Learning About
Guitars
The guitar is the defining instrument of blues and rock and
roll, so by default it has become the defining instrument of
the American music experience. If you want to learn
about guitars, you should really understand that
you'll be learning the history of music in America.
The guitar became so omnipresent because it's such a
flexible instrument. You can play chords, you can play a
bassline. You can take the melody or act as a rhythm section. A
guitarist in the hands
of a master is like an orchestra unto itself, able to sound
like more than one instrument at a time.
I first learned about
guitars when I was a young kid - no more than four or five
years old - and my aunt would play and sing in her rocking
chair. She played Irish folk songs, plucking them out easily
and singing out the lyrics in her beautiful alto voice. Hers
was a standard, six-string acoustic guitar of the type you can
see and hear every day just about anywhere, but each guitar
really has its own unique style and personality.
The typical guitar is six string, but there are other styles
as well. You can find a four string guitar, or a 7 string, or
even the 12 string -
probably the second most popular and well known besides the six
string. Such luminaries as Pete Townsend, Robbie Krieger and
Tom Marello have all played the 12 string guitar to great effect,
adding yet another dimension to this remarkable instrument.
If you look hard enough, you could even find an 18 string
guitar. Go to Youtube and look it up - you can hear folks
plucking out familiar tunes on this unfamiliar instrument.
Of course, one of the other things that has made guitars so
prevalent is the fact that as an instrument it's equally great
acoustically and electrically. Most bluesmen made their name
playing the acoustic
guitar; most rock and roll guitar heroes are known for
their work with the electric
guitar. There's something about guitars - maybe it's the
ability to self-harmonize - that lends the instrument that
range.
Once you've learned about guitars and how they shaped music,
the next step is up to you. Maybe the guitar speaks to you and
you're ready to pick it up and become the next BB King. Maybe
you've decided to become a bassist instead, which is
understandable - less pressure! Either way, understanding the
origin of the instrument's popularity today is key to getting
the most from yourself musically.
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