It is a shame I did not manage to bump my other guitar thread in time...

fags that obsess over gear and branding ruin music

play what you want

I'm relearning the guitar after recovering from a stroke and the crippling depression that followed. I was always weak at chords (was mostly a lead player). Should I just transcribe diatonic chords in each key? I'm thinking doing both horizontally and vertically (being in a mode and transcribing the inversions). Any advice? Also want to play at incredbl hihg speeds.

The Fender Squier Bullet Mustang has a pretty good reputation and I've been using it for a couple of years.Totally fine guitar and I don't see myself buying another one in the near future

>Any advice?
If you want to be a lead player why are you getting stuck into the weeds of weird ass music theory?
If you want to get faster then slow down to a 50% pace, and increase your bpm by 10% when you can get your riff down perfectly 20x at the current pace.

I want to be well rounded. Chords have always been a weak point of mine and I am unsure of how to approach properly learning them. It feels daunting at first, knowing that you can build not just a root position chord around one note, but also inversions of other chords too. I'm kinda having a hard time getting the concepts I'm thinking into words right now.

>The virgin Gibson player
>The chad Chibson player

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Properly learning them isnt diving into the deep end like you suggest. Learn your basic shapes, learn your favourite scales. Learn the shapes that live inside the modes and scales you enjoy using, if you feel the need to go that far

Thanks for the advice user, and nice trips

I've heard good things about Squier, I'll keep it in mind. Thank you.

I don't own any Yamaha Pacifica guitars, but I have heard really good thing about it, it is better than a same priced squier.

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