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Thread started 04/22/05 6:31am

Alasseon

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Piano vs Guitar

If the long-term goal is to learn both instruments, which should be learned first? Piano or guitar?

Is there a value of learning one first that makes it easier to learn the other?

Or does it even matter?
batman guitar

Some people tell me I've got great legs...
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Reply #1 posted 04/22/05 8:32am

Luv4oneanotha

its a matter of taste... and full love of each instrument

Guitar is easier to learn
Piano is more difficult
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Reply #2 posted 04/22/05 5:52pm

talmuzic

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dexterity determines which one is easier. I think piano is easier because you can see the layout from a better perspective. cool
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Reply #3 posted 04/22/05 6:48pm

yamomma

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talmuzic said:

dexterity determines which one is easier.


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Composition is knowing your music. Which ever instrument you feel more comphortable with will determine your next step. After that, try both!
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All Rights Reserved.
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Reply #4 posted 04/23/05 9:03am

SimonaleX

I think piano is much easier at the beginning. Imagine a person trying to play a melody for the very first time on both instruments. No comparison IMO!
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Reply #5 posted 04/23/05 9:30pm

NikkiH

Luv4oneanotha said:

its a matter of taste... and full love of each instrument

Guitar is easier to learn
Piano is more difficult

eek okay I think its the total opposite! Guitar is alot harder for me than piano is...
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Reply #6 posted 04/24/05 9:59pm

Freespirit

Attempting to learn guitar... I figure... I would like to take my instrument with me wherever I go...

Piano (played well) still and always will drive me insane. rose
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Reply #7 posted 04/25/05 8:43am

Luv4oneanotha

NikkiH said:

Luv4oneanotha said:

its a matter of taste... and full love of each instrument

Guitar is easier to learn
Piano is more difficult

eek okay I think its the total opposite! Guitar is alot harder for me than piano is...

basic guitar is easy, its just memorizing chords...
if your trying to solo, doing pull-ups and push-downs that takes me skill
you need to build up accuracy
but its pretty easy

Piano is easy as well...
but using both hands can get to someone...
unless your a chord progression pianist
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Reply #8 posted 04/26/05 1:54am

hectim

Learning piano will make it easier to read music and understand music theory.
Learning guitar (if you're talented and driven) will have you playing in arock band in a couple of years, so you can experience playing together with other musicians.
Both are important. But since learning one instrument is hard enough, focus first on the one you really love most. What turns your head in the shop window? A Nord electro or a Gibson Les Paul?

You might also consider something else completely. If you play, say, trombone, you'll have an easier time finding a good band, cause trombonists are rare and guitarists/keyboardists aren't.
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Reply #9 posted 04/26/05 2:43pm

Luv4oneanotha

hectim said:

Learning piano will make it easier to read music and understand music theory.
Learning guitar (if you're talented and driven) will have you playing in arock band in a couple of years, so you can experience playing together with other musicians.
Both are important. But since learning one instrument is hard enough, focus first on the one you really love most. What turns your head in the shop window? A Nord electro or a Gibson Les Paul?

You might also consider something else completely. If you play, say, trombone, you'll have an easier time finding a good band, cause trombonists are rare and guitarists/keyboardists aren't.

Few years?

try a few monthes
when i first started playing guitar
in 4 monthes i joined a band
of course i was just a rhythm guitarist then
now im a lead guitarist
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Reply #10 posted 04/26/05 6:41pm

PBS

I found playing the piano easier than the guitar even though I love and prefer to play the guitar??
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Reply #11 posted 04/26/05 10:03pm

NikkiH

hectim said:

Learning piano will make it easier to read music and understand music theory.
Learning guitar (if you're talented and driven) will have you playing in arock band in a couple of years, so you can experience playing together with other musicians.
Both are important. But since learning one instrument is hard enough, focus first on the one you really love most. What turns your head in the shop window? A Nord electro or a Gibson Les Paul?

You might also consider something else completely. If you play, say, trombone, you'll have an easier time finding a good band, cause trombonists are rare and guitarists/keyboardists aren't.

Hello,horns and woodwinds are really difficult as well! lol Plus everyone doesn't have the lips for it...and then you have to worry about air flow,fingers,and brain coordination,at least with strings (a piano is technically a string instrument as well)you just have to worry about hands and brain... biggrin
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Reply #12 posted 04/27/05 12:21am

hectim

Luv4oneanotha said:



try a few monthes
when i first started playing guitar
in 4 monthes i joined a band
of course i was just a rhythm guitarist then
now im a lead guitarist


lol just a rhythm guitarist? You mean like Prince and Miko Weaver and Catfish Collins and Jimmy Nolen and Steve Cropper? wink It took me about a year and a half to produce decent-enough pentatonic blues solos somewhere between the Stooges and Clapton and play Ramones style power chords. Then it took me 17 years to become a decent rhythm guitarist and I'm still working on it every day.

To be preecise-edit: (and I'll keep working on playing lead like George Benson for EVAH)
[Edited 4/27/05 0:25am]
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Reply #13 posted 04/27/05 12:24am

hectim

NikkiH said:

Hello,horns and woodwinds are really difficult as well! lol Plus everyone doesn't have the lips for it...and then you have to worry about air flow,fingers,and brain coordination,at least with strings (a piano is technically a string instrument as well)you just have to worry about hands and brain... biggrin


Hello! biggrin
I didn't say they were easy, just that it's worthwile considering if you're starting from scratch and aren't sure about the instrument. Also, horn players don't have to lug all that damn gear around like we guitarists, keyboardist. I'm always SO jealous of the horn section in my band! One case, that's all. If I were to start again, I'd seriously consider the trumpet or alto sax.
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Reply #14 posted 04/29/05 9:14pm

NikkiH

hectim said:

NikkiH said:

Hello,horns and woodwinds are really difficult as well! lol Plus everyone doesn't have the lips for it...and then you have to worry about air flow,fingers,and brain coordination,at least with strings (a piano is technically a string instrument as well)you just have to worry about hands and brain... biggrin


Hello! biggrin
I didn't say they were easy, just that it's worthwile considering if you're starting from scratch and aren't sure about the instrument. Also, horn players don't have to lug all that damn gear around like we guitarists, keyboardist. I'm always SO jealous of the horn section in my band! One case, that's all. If I were to start again, I'd seriously consider the trumpet or alto sax.

True. But I assume that the piano and guitar are included in more bands...so there is more likelihood of getting a job.
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Reply #15 posted 04/30/05 5:42am

7salles

Well, it depends, to be a virtuoso is quite hard on all instruments. I think it's more easy to make chords on keys. Like when you see a Dm7(9/13) it's very easy for me to do on a piano, in the guitar i waste some time to find. a fast pentatonic lick or fast arpeggio is much more easy on the keys too. On the other side transposing is ridiculously easy on guitar, so that helps a lot. And one thing that eases the playing on guitar is that you don't need to have a dexterity as good as piano players have. And i think pretty hard to get a groove in my rythm piano playing. I feel like my fings are glued somehow. After all things I said, i cannot answer what is more easy. sad
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Reply #16 posted 04/30/05 9:22am

respectful

Alasseon said:

If the long-term goal is to learn both instruments, which should be learned first? Piano or guitar?

Is there a value of learning one first that makes it easier to learn the other?

Or does it even matter?



You have the mental and spiritual capacity and discipline to LEARN what you love to do then you can do it all at the same time. There is no limit in what you touch only that you touch... with discipline and a sincere heart.

And anybody subjecting you to OTHER THAN THE TRUTH is a lie... and therefore... meet that LIE halfway and WALK RIGHT THE (BLEEP) over it.

GODBLISS
SingMia

[Edited 5/2/05 13:22pm]
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Reply #17 posted 04/30/05 9:23am

respectful

respectful said:

Alasseon said:

If the long-term goal is to learn both instruments, which should be learned first? Piano or guitar?

Is there a value of learning one first that makes it easier to learn the other?

Or does it even matter?


YESSSS



You have the mental and spiritual capacity and discipline to LEARN what you love to do then you can do it all at the same time. There is no limit in what you touch only that you touch... with discipline and a sincere heart.

And anybody subjecting you to OTHER THAN THE TRUTH is a lie... and therefore... meet that LIE halfway and WALK RIGHT THE (BLEEP) over it.


GODBLISS
SingMia

[Edited 5/2/05 13:23pm]
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Reply #18 posted 05/01/05 8:55pm

Luv4oneanotha

hectim said:

Luv4oneanotha said:



try a few monthes
when i first started playing guitar
in 4 monthes i joined a band
of course i was just a rhythm guitarist then
now im a lead guitarist


lol just a rhythm guitarist? You mean like Prince and Miko Weaver and Catfish Collins and Jimmy Nolen and Steve Cropper? wink It took me about a year and a half to produce decent-enough pentatonic blues solos somewhere between the Stooges and Clapton and play Ramones style power chords. Then it took me 17 years to become a decent rhythm guitarist and I'm still working on it every day.

To be preecise-edit: (and I'll keep working on playing lead like George Benson for EVAH)
[Edited 4/27/05 0:25am]


Call me a prodigy but i learned the guitar playing the petatonic blues scales
and learned playing Hendrix Barre chords
I understand what your saying though
but i've been mimicking Django Reinhardt solos for all i can remember
Rhythm guitaring was pretty easy compared
to yje Muddy Waters, Jimmy Rogers riffs
Are you a traditional guitarist or self taught?
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Reply #19 posted 05/01/05 11:01pm

heartbeatocean

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For me, piano is more well-rounded...you get a better idea of how melody and harmony work and how they work together since you're playing them at the same time. It's a more complete, full experience, though of course a guitar is most often played with other people. Piano is more difficult because both hands have to hit the notes...you have eight fingers to worry about instead of four. I never found the guitar that gratifying because it cut my fingers and caused me pain. But then again I never sweated it out.

It's an important choice because certain instruments are geared for certain genres. You can never play a saxophone in an orchestra, for instance. And you can't play a violin in a marching band. So it's good to consider what you want to do with it in the long-run, what music you want to play, and who you might want to play with, if anybody.

wink
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Reply #20 posted 05/02/05 1:39am

hectim

Luv4oneanotha said:


Call me a prodigy but i learned the guitar playing the petatonic blues scales
and learned playing Hendrix Barre chords
I understand what your saying though
but i've been mimicking Django Reinhardt solos for all i can remember
Rhythm guitaring was pretty easy compared
to yje Muddy Waters, Jimmy Rogers riffs
Are you a traditional guitarist or self taught?


Both, I took classical lessons and am taking bebop lessons right now, but in the blues & rock stuff I've played most of my muiscal career, I'm self taught.
To be more specific about the rhythm thing: there are so many feels between straight eights and swung triplets, so many nuances, playing a little behind the beat, playing on top of it, and then there's the different effect all those will have on different bands: one drummer sounds great when you're behind, another sounds best when your on top so HE can drag it a little bit. Also, how much dragging or pushing can a band take until the tempo starts to change? Then there's the matter of accents and counter-rhythms: at what points do your accents follow the snare drum and hi hat patterns and at what points do they play around them? What about the relationship to the keys and bass parts? Then there's staccato vs legato: How long do your chords last? And then there's the area of chord choices: anything from a full barre chord to a one note-chunk. Emphasizing 1s and 5's for a rock feel, or playing only colour tones on the higher strings for a funky/jazzy sound. In pop, there's all the possibilities open strings (and a capo) give you for a chiming byrds style sound. Then there's open tunings. And there's country blues-style rhythm/bass combined. All these choices don't only influence your own sound, but the way your entire band plays. Prince is one rhythm guitarist who can push his entire band to great heights with his rhythm playing, conciously or subconciously playing with all the different elements I just named. Wich isn't meant to disparage lead playing (which I love to do and hear) but to say: never underestimate the power, value and complexity of rhythm playing, especially in funk or funk-influenced music.
h
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Reply #21 posted 05/02/05 8:17am

FLUX

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A good friend of mine started his music career as a pianist.
It gave him a good grounding in Music theory.
He took up guitar when he realised it was easier to carry around . wink
~PClinuxOS~ yes I've been here longer than I care to remember, ... I drop in from time to time, ... thumbs up!
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Reply #22 posted 05/02/05 10:30am

otan

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I learned to play piano by ear first. It's just easier to form chords and find the melody on piano. Guitar - you have to learn how to TUNE the thing before you do anything else. And it's hard to learn what goes where on the guitar, but, once you get past that part, learning to play guitar came a whole lot faster than piano. I'm still sucking on piano. I'm sucking less on guitar.
The Last Otan Track: www.funkmusician.com/what.mp3
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Reply #23 posted 05/05/05 1:52pm

krayzie

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otan said:

I learned to play piano by ear first. It's just easier to form chords and find the melody on piano. Guitar - you have to learn how to TUNE the thing before you do anything else. And it's hard to learn what goes where on the guitar, but, once you get past that part, learning to play guitar came a whole lot faster than piano. I'm still sucking on piano. I'm sucking less on guitar.



Piano is the most difficult if you want to play it VERY well....
Guitar is easier...
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Reply #24 posted 05/06/05 2:14am

hectim

krayzie said:

Piano is the most difficult if you want to play it VERY well.... Guitar is easier...


So playing guitar like Wes Montgomery is easier than playing piano like Herbie Hancock? How do you know? Can you do both?
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Reply #25 posted 05/06/05 9:34am

krayzie

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hectim said:

krayzie said:

Piano is the most difficult if you want to play it VERY well.... Guitar is easier...


So playing guitar like Wes Montgomery is easier than playing piano like Herbie Hancock? How do you know? Can you do both?


I never said that...


I play guitar and piano....
I learn piano first but when I started playin guitar it was very easier...

I play classical music and IT'S VERY difficult, extremely difficult to play...
You got to be VERY skilled...
[Edited 5/6/05 15:31pm]
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Reply #26 posted 05/06/05 10:17am

otan

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There's no way to say which one is more difficult to play well.

Apples and Oranges: Which one tastes better?

Same useless debate.
The Last Otan Track: www.funkmusician.com/what.mp3
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Reply #27 posted 05/06/05 11:06am

SimonaleX

krayzie said:

hectim said:



So playing guitar like Wes Montgomery is easier than playing piano like Herbie Hancock? How do you know? Can you do both?


I never say that...


I play guitar and piano....
I learn piano first but when I started playin guitar it was very easier...

I play classical music and IT'S VERY difficult, extremely difficult to play...
You got to be VERY skilled...


Well, do you know classical guitar?!

Every instrument played on the highest level possible is difficult, don't matter if it's guitar, piano or triangle. There are differences especially at the beginning. To play a melody or a chord on piano can be achieved in a much more intuitive way.
[Edited 5/6/05 11:12am]
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Reply #28 posted 05/06/05 10:54pm

guitarslinger4
4

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SimonaleX said:

krayzie said:



I never say that...


I play guitar and piano....
I learn piano first but when I started playin guitar it was very easier...

I play classical music and IT'S VERY difficult, extremely difficult to play...
You got to be VERY skilled...


Well, do you know classical guitar?!

Every instrument played on the highest level possible is difficult, don't matter if it's guitar, piano or triangle. There are differences especially at the beginning. To play a melody or a chord on piano can be achieved in a much more intuitive way.
[Edited 5/6/05 11:12am]


I think maybe what he's saying is that after you learn to play one instrument, learning to play another isn't as hard because you know HOW to learn. I play guitar, piano, bass, drumz,and trumpet, and though I started out playing classical piano, I learned what I needed to do to improve on an instrument, so when I finally got around to learning how to play drumz, it wasn't as hard to get better because I already KNEW how to get better.

And in response to what someone was saying about rhythm guitar.....it takes a lot more to be a good rhythm guitarist than a good lead player. How many guitarists do you know that have good rhythm? Just because they're a rhythm player doesn't mean they HAVE rhythm!
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