard."
The six strings are pressed onto the fretboard by the player's hand,
which shortens the part of the string allowed to vibrate when plucked,
which changes the pitch of the string. So (again, I speak for a right
handed player, just reverse right and left for left handed player) the
player's left hand frets combinations of strings against the fretboard,
while the right hand plucks or strums the strings to cause them to
vibrate.
The modern western musical scale consists of 12 tones (the 13th tone is
an "octave" of the first tone) These tones are
denoted with the letters A through G as well as the symbols "sharp," "flat,"
and "natural." For example the 12 tones could be written as: There are six strings on most guitars (12 on others), and they are
tuned from the lowest string (the string closer to the top of the guitar
as it rests in your lap.) to the highest string as: E, A, D, G, B, E
Which leads to the following scatter of notes on the fretboard (realize
that two notes with the same name may not be the same pitch, but could be
"octaves" of each other-- an example is the lowest and highest
strings which are two octaves apart.)
1.2 Guitar Basics


1.3 Musical Basics
A, A#, B, C, C#, D, D#, E, F, F#, G, G#
The next tone in the preceding scale would be "A" again. This second "A" is
called an "octave" of the first "A". Mathematically, this means that
the second "A" note is
vibrating at twice the frequency as the first "A" note. The result of this is
that the two notes sound the same except that the second one has a higher
pitch. This will make more sense as the tutorial progresses. Music works in
a very mathematical fashion. (as strange as that may seem) A "Note" with
a "pitch" is simply a sound wave traveling through the air at a certain
frequency. The way that these waves interact with each other lead us to
what we call music.


1.4 The strings

1.5 Tuning the Guitar
As you may have realized from the previous picture, the same note can be
played on different strings (although the two notes may be octaves). This leads
to a relatively simple way of tuning the guitar. Once one of the strings of the guitar
is in tune (either with a nearby piano, or by ear) the all other strings can be tuned
from this string. To tune the A string from the low E string, for example, the
player would fret the low E string on the fifth fret (making it sound as an A note)
and compare this tone to the A string. The player would then turn the tuning peg that
the A string is connected to until the two pitches sound the same. The same method
works for all other strings, except when tuning the B string from the G string. In this
case the player would fret the fourth fret. This is illustrated below:

On to Section 2