Guitar Noise Podcasts

Podcast Feed iTunes subscribe button

Recent Articles

One Note At A Time - Turning Scales into Solos (Part 2)

David Hodge, July 1, 2008

After spending our last lesson looking at all the notes in a scale, this time we’re going to just look at a few. One of the best things you can do to get going as a soloist is to minimize the number of notes you use in a solo. Focusing on one, two, three or four notes will help you on both rhythm and phrasing, which make a solo a lot more interesting than just stringing as many notes together as fast as you can.

Into The Blue: Rhythm Part 1

Paul Andrews, June 30, 2008

Welcome to the first of a new series of articles entitled Into the Blue, which will explore the style, sound and key players within the Blues genre. This series will be pitched at an intermediate level and will build on techniques and practices that many players will be well aware of. But, of course, we’ll still start off slowly, making sure we leave nothing to chance.

Choosing Colors - Turning Scales into Solos - Part 1

David Hodge, June 23, 2008

Putting together solos is not easy for a lot of people, and the conventional teaching (”just use your scales”) doesn’t always make sense when you’re just starting out. In this, the first of a series of articles, we take a listen to the differences in tonal color between the major scale and the major pentatonic.

Waterfalls - A Sweet Little Finger-style Song

Peter Simms, June 15, 2008

Guitar Noise welcomes the long-awaited return of Peter Simms to our pages! Peter’s been very busy with performing and teaching this past year but wanted us to know he’s still thinking of the Guitar Noise readers. So much, in fact, that he wrote this song (and the accompanying lesson) just for us!

From Junky to Funky - Part 2 - My DIY Low-Budget Bass Makeover

Mitch Schlesinger, June 15, 2008

Having made himself a terrific fretless neck, Mitch sets himself the task of finishing his budget bass guitar with the classic coral pink finish. It’s truly astounding to see the results of his project. What a beautiful bass guitar!

Guitar and Music Books

The Complete Idiot's Guide to Playing Guitar by David Hodge

The Complete Idiot's Guide to Playing Bass Guitar

by David Hodge

Whether readers have just picked up the bass or are learning to improve their technique, this book provides a strong foundation in reading music, purchasing the right equipment, and care and maintenance of the bass guitar.

Customer reviews:

"David Hodge has written a very good book on the bass - of which there are very few."
"Mr. Hodge anticipates questions very well, and his conversational writing style translates superbly to learning an instrument."

Read our full review of The Complete Idiot's Guide to Playing Bass Guitar.


Browse Lessons

Find lessons by category.
Did we mention all lessons are free?

Community Forums

Friendly guitar discussion.
Join our community for the fastest response to all your questions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Got a question?
Chances are it's been asked and answered already. Pretty cool, huh?

Guitar Noise Feed

Guitar Noise RSS Feed
Get all the latest updates from this site.

 One of the most comprehensive online guitar teaching pages. www.thisislondon.co.uk