1) Keep it Close: Place your fingers near to the strings It's simple. The less you move your fingers, the faster you change between chords. The truth is, the weaker your fingers are the further from the strings they'll move when you change chords. Chance is, you may not have noticed just how high they're lifting off.
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Read More »10 Step How To Change Chords Faster, Easier and Smoother Formula (That Works Every Time) Learn how to change guitar chords easier and quicker while strumming and picking. Beginner guitar players or experienced players find out how to play guitar chords faster and smoother. For a killer exercise to help you learn the fretboard notes + FREE backing tracks check out: Octave Shape Minor Pentatonic Exercise For faster finger exercises with FREE backing tracks you may be interested in: Octave Shape Arpeggio Exercise It's essential to be able to change between chords smoothly and quickly if you want to sound any good at playing the guitar. The trouble is that fast switching between chords whilst strumming and picking is tricky for beginners.
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Read More »5) Find A Common String: Slide your finger into position on shared strings Some chords have notes played on the same string when changing between them. The E major to D major chord change is a prime example, as illustrated in the exercise below. The first finger is the commonly shared finger between these two chord shapes. Keep the shared finger pressed down on the string when you switch between the chords. It's simple once you recognise what the shared string is. Try this method for yourself: Exercise: Sliding Finger 1. Place all of your fingers down on the open E major chord. 2. Strum the E chord once, then immediately change to the D major chord and strum that once. 3. Repeat the chord change 4 times: E-strum-D-strum - E-strum-D-strum - E-strum-D-strum - E-strum-D-strum 4. On the 4th change, look at your 1st finger as you go from the E to D shape. I bet it is lifting off the G (3rd) string, isn't it? If you answered yes, you don't want to do that. It's wasted, unnecessary movement. The fix - Slide your 1st finger up and down the 3rd string, don't lift it when you change between the E and D major. Do this in any song with this chord change you learn from today. You’ll achieve “economy of movement”, which will make the chord change quicker, slicker, and cleaner. Pro Tip: If you're a beginner guitarist, your fingers will be slow to form a chord shape. Don't stress out. The more you practice the ten steps outlined in this article, the faster your chord changes will improve.
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