GUITARHABITS

Free Quality Guitar Lessons

  • Home
  • Best Posts
  • Categories
  • All Lessons
  • Donate♥
  • About
  • YT
  • IG
  • FB

Archives for May 2014

The Importance and Value of Learning Lead Guitar Solos

By Klaus Crow 4 Comments

May 14, 2019 by Klaus Crow

Bigstock photo
When I first started playing electric guitar (4 years after I picked up the acoustic guitar) all I wanted to do is learn those almighty guitar solos of Slash, Nuno Bettencourt, Joe Satriani, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Scott Henderson, Marty Friedman, Kirk Hammet, Dimebag Darrel and other great legends.

It was the best thing ever. Unawarely I built my guitar vocabulary like that.

After a while fellow musicians, guitar teachers and guitar players from around town that I looked up to were advising me to develop my own style and learn to improvise. It was the obvious next step to becoming a better guitar player.

I practiced scales, sequences, licks, arpeggios, intervals, just about anything I could get my hands on and continued to work on my improvisation skills. Freedom on the fretboard at last.

Then I started playing in bands doing covers, creating and performing my own music. Playing some more and more and more. Time went by and I gained a lot of gigging experience, developed my own style, learned a lot of new things, but on the other side I also stopped building and expanding my guitar vocabulary.

Years later I got back into transcribing and practicing solos by other guitar heros that found my interest. It was refreshing, inspiring and opened up new worlds. It took my soloing to other places and improved my playing once again.

To gain input and keep educating yourself you got to keep practicing, studying and memorizing guitar solos regularly. It’s like reading a new book or watching a brilliant movie to fuel your inspiration.

Besides that there are also other important reasons and benefits to learning lead guitar solos.

Check them out:Continue Reading

How to Build an Awesome Repertoire

By Klaus Crow 7 Comments

May 14, 2019 by Klaus Crow

Bigstock photo
Building, learning and mastering a repertoire is part of being a musician. It’s your chance to show who you are as a musician.

It’s a great feeling to be prepared and feel confident whenever someone asks you to play something, to perform spontaneously in front an audience because you know you can or just to be able to play a bunch of songs when you’re relaxing at home, on the beach, on a holiday or when you’re hanging out with family and friends without having to rely on your sheet music.

You will feel free and liberated.

Building a repertoire when you’re playing in a band can be a fun challenge too.

Depending on the number of musicians, what kind of musicians and instruments in the band (acoustic guitar, electric guitar, male vocal, female vocal, bass, drummer, keyboard, trumpet, violin, cello, accordeon, steel guitar, etc.) they will definitely influence the choice of songs and the styles you pick for your repertoire.

For every instrument so many ideas come to mind. Such a pleasure :)

So how do you go about building your own repertoire?

Let’s take a closer look.

Picking the right songs
Take out a paper and pencil or a laptop if you prefer. Choose songs you love and songs that are appealing to the audience. It’s likely that the songs you choose will remain on your repertoire for quite a while so choose wisely. If you’re playing covers and you want to play songs that do well by a large number of people then songs by the Beatles or Eagles or always a good pick. Of course it also depends on the style of music you play, the average age of your audience and where your show is located. Continue Reading

Basic Open Guitar Chords

By Klaus Crow 55 Comments

May 29, 2025 by Klaus Crow

8 Most Important Open Guitar Chords For Beginners

Basic Open Guitar Chords

Basic Open Guitar Chords for Beginners

Where do you start when you want to learn to play guitar? Well, the first thing you want to do is learn is some basic open guitar chords, a basic strumming pattern and then start practicing some beginner songs, so we’ll start out with some basic open chords.

The chords are the building blocks for your songs, they give you the harmony. The strumming delivers the rhythm and together they are the accompaniment for your or someone else’s singing voice which in turn provides the melody.

The 8 most important chords for beginners are: C – A – G – E – D – Am – Em – Dm. (you can memorize the first 5 open major chords by the word CAGED)

Songs with Beginner Chords

With these simple chords alone you can play an endless amount of easy songs. For example there are about a million songs that use this chord progression: G – D – Em – C (also called the I – V – vi – IV progression).

Songs like “I’m yours” by Jason Mraz, “With or without you” by U2 and “She will be loved” by Maroon 5 can all be played with just these 4 chords. Not all of these songs are originally in the key of G but you could easily fix that with the help of a capo and play it in the appropriate key.

The open chords are also the starting point and components for the more advanced chords that follow like barre chords. All barre chords are derived from open chords. If you’re interested check out The Four Most Essentiall Barre Chords. 

How to Play The Beginner Guitar Chords

In the video lesson below I’m going to show you how to play each chord correctly step by step and how and where to put your fingers on the strings.

Continue Reading

The 5 Major Pentatonic Scale Shapes – Positions

By Klaus Crow 26 Comments

May 14, 2019 by Klaus Crow

Bigstock photo
The major pentatonic scale is mostly used in country, folk country rock, blues and jazz.

It creates a more happy and uplifting sound.

The shapes of the major pentatonic scale are exactly the same as those of the minor pentatonic scale, except the root note is located else where.

Looking at it from the major scale, if you leave out the 4th and the 7th note of the major scale you’ll also end up with the major pentatonic.

The 5 shapes shown below are all the same scale (G major pentatonic scale) just played in different positions, so you can learn the scale all over the neck. That’s the whole purpose, eventually you want to have the freedom to be able to improvise around the entire fretboard.

SHAPE NAMES
Each shape has it’s own shape-name C, A, G, E and D, derived from the C-A-G-E-D system. Note: The name of the shapes have nothing to do with the key of the scale. The names refer to the chord shape (made up of the red and green dots) that is surrounded by the scale shape.

If you want to know more about the CAGED system check out: What is The CAGED System? (The Keys to The Fretboard)

ROOT NOTES
In the scale diagrams below the red dots indicate the root notes and the green dots indicate the remainder chord tones.

The root note of each shape determines the name of the scale. In the examples below all the scale shapes are in the key of G, so all the root notes are G notes.Continue Reading

Next Page »

Most Popular Posts

Easy Guitars Songs For Beginners

Best Acoustic Guitars under 450 Dollars

8 Most Important Chords for Beginners

Learn The Guitar Fingerboard in 16 Days

Easy Guitar Riffs & Intros for Beginners

16 Legendary Fingerpicking Patterns

The 5 Pentatonic Scale Shapes

How to Play Beautiful Open Chord Shapes

Best Guitar Amps for Practice and Small Gigs

Categories

  • Chord Melody
  • Chords
  • Chord progression
  • Strumming | Rhythm
  • Fingerpicking
  • Scales
  • Soloing | Improv
  • Licks
  • Riffs
  • Excercise
  • Motivation
  • Rock
  • Blues
  • Gear
  • Songs
  • Solos
  • Music theory
  • Practice
  • Intervals
  • Arpeggios
  • Vocals | Singing
  • Ear training
  • Songwriting
  • Recording
  • Performing
  • Online guitar tools
  • Country
  • Metal
  • Jazz
  • Pop of all times
  • Best buy
  • Christmas
  • Ear practice
  • Lifestyle Design
  • Beginner
  • Intermediate
  • Advanced
  • Uncategorized

Copyright © 2025 · Guitarhabits - About - Privacy Policy - Change Consent - Do Not Sell My Personal Information - Cookie Policy

Note: As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Scroll Up