Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Fingerpicking for Guitar

Fingerpicking for Guitar

Fingerpicking is a form of soloing, which simply means adding bass and some other "additions" to the main melody - such as beatboxing, strumming, overtones, etc. - to make the original monophonic "main line" full and colorful. The "main line" of the original monotone becomes rich and colorful.

Split-brain exercises:

1, finger exercises

Can be used to climb the lattice practice method to each string, each handle of the tone are played once, enough time to use a variety of different climbing lattice practice method integrated training.

2, chord practice

According to the chords of the textbook, you can also find some of your favorite songs, and practice according to the chords of the songs, and at the same time, when you encounter strange and unfamiliar chords, think about the structure of the chords.

3. Scale practice

Try different scales, you can choose CG and other common scales for beginners, and stick to different positions.

Expanded:

Guitar notation

"H" in guitar notation stands for strumming (also known as hammering), i.e., playing a certain note and then hammering to a higher note on the same string with the corresponding finger of the left hand, aiming for steadiness, accuracy, and viciousness.

"H," for strumming, is a kind of legato (rounded tone) -- an upward legato. The so-called upward legato is two notes before and after, with the pitch of the note after being higher than the one before. Strikes are called: upward legato or strumming or malleting or Hammeron or percussive legato. The symbol for a strum is ⌒ or H. As shown here:

"P" in guitar tablature indicates a hook, where you play a note (a non-null note) and then hook the lower note of the same string with the corresponding finger of your left hand.

"P," for "Pulloff," is the opposite of a strum, which is a downward legato. The marking symbol for a struck string: ⌒ or plus P.