{"appState":{"pageLoadApiCallsStatus":true},"articleState":{"article":{"headers":{"creationTime":"2016-03-28T14:33:28+00:00","modifiedTime":"2016-03-28T14:33:28+00:00","timestamp":"2022-09-09T18:15:39+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Academics & The Arts","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/33662"},"slug":"academics-the-arts","categoryId":33662},{"name":"Music","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/33730"},"slug":"music","categoryId":33730},{"name":"Instruments","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/33731"},"slug":"instruments","categoryId":33731},{"name":"Guitar","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/33735"},"slug":"guitar","categoryId":33735}],"title":"Learning the Slide on Guitar","strippedTitle":"learning the slide on guitar","slug":"learning-the-slide-on-guitar","canonicalUrl":"","seo":{"metaDescription":"Don't sweat learning the slide on guitar! 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This video covers not one, but two types of slides that will help expand your guitar abilities.","item_vector":null},"titleHighlight":null,"descriptionHighlights":null,"headers":null},{"objectType":"article","id":206620,"data":{"title":"Proper Slide Guitar Technique","slug":"proper-slide-guitar-technique","update_time":"2016-03-27T14:45:36+00:00","object_type":"article","image":null,"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Academics & The Arts","slug":"academics-the-arts","categoryId":33662},{"name":"Music","slug":"music","categoryId":33730},{"name":"Instruments","slug":"instruments","categoryId":33731},{"name":"Guitar","slug":"guitar","categoryId":33735}],"description":"Slide guitar is physically easy in one sense — just drag a slide over the strings, and you can instantly hear the effect, right? However, proper slide guitar technique is not quite that simple. It can be difficult to control the sliding and keep the buzzing and rattling artifacts to a minimum.","item_vector":null},"titleHighlight":null,"descriptionHighlights":null,"headers":null},{"objectType":"article","id":143498,"data":{"title":"How to Play Slide Guitar","slug":"how-to-play-slide-guitar","update_time":"2016-03-26T07:54:36+00:00","object_type":"article","image":null,"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Academics & The Arts","slug":"academics-the-arts","categoryId":33662},{"name":"Music","slug":"music","categoryId":33730},{"name":"Instruments","slug":"instruments","categoryId":33731},{"name":"Guitar","slug":"guitar","categoryId":33735}],"description":"Slide is the technique of using a glass bottle or piece of metal piping on the guitar strings to, no surprise, slide into, out of, and in between notes. A slide acts like a nut or piece of fret wire, creating a new endpoint from which the strings rest and ring.\nBecause a slide is not actually used to press strings down to the fretboard, but instead glides along top of the strings, it’s possible to play microtones, which are notes that fall between the semitones (between the frets). For this reason, slide guitar is very expressive and has a vocal‐like quality.\nFor quick reference, listen to Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “Free Bird,” which may be the most recognizable modern slide guitar recording.\nChoosing a slide\nThere are different materials used to make slides, and each material produces a slightly different sound. Materials include glass, brass, stainless steel, chrome, copper, porcelain, and Pyrex. Generally speaking, the more mass (thickness) a slide has, the greater the volume and sustain it produces. Hardness increases the high‐end frequencies. Thicker slides work better on acoustic guitars. Because electric guitars are aided by amplification, they can get away with thinner slides.\nDeciding which finger to wear the slide on\nOf equal importance to a slide’s sound is its feel and comfort of use. Slides are hollow and worn over a finger on your fretting hand. Slides are worn on the second, third, or fourth finger. Some players like to wear the slide on the fourth finger so that the other three fingers are free to fret normal notes and chords as needed.\nOther players lack the necessary control to properly play slide guitar when the fourth finger is in use, so they opt for using the second or third finger instead. How tight a slide fits around your finger affects the control you have over it.\nExplore your options and choose a finger that allows you to use the slide to the best of your abilities. Johnny Winter and Tom Petty’s Mike Campbell prefer to use their fourth fingers to play slide. Duane Allman used his third finger. Joe Walsh, Bonnie Raitt, and ZZ Top’s Billy Gibbons all wear their slides on their second fingers.What matters most is how well you use the slide. Whether you get use out of your other fingers is of secondary importance.\nUsing a slide properly\nAfter you have a slide in hand and you’ve chosen a finger on which to wear it, the next steps are positioning it properly on the guitar strings and damping unwanted noise. Good slide technique requires you to:\n\n Position the slide perpendicular to the strings, in the same direction as the frets.\n \n Target notes by placing the slide directly over the fret wire, not in the spaces between the frets.\n \n Push down with enough pressure so that the strings make full contact with the slide, but not so much pressure that the strings contact the frets. You don’t want the strings to rattle against the slide or against the frets.\n \n Hold the slide level and apply equal pressure across all strings (or at least across the strings on which you’re targeting notes).\n \n Use a finger or fingers behind the slide to dampen strings, much like you do when performing a bend.\n \n\nWhether to pluck strings using a flatpick or using your fingers while playing slide is a matter of preference. Joe Walsh uses a pick, Duane Allman used bare fingers, George Harrison palmed his pick while using a slide, Bonnie Raitt plays finger-style using thumb and finger picks. Whatever you choose to do, just be sure to let target strings ring freely and prevent idle strings from making unwanted noise.\nLike any type of guitar playing, producing a clean slide sound is a balancing act between your two hands, with various parts of your hands and fingers contributing to damping.\nWith normal guitar playing, the height of the strings over the fretboard (called the action) is set low. Low action makes it easier to fret notes, and prevents depressed strings from going sharp by being pulled too far out of alignment. With slide guitar playing however, low action can cause unwanted buzzing and rattling noise.\nFor this reason, many slide players adjust their guitars (called setup) with higher action in order to get the cleanest sound possible. Because slides aren’t used to press strings down to the fretboard, there’s no risk of pulling the strings sharp. In fact, instruments that are used strictly for slide playing — like dobros, resonator guitars, and in some cases, regular guitars — use a special attachment called an extension nut, which raises the strings extra high over the fretboard. Extension nuts work well for slide, but they make fretting with your fingers impossible.","item_vector":null},"titleHighlight":null,"descriptionHighlights":null,"headers":null},{"objectType":"article","id":155648,"data":{"title":"How to Learn and Analyze Songs on the Guitar","slug":"how-to-learn-and-analyze-songs-on-the-guitar","update_time":"2016-03-26T13:03:49+00:00","object_type":"article","image":null,"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Academics & The Arts","slug":"academics-the-arts","categoryId":33662},{"name":"Music","slug":"music","categoryId":33730},{"name":"Instruments","slug":"instruments","categoryId":33731},{"name":"Guitar","slug":"guitar","categoryId":33735}],"description":"Learning songs on the guitar is the absolute best way to develop as a musician. Every song you learn teaches you something new about using chords, playing progressions, and applying scales (not to mention licks, phrasing, fingering, and overall technique). For each new song you study, identify its components and analyze how it’s put together. For example, answer the following ten questions about every song you work on:\n\n What’s the key of the song?\n \n What’s the parent major scale of the music?\n \n On which major scale degree is the tonic chord based?\n \n How would you number the chord progression?\n \n From which CAGED forms are the chord shapes drawn?\n \n Does the song change keys?\n \n Which type of scale patterns does the song use?\n \n How is the music similar to other songs you play?\n \n What are some other ways that you can play the song?\n \n How can you borrow ideas from the song to play over other songs or compose your own music?\n \n\nLearning a song today is as easy as searching its title in a search engine. After all, just about any song you can imagine is available online for download. Plus, you can stream a lot of music for free online, and you can find official, complete, accurate tabs to most popular songs in songbooks or individual scores. You can even download songs off the Internet to play anytime you want.\nHow to practice by playing along with songs on the guitar\nAside from learning parts from songs, you can also play along with them as you practice. Keeping up with the pace of a recording helps you develop timing and endurance. Plus, it gives you an opportunity to hear your part harmonically mixed with the rest of the music.\nRecorded music makes for a great play-along track even when you’re not playing parts from that specific song. For example, you can practice G major scale patterns simply by playing them over a piece of music based in the same scale. Hearing how the scale mixes harmonically with the rest of the music really brings it to life.\nHow to practice by recording yourself on the guitar\nWhen you play guitar, your mind can become so focused on the physical tasks of fretting and picking that you fail to properly sense other important aspects of music like pitch, timing, feel, and tone. The way you think you sound while playing is often quite different from how you really sound. The best way to critique your playing is to listen to a recording of yourself.\nYou don’t need a lot of fancy technology to record yourself. Most computers, laptops, tablets, smartphones, and other portable devices have features, programs, and apps that you can use to record yourself. For example, you can just set your Phone on your lap or in front of your amp as you practice and play, using the built-in voice memo.\nBasics of looping on the guitar\nA loop is a repeated section of sound material. You can make loops with a wide range of music technologies, like recording programs, drum machines, and guitar effects pedals.\nAs a guitarist, you can easily add a loop pedal into your signal change so that you can record and play back your playing at the stomp of a foot. The most popular unit for this use is the Boss Loop Station, which is available in different models. However, other manufacturers produce products that do the same thing.\nWhen using a loop pedal, you plug your instrument into the pedal and then connect the pedal to your amp. When you stomp on the pedal, the device starts recording you. When you stomp on it again, it plays back what it just recorded. After it reaches the end of the recorded section, it immediately starts again from the beginning.\nHow to practice with others on the guitar\nPlaying with others is good for both practice and play. Other musicians can give you feedback, share ideas, provide accompaniment, and trade licks. Learning and practicing aside, it’s fun just to hang out with others doing something you love. After all, we humans are relational beings; we’re made to harmonize with one another.\nWhen playing with others, you can have one person play rhythm while another plays melody, sings, or improvises. You can then trade parts.\nHow to take advantage of music theory resources\nOne of the best ways to develop your understanding of music and guitar playing is to keep on studying! Countless books, DVDs, and websites offer guitar instruction and music theory lessons. You don’t need to master everything that’s out there, but it’s helpful to always have something that you’re slowly working your way through. That way, you’re always making progress and developing new skills and techniques.\nLearn how to read music. Understanding music notation influences how you play the guitar even when you don’t have sheet music in front of you. Plus, you’ll be better able to follow charts and lead sheets when the need arises. You don’t have to learn to read like a concert violinist; just learn the basics.\nHow to set reasonable, realistic goals\nIf you’re serious about progressing as a guitarist, you need to set some goals. You don’t have to set major goals— just something simple that you can work toward. A good goal is to learn a song or a part of a song. Maybe your goal is to play at an open mic night or at church or to make a YouTube video to share with friends.\nWhatever the case may be, just set small, achievable goals that give you a target to set your sights on. 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Don't sweat learning the slide on guitar! This video covers not one, but two types of slides that will help expand your guitar abilities. About This Article
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