Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • Throughout this songwriting part of the course,

  • there's gonna be some stuff that's

  • gonna be geared towards absolute beginners,

  • intermediate players, and advanced players.

  • This part is for the absolute beginners.

  • Like you don't know that what the world can

  • be with you as a guitar player.

  • And I'm here to show you that right

  • now-- within a matter of minutes,

  • that you can be a songwriter.

  • So we'll start like this.

  • So if you're holding a guitar in your hands

  • and you can play a couple of notes on the guitar,

  • you're well on your way to being a songwriter.

  • You don't have to even know the names of the strings.

  • For the moment, let's just call it

  • the fattest string, the one closest to you.

  • It happens to be the E string.

  • But play that string.

  • [GUITAR NOTE]

  • Great job.

  • OK.

  • [LAUGHING] And then pick any of the--

  • pick a dot.

  • The first, second, or third.

  • Let's take the first dot, just for the sake of argument.

  • And so all you're gonna do is play

  • those two notes, one at a time.

  • [GUITAR NOTE]

  • And now the dot.

  • [GUITAR NOTE]

  • OK.

  • Practice that until you're able to play both of those.

  • Now just pick a number between one and four.

  • Let's just say four is the number that you chose.

  • Play that fat open string four times in a row.

  • [STRUMMING GUITAR]

  • Pretty good.

  • Try it again.

  • [STRUMMING GUITAR]

  • Sounds like the fat open note four times in a row.

  • Now, that second note, which is this dot here, how about

  • let's pick another number.

  • Two.

  • All right, so we're gonna play that twice in a row.

  • [STRUMMING GUITAR]

  • One more time.

  • [STRUMMING GUITAR]

  • Now let's put it all together.

  • The fat note four times, the dot two times.

  • [STRUMMING GUITAR]

  • Now repeat.

  • One, two, three, four.

  • One, two.

  • One, two, three, four.

  • [STRUMMING GUITAR]

  • I-- we just wrote a song.

  • On your own guitar, pick any notes, any dots, any numbers.

  • Play them in a consecutive order and repeat,

  • and then you're a songwriter.

  • There's no mysterious mystique.

  • You and Paul McCartney are now songwriters, OK?

  • There's a longer route to writing "Let It Be,"

  • but there's no difference between you,

  • as a person who can hold a pick and have a guitar in your hand,

  • to become a songwriter right now today.

  • The same thing applies with playing simple chords.

  • If you can look-- like, I've got a six-year-old kid at home.

  • And the other day, I was like, I'm gonna

  • teach you how to write a song.

  • He said, dad, that's impossible.

  • I said, no it's not.

  • We did the same principle.

  • He just held his finger right here.

  • It's an E minor 7 chord, but you don't need to know that.

  • Just hold your finger right there

  • and strum all the strings.

  • [STRUMMING GUITAR]

  • And now put that finger on the dot on the fattest string.

  • [STRUMMING GUITAR]

  • For the sake of our argument, let's do our four strums

  • on the first one, two strums on the second one.

  • [STRUMMING GUITAR]

  • Let's speed it up and see if it sounds like punk rock.

  • [STRUMMING GUITAR]

  • And you're a songwriter.

  • Songwriters are just people that put notes and chords

  • in a certain order and play them a certain number of times

  • there's nothing more to it than that.

  • I discovered that in my basement with my punk rock band,

  • and the heavens opened.

  • All of a sudden, I wanted to play guitar

  • because I don't have to wait.

  • I didn't have to laboriously slog through a tar

  • pit of tiresome lessons.

  • I wasn't working the tar, I was immediately playing the guitar.

  • And so now you can play the guitar, too,

  • and write some songs.

  • [GUITAR SOLO]

Throughout this songwriting part of the course,

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it