Gitarre mit mini händen?
Ich habe sehr kleine, unbewegliche Finger und bin nur 1.48 groß und weiblich.
Ich schaffe nicht alles auf der Gitarre zu spielen, bin noch anfänger. Ich komme nämlich nicht überall mit den Fingern dran. Auch beim Piano hatte ich ein ähnliches Problem, doch da fand ich noch Lösungen.
Ich will definitiv nicht aufhören, es war ein langer Traum eine E Gitarre zu besitzen-Doch ich kann nicht z.B. Fret 3 und 5 gleichzeitig berührern oder jeden finger an einen anderen Fret platzieren.
Gibt’s Tipps?
Electric guitar is already heavy for normal mortals, which is why I have abandoned it and now learn bass guitar, I’m more.
Just keep practicing and if that’s still not right, you might have to watch that you get a more suitable guitar. It should be possible.
I have a question to you Hennatori if you would answer. I play gitarre and think about months if I don’t want to put a bass too, because I love the sound. Is bass more straightforward to learn or is that the same and are you playing longscale or?
Playing bass is easier. Especially if the bass guitar has only 4 strings.
In my opinion, bass is really underestimated, because bass is a completely different instrument.
In addition, the bass is the clock base, the foundation, the guitarist plays out, he can possibly compensate for it or just improvise, play the bassist, or he comes out of the clock, he can ruin the whole song.
The bass may not be as striking as the guitar, but the bass is the heart of the piece. If he fails, the piece will fall with him.
The string number? It decides more whether the bass can make even deeper sounds.
Your hands are absolutely enough, especially with the electric guitar there are possibilities, because in the rarest cases you have to put everything down at the same time.
What you need to train is mobility and yes, I stopped at that time, because I am desperate as an autodidact, but that was more because at that time I simply lacked the money for a teacher and an alternative learning concept than that.
Let us now come to the solution of the problem.
First go check off your current guitar, maybe it is simply wrongly set (for cheaper guitars often the positions of the strings are too high or low). If this is the case, your problem could be solved, at least with regard to the haptic of the guitar.
If this is not possible the problem or a correction, go to a music house, take advice and test yourself through the electric guitars. The size is not so the thing here, because shapes there is a lot of choice, but can of course decide about comfortable posture. For example, a Firebird or a Phoenix alone is more powerful than a Stratocaster or an SG.
However, it is especially important for the haptics of the guitar and the width of the mensur, this varies from model to model something and can make the decisive difference. Comfortable gripping is incredibly important for the electric guitar, because you want to react quickly and effectively.
Look for a teacher, no matter how long or short your fingers are, there are also many ways on the guitar to vary the attitudes, the thumb does not support the left hand without any reason and can make quite attitudes.
Dive your fingers regularly, you don’t even know what kind of spreading fingers can get out. Also make individual finger exercises, the small finger can develop incredibly good force and take the weaker ring finger dependent on the muscle of the small finger.
Hello,
There are different guitar sizes and shapes. If you have smaller hands, a guitar with a smaller scale or a narrower neck could be more comfortable for you. You could look around for a guitar designed specifically for players with small hands.
Regular finger training can help improve your finger strength and flexibility. You can perform finger exercises specifically aimed at developing fingerprints. There are many exercises you can find online that will help you increase your finger mobility.
Kapodasters can also be a good help. A capodaster is a small device that is clamped on the guitar neck and increases the pitch. You can place the capodaster at different positions on the fingerboard to change the pitch of the chords and possibly facilitate gripping of difficult chords.
Success
Small fish
Practice. Practice. And: practice.
There are so-called half or 3/4 guitars. They’re meant for small children, because of the little hands, but could solve your problem.
Success
I’d say your hands are enough. I have to train and stretch but otherwise it’s right.
Sounds soothing, thank you
Because I had problems with it at the beginning but now I’m out of trouble
There is bsp a mini squier which is quite expensive.
I’ll still watch, thanks for the tip 🙂
How would it be to switch to keyboard?
A keyboard cannot replace an electric guitar. Guitar is not just the sound, it’s the whole sense of play that makes it.