For most of us, learning an instrument requires an enormous amount of dedication
%u2013 understanding fundamental principles and techniques before embarking upon
long practices. Practicing long hours will finally reward the student with a
working knowledge of the instrument. And, if they are lucky, after many years of
hard work they may even become quite a masterful player. The guitar, especially,
is held up as one of the more popular instruments to which people dedicate
themselves. With images of musical grandeur in their heads they apply themselves
night and day to the practice of guitar in the hopes of someday becoming
proficient. But there are a rare few of us who can actually learn guitar by ear
%u2013 an inherent skill that graces only the lucky among us.
Ultimately,
you never know until you try if you can learn guitar by ear. If you are
interested in taking up guitar and have a few chosen songs that you would really
like to learn to play %u2013 try it out. If you play the song on a CD, those who
can play guitar by ear can mimic the notes they hear on their own instruments.
For those who have a working knowledge of the guitar %u2013 the ways in which to
hold it and the tone that each vibrating chord makes %u2013 the possibility to
learn guitar by ear is far more probable. Until you really understand the sounds
that each chord is capable of making, it will be difficult to replicate the
sounds you hear in your music on the strings of your guitar.
In some
cases it is possible to train yourself to learn guitar by ear. Begin by learning
the sounds the strings make on your guitar; really process this and hear it in
your head as well as your ears. Listen to how the sounds change as you change
chords and begin to listen to the music on your CDs with an ear towards those
chord changes. You will soon begin to hear chord changes in the songs that you
have listened to over and over without ever previously recognizing those chords.
It%u2019s amazing how your ear changes once you begin to learn guitar; suddenly
you are able to make those necessary correlations between the sound that your
guitar makes and the sound that the guitar makes in some of your favorite songs.
Pick one part of the song and begin to try it out on your own guitar; keep
trying until you are able to replicate the sound. Soon enough you%u2019ll be
able to piece the song together; often sounds are just repetition of the same
chords.
While playing music adeptly by ear is in inherent skill, you can
still learn guitar by ear if you are dedicated and single-minded in your task.
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