Can you play the guitar well enough to easily learn your favorite songs? Not yet?

The Jamorama Deluxe Course will teach you everything you need to know to learn how to play guitar. From absolute beginner level, right through to being a professional guitarist.

We have been providing guitar lessons online for over 6 years. Our team, is made up of passionate musicians who have strong values and feel we can bring knowledge and experience to the world of online learning.

Teaching others is one of our core values and so we continue to strive for the best lessons and the best use of technology to delivery our lessons. We believe in our product and continue to develop our product and community. We have taught thousands of students how to achieve their goals on guitar so we understand exactly what you are going through right now and as good teachers we continue to ask the right questions.

Right now we would like to ask you a few questions and you probably have some burning questions too!

Please Read on... We hope we can and answer those for you!

Where is your guitar playing level at?

Beginner?

Need all the help you can get?

Getting started with the absolute basics can be really hard work. We have worked extra hard putting together a step-by-step course to make learning fun and get you playing the guitar sooner. Our Jamorama Course is a comprehensive and fun course and will teach you everything you need to know from absolute beginner to jamming in a band.

Intermediate?

Do you have some experience but are looking for more skills to play new songs?

Many online sites are geared towards experienced players, but can lack direction. Most websites expect you to pick and choose what you want to learn and don’t really help you with your development.

Our Deluxe Course materials will challenge any guitarist and give you a clear direction.

Advanced?

Are you already playing some songs?

If you have been playing for a while or used to play the guitar and feel stuck in a rut, then your next decision is easy.

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Sunday, June 6, 2010

Reasons to Learn Guitar Scales

By Ricky Sharples

When you buy your first guitar and start fooling around with it, learning songs and making up your own tunes, you kind of wonder about the need to learn guitar scales. If I'm doing okay with my own natural talent, why do I have to spoil the fun by learning a bunch of dry scales?

You need to learn guitar scales because they are your key to understanding the guitar fretboard. You really need to learn your way around the notes on the guitar so that you can give your playing some depth and variety. Take the major scale for example. The do-re-mi-fa-so-la-si-do you learnt when you were a kid. If you can find that scale in any key in any part of the fretboard, you have control over the music and you are not restricted to the basic open chords and the notes in the first position you learnt as novice guitarist.

If you hear a lick on a CD and decide that you want to learn it, you could take the hard road and try to find the notes by ear. Lots of people have learnt to play that way. But if you have taken the trouble to learn guitar scales, you will probably recognize from the sound of the riff which scale is used and in what position. If you have the sound of the scales you will recognize the intervals because your practice has made the scale part of you.

If you have the knowledge that practicing guitar scales gives you, your natural talent will give you the seed of a melody and your knowledge of the scales will allow you to quickly develop your ideas and see how your tune sounds at the first, fifth, tenth or twelfth fret. The basic point to why you need to learn guitar scales is that you can learn in a month of practicing scales what ten years of playing hit and miss might give you. Time is short.

So let's get back to the major scale. The do-re-mi scale is a bunch of notes separated by a certain number of frets. The seven notes are separated by seven intervals. The intervals are of two sizes - tones and semitones. The semitone is the interval between two adjacent frets, the tone is an interval with an empty fret between the notes.

The intervals in the major scale go like this: TONE - TONE - SEMITONE - TONE - TONE - TONE - SEMITONE. If we count each tone as two semitones, you have a total of twelve semitones in an octave. This is the material you work with as a guitar player if you learn guitar scales. You learn scales that make use of these intervals to produce sounds that are capable of producing a range of feelings in your listeners.

Do you want to learn to play the guitar? Learn How To Play A Guitar For Free is a constantly updated blog which contains all the resources you need for: learning to play solo guitar, how to learn guitar chords, how to learn to read and play easy acoustic guitar tabs, finding a free online guitar tuner, looking for free guitar lessons online, and how to learn guitar scales.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Ricky_Sharple