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Design Your Room to Improve Your Guitar Playing

By Klaus Crow 14 Comments

September 1, 2022 by Klaus Crow

guitar-amp-pr0n-by-marco-raaphorst

photo by Marco Raaphorst
The room where you spend most of your time is of great importance to your playing.

I have noticed that when I put my electric guitar in the living room I tend to play more solos, riffs and licks.

When I put my acoustic guitar in the room I will play more fingerpicking style, blues licks or try to figure out nice chord changes.

Writing songs is something I am also more likely to do on an acoustic guitar.

Our busy “need to get things done” society has such a major impact on our lives, there might be times where your guitar doesn’t see the light of day. When your guitar is not right in front of you in those busy times, it is possible that it doesn’t occur to you to play at all.

A great way to change this awful situation is to design the room you play in. Your room must breath music, inspire you, be effective and suitable and make you want to pick up that guitar every time you are there.

Here are 5 keys to make this thing work:

Continue Reading

10 Ways to Play the Most Beautiful Open Chord Shapes

By Klaus Crow 90 Comments

July 18, 2022 by Klaus Crow

The Most Beautiful Open Chord Shapes – Part I


A great way to make your chord progressions and songs sound awesome is to use open chord shapes.

I always love to use these chords to add some flavor to my chord progressions. One of my favorite chords is Fsus2, it contains the complete package. It’s sounds beautiful, gentle, tight, cool and rough at the same time.

Moving Open Chords

When you move an open chord up the neck the name of the chord changes and the chord gets extended with 1 or 2 notes. This way you can get beautiful sounds.

While you can play barre chords at any fret on the fingerboard, open chords can only be played at certain frets. If you play them at the right frets they sound amazing, if you don’t… well they just sound terrible. So be careful.

Because of all the extended chord names I didn’t bother to name every single one of them. That’s not the point here.

Experiment

It’s all about incorporating these chords into your songs and chord progressions, putting your creativity to the test, experimenting with all the possibilities, replacing some basic chords for these extraordinary ones, learning to hear what sounds right and what feels good.

Check out the youtubes Part I, II & III and the corresponding chord fingerings below.

Have a great time!

Continue Reading

8 Basic Principles to Become a Better Guitar Player

By Klaus Crow 16 Comments

March 29, 2021 by Klaus Crow

guitar-player-by-yuri-samoilovI had the pleasure of learning to play guitar at a young age. The good old days when I had all the time in the world to practice and play. Lack of time was not an issue back then.

As I became an adult, I fell into the booby trap of our time consuming society. I went along with this rollercoaster ride for quite some time, getting things done and following the mass.

It was getting more and more difficult to find time to practice, write songs or work on any other aspect of guitar playing.

When I started to read books and blogs about efficiency, life strategies and zen buddhism I became aware of the fact that I could choose how I wanted to live, how I wanted to perceive, feel or act.

I realized I had to change my lifestyle if I wanted to fulfill my goals and pursue my passion.

A couple of years ago I found a way again to practice, play, write and do a lot of other great things on a daily basis. It feels great to improve.

I know my way around the guitar but it still feels great to practice and learn new things. It’s something I will never stop doing, just because I love doing it.

In order to become a better guitar player you need some basic principles to keep you motivated, inspired and playing at all times.

Here are the 8 basic principles that will make you a better guitar player:Continue Reading

The 5 Pentatonic Scale Shapes You Must Know

By Klaus Crow 91 Comments

March 18, 2022 by Klaus Crow

In order to learn how to solo and improvise in blues and rock you must know the 5 pentatonic scale shapes. A lot of blues players tend to get stuck in the first pentatonic scale shape, but to be truly free and improvise across the entire fretboard you need to know all the shapes.

And it’s not just about that. Every shape gives it’s own sound and feeling to a guitar lick. This is where the magic happens. This is where the coolness and the beauty comes through all these different shapes. They all got their own personality.

Learn all the shapes thoroughly and when you do also learn them in different keys. It is a lot of work, but it is important that you do, so take your time with it. Practice with focus and dedication.

The examples below are all in the key of A, but you can play these shapes in every key, just move the shapes up and down the neck. The red notes are showing the root notes of the scale, so in the scale shapes below they are all A notes.

If you want to play the shapes in the key of G for example, all you need to do is move them 2 half steps down. (a half step is a one fret distance) If you want to play the shapes in the key of E move up 7 half steps, etc, etc.

Good luck and enjoy!

 
 

Pentatonic Scale Position #1 / E shape:

Pentatonic Scale Position #2 / D shape:

A MINOR PENTATONIC SCALE - POSITION #2 - D SHAPE

Pentatonic Scale Position #3 / C shape:

Pentatonic Scale Position #4 / A shape:

Pentatonic Scale Position #5 / G shape:

Do you really want to get the most out of your pentatonic / blues scale shapes, learn awesome blues licks, create your own licks, connect licks, and be able to improvise all over the guitar neck?

Check out: 50CoolBluesLicksImprovisation

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