Fingerstyle Guitar – Easy Songs in the Public Domain

This guitar ebook includes fingerstyle arrangements for Brahms Lullaby, Kumbaya, Ode To Joy, Sarabande, Can Can, Twinkle Twinkle Little Star, Frère Jacques and All Through The Night. There is also a selection of fingerpicking, bluegrass and chord strumming accompaniments for these pieces. Also includes simple melodies for the songs and warm up exercises.

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I have been playing guitar for a while now, but I didn’t start playing classical or fingerstyle until sometime after beginning with rock, pop, funk, reggae and metal styles. I have since started to fall for this style of guitar playing. It’s so relaxing and it’s a challenge and really interesting to explore what can be done. I am nowhere near being a good fingerstyle player, but I’ve been teaching beginners for 12 years and this experience makes it possible to put together an interesting selection of pieces for this book that is for beginner guitar and advanced beginners. The book can be used by teachers in their lessons. Self taught players can learn too, but they would need some prior knowledge of reading music and some basic beginners ability to play a few simple chords together, such as C, F, Am, E, G, G7, D and Dm..

In this book you will find a collection of public domain songs with unique fingerstyle arrangements. There is also a selection of fingerpicking, bluegrass and chord strumming accompaniments for the pieces. The patterns in these accompaniments are fairly basic ideas that can be used for many other songs. It is worth studying these and learning the fingerpicking patterns, how the bluegrass bass notes work and linking that with the off beat chord strums and also getting a grasp of the simple strumming rhythm with accents on beats 2 and 4 for Ode to Joy.

My aim for this book is to make it easy for people to find an collection of simple fingerstyle songs that doesn’t get too hard too quickly, and opens the door for learning harder or longer songs after confidence has been built up by playing songs that have been arranged to be fairly easy and inviting to play for the beginner or advanced beginner. Some of the fingerstyle arrangements would take some rehearsing for even more advanced players actually, to play them well, so it’s not just a book for beginner guitarists. Perhaps the player may be great at other things but not familiar with fingerstyle, so this might be a good entry.

This book of easy songs has been created by making new arrangements from public domain songs. Public domain songs are great for learning because the tunes are familiar and there are no copyright restrictions for performing or for creating arrangements of them. This book can be used by teachers and students, or by anyone learning on their own.

The fingerstyle arrangements are unique to this book and have been made by playing around with various combinations of melody, bass and notes from the chords until a good balance was reached between being fairly easy to play but also challenging and enjoyable/relaxing.

Whilst you may find other fingerstyle versions of these songs elsewhere, they won’t be the same as these. I have made them up and not followed anyone else’s so it would be almost impossible for them to be the same, because there are lots of combinations of bass notes (root notes, 3rds, 5ths) to go along with the melody, perhaps different bass line rhythms, and there are also some hammer ons, pull offs and slides in places. You can find many different melody transcriptions with the same melody presented in slightly different ways, but the beauty of fingerstyle playing is that you can be quite creative with the arrangements to make something fairly different and unique, even though these public domain songs have been played countless times before.

The style of the book should come across as a coherent body of work as it’s been arranged by one person. However, it’s good to explore other books written by other people too if you are interested in learning more fingerstyle playing, because other arrangers will add their own style to pieces too and you will learn different things from them. I hope this book will help you start or continue your journey into learning fingerstyle, or perhaps with finger picking or bluegrass guitar playing.

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Warm Up Tabs for Guitar, Bass & Ukulele – Scales & Arpeggios

We’re still in lockdown in Wales (UK), and we can only travel 5 miles. I’ve been busy teaching online lessons and also have done a lot of DIY projects around the house. I thought I would have had loads of time to update my blogs but I’ve been too busy! However, my students that have carried on have been burning through their grades and practicing more than ever. Here are a few scales warm ups I’ve been adding to their new practice plans, which I’ve been writing with google docs and sending the parents a link to so they can see updated practice notes whenever I add new things to it.

At the end of the post, there is also a bonus chord exercise challend for you to try.

These scales, arpeggios and chords exercises are good for any beginner or intermediate player that has been learning guitar for a while and has the ability to read tab. You might be used to reading proper sheet music, like on the rest of the website, but the tab is essentially the same. You have 6 lines (4 for ukulele), and the top line is the bottom string on the instrument. So the bottom line on the tab is the thickest string on the guitar. You’ll see tab elsewhere on the internet like on ultimate-guitar.com, so hopefully everyone will be able to read these.

Hopefully you can find these an enjoyable way to warm up whilst stuck at home. Run through all of these as a warm up so you’re not neglecting your scales, and then go and learn something else like you would in a guitar lesson. Perhaps learn a song or maybe some chord progression exercises or learn to play a guitar solo from a song you like.

Scales & Arpeggio Warm Ups – Guitar

4X forwards and backwards for each one

E Blues scale

———————————————–0–3–
—————————————0–3———-
—————————-0–2–3——————
———————0–2—————————-
———-0–1–2————————————
–0–3———————————————–

A minor pentatonic scale

Fret 5 = 1st finger, Fret 6 = 2nd Finger, Fret 7 = 3rd finger, Fret 8 = 4th finger

————————————–5–8——
——————————–5–8————
————————–5–7——————
——————5–7————————–
———-5–7———————————-
–5–8——————————————

G major scale

———————————————————5–7–8–
———————————————5–7–8————-
———————————-4–5–7————————
———————–4–5–7———————————–
————3–5–7———————————————-
-3–5–7———————————————————

A major arpeggio

Fret 4 = 1st finger, Fret 5 = 2nd Finger, Fret 6 = 3rd finger, Fret 7 = 4th finger

————————–5—-
———————-5——–
——————6————
————–7—————-
——4–7———————
–5—————————-

A minor arpeggio

Fret 5 = 1st finger, Fret 6 = 2nd Finger, Fret 7 = 3rd finger, Fret 8 = 4th finger

————————–5—–
———————-5———
——————5————-
————–7—————–
———-7———————
–5–8————————–

 

Scales & Arpeggio Warm Ups – Bass Guitar

4X forwards and backwards for each one

E Blues scale

——————————————————
———————0–2—————————-
———-0–1–2————————————
–0–3———————————————–

A minor pentatonic scale

Fret 5 = 1st finger, Fret 6 = 2nd Finger, Fret 7 = 3rd finger, Fret 8 = 4th finger

————————————————
——————5–7————————–
———-5–7———————————-
–5–8——————————————

G major scale

———————————-4–5–7—9—11–12—-
———————–4–5–7——————————–
————3–5–7——————————————-
-3–5–7——————————————————

A major arpeggio

Fret 4 = 1st finger, Fret 5 = 2nd Finger, Fret 6 = 3rd finger, Fret 7 = 4th finger

——————————-
————–7—————-
——4–7———————
–5—————————-

A minor arpeggio

Fret 5 = 1st finger, Fret 6 = 2nd Finger, Fret 7 = 3rd finger, Fret 8 = 4th finger

——————————–
————–7—————–
———-7———————
–5–8————————–

Scales & Arpeggio Warm Ups – Ukulele

4X forwards and backwards for each one

C minor pentatonic scale

——————-1–3———-
———–1–3——————
—0–3————————–
———————————

C major scale

———————-0–2–3—-
———–0–1–3—————
—0–2————————–
———————————

D minor scale

——————-3–5———-
———–3–5——————
—2–5————————–
———————————

D major scale

———————-2–4–5—-
———–2–3–5—————
—2–4————————–
———————————

E natural minor scale

—————————5–7——-
—————5–7–8—————-
—4–6–7—————————-
————————————–


Bonus Chord Exericse

How many times can you play these chords in 1 minute?

Set a countdown timer for 1 minute. Strum each chord once and then repeat when you have done all 3 chords. Count how many times you go around them in 1 minute.

Challenge 1: A, D, E.
Challenge 2: E, A7, B7.
Challenge 3: A7, D7, E7.
Challenge 4: Am Dm7 G.
Challenge 5: C F G.

(PREMIUM) – First Guitar Book – Easy Reading Scales, Riffs & Melodies

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A Ukulele Version is also available.

  • PDF ebook
  • 20 pages
  • Easy to read design
  • Song melodies
  • Scales
  • Riffs
  • Useful for beginners of all ages.
  • Includes 3 blank template PDF files for writing your own scales and exercises

Contents

  1. Front Cover
  2. Contents
  3. Introduction
  4. How To Read The Music – Part 1
  5. How To Read The Music – Part 2
  6. Twinkle Twinkle Little Star (FREE)
  7. Happy Birthday
  8. Sheet 1 – Guitar Scale Exercises (FREE)
  9. Sheet 1 – Rock Riffs
  10. Camptown Races
  11. Sheet 2 – Rock Riffs
  12. Amazing Grace
  13. Sheet 2 – Guitar Scale Exercises
  14. Morning Has Broken
  15. Sheet 3 – Rock Riffs
  16. Sheet 3 – Guitar Scale Exercises
  17. Can Can
  18. Sheet 4 – Guitar Scale Exercises
  19. Sheet 4 – Rock Riffs
  20. Mexican Hat Dance

People that might find this book useful

  • Beginner Guitar students of any age group.
  • Guitar teachers can print the book or single sheets for their students and teach it to them.
  • Get used to the basics with this easy to read book before moving onto standard tab and notation.
  • Parents may be able to teach their children with this book.
  • Some may be able to teach themselves the basics with this book.

About The Book

This easy reading ebook is a compilation of 9 years teaching guitar and preparing lesson sheets for my students. I developed the easy reading design for complete beginners. It is based on normal guitar tab, but simplifies it so that there are no distractions, and it’s huge and easy to look at rather than the numbers being small.

I tested some of these sheets over the last 6 months until I was ready to create the rest of the book. I have found that the format that I have created takes away any unnecessary distractions in order to teach the basics without distractions and confusion. I believe it solves problems with reading the music for beginners of any age, but particularly for young beginners.

I decided to create this range of sheets like this one to make both my life easier and to help my students get to grips with reading tab quicker for playing scales, melodies, public domain songs, traditional songs and riffs. I have created the sheets using Adobe Illustrator.

There are different ways of playing the scales so it’s ok to do what works for you but don’t just use 1 finger for all of it! Younger players think it’s faster at first, but it’s really not in the long run. If you have frets 1 2 3 and 4 to play in an exercise, you could use all 4 fingers to play it (1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th finger). Use this technique of ‘one finger per fret’ where it seems comfortable to do so. If a scale only has 0, 2 and 3 in it, then you could use just your strongest 2 fingers to play it (1st finger for the fret 2’s and 2nd finger for the fret 3’s).

Guitar teachers can use this ebook in their own teaching and they are welcome to print physical copies for their students.

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