#31
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Quote:
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#32
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I once used Open G tuning to teach a fellow who wanted to play guitar while riding a unicycle. Simple barres left his brain power available for balance, rather than making standard chord grips.
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#33
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Check out the Yamaha GL-1 Guitalele
A Yamaha GL-1 Guitalele is a 6 (nylon) string guitar, that is ukulele sized. You can play play it like a guitar, and it will sound like one with a capo @ the 5th. Songs will sound right, just higher pitched compared to it being played on a guitar without a capo.
It's fun, even for adults (smaller, dextrous hands probably help), it's not too expensive (just under $100), and is a quality Yamaha instrument. Search for songs on YouTube with this instrument, and you'll be amazed. I owned this one for a couple of years, and then sold it to fund a more higher quality small guitar, the Taylor Baby. I would have kept it, had I not had a house guitar limit, imposed by my better half. [/url] |
#34
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My suggestion would be to get a downsized yamaha
classical -they come in different sizes -think they have a 1/4 , 1/3 etc sizes -and their not all that pricey -classical's are easier on young hands . i have a guitalee -its ok but its not tuned to eadgbe Their is a way to get strings for it that will play in tune with a guitar - theirs a utube video for that ( cant recall the brands ) Im not sure if its good for small hands - Id still say try a smaller classical -
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