iPlayMusic iPlayMusic - Learn guitar the quick, simple & easy way

welcome to the training center


The iPlayMusic Training Center is an innovative and exciting place for beginner guitar players to learn to play and
practice their skills. We offer a variety of information from guitar chords and strumming patterns to Chord Transitions &
Finger Strength Techniques. This training center is designed to give you the skills you need to play the songs you love.
Follow the 5 steps below and you will be playing in no time:

 Basics   
  How to Hold Guitar
  How to Tune Guitar
>Guitar Pick
  Hand Positioning
  Guitar Anatomy

Guitar Pick

The guitar pick is used with the strumming hand to either pick the strings individually or strum them all at once to play chords. Picks come in many shapes and sizes. The thickness of the pick is usually marked on the pick. Thickness ranges from thin to heavy. Medium is a good thickness to start with, but you should try a few different gauges and see what thickness you like.

Not all guitarists use a pick. Mark Knopfler, the guitarist from Dire Straits is perhaps the most famous lead guitarist in the pop music world to use his fingers, rather than a pick, when soloing. Classical and flamenco guitarists also use fingerstyle rather than a pick to play the guitar. For the most part, it is easier for beginners to produce a nice smooth sound with the pick, so we suggest that you learn how to play with a pick first and then venture off into the world of fingerstyle once you are more advanced.

The guitar pick is held with the thumb and index finger of the strumming hand. Grip the fat end of the pick between your thumb and index finger. The pointed part of the pick should be facing in towards the strings. See figure 10.

Now that you understand how to hold the pick, you should practice striking individual strings on the guitar. Make sure that you have a firm grip, and then strike the 6th string, making sure that you strike the string with the very tip of the pick (about 1/4 of the pick's surface area). In general, if you strike the strings with the same intensity, the more tip you have exposed the louder the chord will be. Try striking the 6th string lightly and then more firm to notice the different tones you can generate. Avoid striking the string so hard that it buzzes. This is a sure sign that you're picking too hard.