The G Chord on the Guitar - Relearning It
April 22, 2007 · Print This Article
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The G Chord on the Guitar - Relearning It
By Lee Griffith
It was these lessons that put me on the right path toward getting those fiddle
tunes to sound crisp and lively on the acoustic guitar.
I was told I had to “unlearn” a number of habits in order to get going in the right direction. The first thing he told me I had to do was to change the way I played the most basic of all chords: the
G chord!
I had spent ten years playing G the way many people play it. You know, your second finger is behind the third fret of the sixth (low E) string, your first finger is behind the second fret of the fifth (A) string, and your third finger is behind the third fret of the first (high E) string. What could be easier?
But being easy wasn’t the point. I had to learn something that was going to be very hard at first, in order to make a lot of other things much easier down the road. Here’s what I had to do: I had to put my THIRD finger behind the third fret of the sixth string, my SECOND finger behind the second fret of the fifth string, and MR. PINKIE behind the third fret of the first string. THE FIRST FINGER WAS NOT EVEN GOING TO BE USED IN THE CHORD!
I tried and it was so unnatural. It was PAINFUL. I couldn’t even push the high E string down with my weak pinkie. What could possibly be the purpose in all of this? Mick told me to discipline myself to learn this and the purpose would become apparent. How true his words were!
After weeks of learning to play G in this new way, I found that I could switch to the C chord with much more speed that ever before. I also found that when I switched to the C chord, I could, at will, just leave my pinkie behind the third fret of the high E string, which gave the C chord an entirely new dimension. Then I could leave it on the same way and go right back to G. I also found that playing the G this way left my first finger and my other fingers in an ideal position to go quickly into lead licks. Why not try this yourself? Take the time to get it down and you’ll never go back!
Copyright © 2007 Lee Griffith. All rights reserved.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Lee Griffith is an avid acoustic guitar player and a vintage instrument enthusiast. He invites you to receive a FREE REPORT on a revolutionary acoustic guitar lesson kit, along with his weekly newsletter via email.
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very helpful article! in fact i’ve done the same thing with the D chord as well. it’s tough and the pinkie needs some strengthening up, but it definitely makes changing chords so much easier…