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Which Guitar to learn on?
There are three
main types of guitar that you will encounter. They are:

Classical Acoustic |

Acoustic |

Electric |
Chances are that if you have asked someone if you
can use their guitar for a while, it would probably be an old
classical acoustic guitar or maybe a steel string acoustic.
These guitars are excellent to learn on because
electric guitars require things like leads, amps, speakers and
power. With acoustic guitars you only need a pick.
The other great thing about acoustic guitars is that
you can’t turn them up loud. When you are learning it is probably
better to play on a guitar that isn’t going too be loud, only loud
enough so your ears can hear your errors and your good
performances.
If you don’t know which types of guitar you want to
play on, ask yourself, ‘what kind of music do I want to play?’
Pick a song that you like for its guitar sound.
Listen to the guitar sounds and only the guitar sounds. Are they
clean, soft sounds? Or are they harsh, heavy or distorted?
Generally, acoustic guitars are softer and cleaner. Distorted, heavy
sounds come from electric guitars that are plugged into amplifiers
and effects units. Can you hear individual notes being picked or are
the strings being strummed hard? The harder you play, the thicker
your strings need to be. You need to know what style you want to
play.
OK you have found a style of music that you like.
Try and find out what the band video for that song is and watch it.
There will probably be a section in there where the band is playing.
In this part, look at the guitarist. Is he/she playing on an
electric guitar or an acoustic guitar? What brand is it? What style?
If you know the exact guitar from the video, you can ask to play on
it at your local guitar shop to see if it suits you.
People play guitar for many different reasons. You
need to understand what it is that you want to get out of the
guitar. To discover your tastes in guitar music, listening to
different styles and genres. Ask musicians at music shops about what
kind of guitars different bands use, or ask them what kind of
amps/effects those artists use to get that sound.
The answers don’t have to be exact because they will
get you thinking about what you need to buy to achieve the sound you
are after.
For more information on achieving different
guitar sounds, see our articles on basic guitar effects and guitar
manufacturers and guitar models.
This FREE course
in brought to you by Jamorama - The Ultimate Guitar Learning Kit
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