Hey Sebastian,
Good to hear that. I am practicing on an acoustic guitar. Never used an electric guitar before. I started out with my brother's classical guitar though (I used to strum only), before I switched back to the acoustic guitar a couple of months back.
English Guy wrote:Hi, I am a guitarist as well. Linux has some useful things for guitarists.
I use 'play it slowly' to slow down tracks I am learning (it can also just play a short phrase at a time). You can write tab with tuxguitar (and print it, very useful for teaching), Hydrogen drum machine is useful, as it is best to practice with a beat, or you get a rude surprise when you finally try playing along. If you learn to use a sequencer, you can make your own backing tracks.
Even if you do not intend to do studio style recording the ability to record yourself is useful; it helps you work towards being able to listen to yourself objectively as if listening to another person.
(BTW: the trick I teach re bar chords is, instead of squeezing, put a slight twist on the neck as if trying to bend it back. When you have learned to achieved it, then learn to do it with as little pressure as possible, as it is the excess pressure that will slow you down; in fact, learn to do this with all your chords).
Thanks for the list of software, English Guy! I will look them up. Regarding your advice on barre chords, that's a very good advice. I need to learn to apply the least pressure possible. My thumb is getting really tired after I hold the F chord for a few seconds. I hope it gets better in time.
