first, acoustic or electric.
If electric, you need an amp.
Phil's picks for good starter acoustic guitars, or what I'd recommend to my private students.
new $250-500:
Seagull
Yamaha
Seagulls are solid wood, yamahas are solid top, ply back and sides. You need a solid top, 90% of the sound comes out of the top. Want a pickup so you can plug it in to a p.a. or amp? You can buy one installed, or install one later. Seagull uses L.R. Baggs, high end stuff without breaking the bank.
used? You can find a lot of great stuff used.
Electrics: Mexican Fender Strats and Teles are good starters. Stay away from Epiphones if you can. Godin makes great electric guitars too, and many are very affordable and they're a consistent manufacturer, so if you play one in a store and like it, go buy it used on ebay. Godin and Seagull have the same parent company, La Patrie. Great canadian company. Even their cheap stuff is totally pro.
Amps: Fender Blues Jr., about $300 new at Guitar Center. Trust me on this one piece of gear.
Get guitarist friends to shop with you, they'd love to go. Have them play the instrument for you, so you can hear it.
And the biggest piece of advice, no matter where you buy it, take it to a shop right away, get it professionally set up with fresh strings. Change those strings every few months please. Every month if you play alot. Every two weeks if you're me. Get a professional set up twice a year. Don't argue, just do it. Going into winter, and coming out of spring.
To learn, have friends show you songs, or look up chord charts and tabs online and have someone show you how to read it if you doubt yourself. Practice slow and steady, then speed up. Treat chords as shapes. Memorize the shapes, not finger by finger. Practice moving slowly, steadily, smoothly through chord changes.
Slow, mindless repetition is the key to teaching your muscles new movements. Break down problem spots to one or two motions and repeat them ad nauseum. THEN speed it up. Then when you think you have it, do it without looking. Practicing while watching t.v. is a great exercise, because it divdes your attention making your peripheral nervous system really LEARN the motion, as opposed to having it reside more in the CNS.
Hope this helps.
-Phil
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Flying Rabbit Wrote: I don't eat it every morning, I do however, pull it out sometimes.
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