Clave: The Secret Key to Pop Rhythm

When you hear the word “clave”, what do you think of?

The two most likely answers are either “Nothing – I have never heard of it!”, or “Why would I want to learn clave? I’m not planning on playing Samba music anytime soon…”

Though you can be pardoned for both of these because of how little clave is discussed in-depth in music literature and theory, the truth is that clave exerts its influence on rock, dance music, and most interestingly, as far as the radio-friendly pop music of today.

Though clave originated in Afro-Cuban music and is most clearly heard there, if we dig a little deeper, we see that an astounding amount of contemporary pop music has adopted the clave for its own purpose.

So let’s dive in. We’re about to see how clave originated, changed through the years, and was adopted by more and more styles of music – making its way from Afro-Cuban music to pop, rock, hip-hop, rap, and beyond.

Hearing Clave in Pop Music

For our first example, let’s take a listen to one of the most-played songs of the decade:

Adele’s ballad “Hello” contains a rhythmic piano accompaniment that beautifully utilizes the simple 123-123-12 clave pattern. This is best heard at [2:22], at the start of the first chorus, as “Hello from the other side…” is sung.

We can write this rhythm out like so:

This pattern splits the music into pulses of varying lengths – so though the music is written in 4/4, by splitting it into a 123-123-12 pattern (that we count in eight eighth notes) we create a less “square” rhythm while still sticking to a time signature that has four beats.

In the case of “Hello”, this creates a swaying, lilting rhythmic structure perfect for a nostalgic ballad.

Now that we’ve heard a clave rhythm in action, let’s look at its concrete rhythmic definition.

So What Is Clave?

Clave actually refers to two things – an instrument and a style of music that are closely related.

“Claves” is the name given to a percussion instrument traditionally used in Afro-Cuban music, consisting of two cylindrical sticks made of hardwood. They are struck together by the player to produce a bright percussive sound – a sound that forms the backbone of much Caribbean music, a center around which the other instruments and the dancers orient themselves.

The rhythms played on these wooden sticks are also referred to as “clave” – and though Caribbean music is incredibly diverse, the same underlying rhythms can be heard in much of the music. There are two in particular that are the most ubiquitously heard.

A Tale of Two Claves

One common type of clave rhythm is known as the son clave, which is found in two flavours, 3-2 and 2-3. Let’s look at each one:

Yes, that’s right – you’ve already heard the 3-2 son clave above! It has that trademark “bam ba-dam bam – bam bam” groove. This is is the type of clave that pop music has borrowed for its purposes, as we’re about to see even more examples of.

Rearrange this slightly and you get the also popular 2-3 son clave:

The other oft-heard variant is the rumba clave. This is the signature pattern of Cuban rumba. Similarly to son clave, it has five rhythmic “strokes”, and its rhythmic pattern gives a unique, characteristic groove to the music. Listen to the 3-2 rumba clave:

As you can see from the score above, it differs from the son clave by only one note. That third hit in the first bar is a bit delayed. This seemingly minor difference lends a completely different sound to the rumba clave – it has more of a rolling feel than son clave:

And here is the 2-3 rumba clave:

Before we dive into examples of where these highly danceable patterns are found in the music we enjoy today, let’s backtrack and see where clave came from and how it made its way from traditional Afro-Cuban music to the airwaves of mainstream radio.

The Creation of Clave

If you’re a music history buff, it’s likely that you know the origin tale of Blues music LINK TO REMASTER – the slave trade brought the rhythmic traditions of Africa over to North America, where they mingled with European musical traditions to produce the soulful, expressive style that paved the way for modern rock ‘n’ roll.

Afro-Cuban Origins

However, the United States were not the only destination for the transatlantic slave trade. More than a million African slaves were brought to Cuba to work on sugar cane plantations.

According to many historians, the instrument known as “claves” were born when the African people began using hardwood pegs that were used to hold ships together as percussive instruments, playing on them the rhythms of sub-Saharan musical traditions.

It is believed that these rhythmic elements intermingled with Cuban music in the early styles of music that used clave rhythm. Among the first was the slow, syncopated danzón, which did double-duty as a musical style and a dance, and the contradanza (also known as the habanera). Rumba, son cubano, and conga soon emerged, with the same clave rhythms as their backbone.

Rhythm ‘n’ Blues ‘n’ Clave

It wasn’t long before African-American music began incorporating these Afro-Cuban rhythmic elements. Much of it was based on the rhythms of the contradanza, whose trademark rhythm was one of the greatest influences on Rhythm and Blues.

In fact, it was from contradanza that the New Orleans clave was obtained – a pattern that consists of the half the clave pattern, with a backbeat added in:

The presence of these clave rhythms only increased in subsequent years, as Cuban music was adopted more and more into the American mainstream.

Notably, Rhythm and Blues musician Bo Diddley popularized what is essentially a 3-2 son clave rhythm with his self-titled debut single:

R&B to R&R

As Rock ‘n’ Roll emerged out of Rhythm and Blues, it retained clave as an important rhythmic element. Simple, five-accent rhythms are very common in early Rock ‘n’ Roll, with musicians like Fats Domino, Buddy Holly, Billy Boy Arnold, and Elvis making use of clave rhythms. The son clave pattern was a rock ‘n’ roll favourite, because of how well it fit in with the 4/4 key signature sensibilities of the genre.

Clave in Modern-Day Pop

Contemporary pop music is hard to concretely define yet instantly recognizable for its diverse array of influences – and because it borrows from rock music, Latin music, and R&B, it should come as no surprise that clave has remained as a strong rhythmic influence in modern pop.

And interestingly, as we’re about to see, not only has pop embraced the clave, but it has even tweaked it to create the “pop clave”, a simplied rhythm that forms the backbone of countless radio hits.

The “Pop Clave”

Remember that popular son clave rhythm we saw?

Pop music has essentially taken this rhythm’s first bar, looped it, and used it as the rhythmic basis for countless catchy and highly-danceable anthems.

Here is our “pop clave”:

By omitting that second bar of the son clave, the pop clave is imbued with a restless, constant forward motion that keeps listeners engaged. It invigorates even slower, relaxed ballads with momentum. Listen for it in Lana Del Rey’s “Love”:

And in John Legend’s “All of Me”:

The pop clave is an interesting beast – once you hear it once or twice, you’ll start to hear it everywhere. And it won’t be your ears playing tricks on you – everyone from Rihanna and Madonna to Led Zeppelin and Journey makes use of it. Just listen for that characteristic 123-123-12!

Son Clave in Pop

Pop music often pays even more obvious homage to its roots by using the full son clave rhythm rather than only its first bar. When that second bar of the clave rhythm is retained, it gives the music a cyclical, rounded feeling.

Here’s Aaron Carter’s 2000 hit “I Want Candy”, an uptempo bubblegum pop tune that features the full son clave rhythm:

The funky bassline lends a rhythm to the song that can be counted as 123-123-1234-12-1234, like so. Slow the song down to 0.5x speed to count along:

It’s also possible to count each bar separately: bar one would be 123-123-12, and bar two would be 12-12-1234.

Notice how this “full clave” rhythm differs from the pop clave. The two-bar variant has a question-and-answer, tension-and-resolution format. Bar one sets up the groove, and bar two completes it. Bar one creates tension, and bar two resolves it with two strong, consecutive hits.

Popular hip-hop and rap music could scarcely exist without this clave pattern. Its long and short pulses make it the perfect framework over which to layer intricate beats and vocals. Snoop Dogg’s “Drop It Like It’s Hot” is one of the most in-your-face and infectious examples of the clave in hip hop:

The Clave Groove

A mindblowing aspect of music is how rhythmic motifs can be traced from genre to genre, with styles embracing the rhythmic sensibilities of the styles that spawned them, integrating the existing musical traditions with fresh new sounds to create something new yet familiar.

The wonderful thing about clave is that it most likely already “exists in the wild” in the style of music you love to play. Whether you’re a rock aficionado, pop diva, Latin music enthusiast, or jazz cat – you can enjoy integrating this rhythmic treasure into your practice, improvisation, and songwriting!

For a fun challenge, try playing your favourite 4/4 song “en clave”, altering its rhythm to fit that 123-123-12 pop clave feel. The results may sound strange, or plain silly – but more likely will open your ears to a brand new, groovy way of playing that tune!

 

 

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About Klezmer Music

You may have heard the word Klezmer before – or maybe not! Learn more about this distinctive style of Jewish folk music with Musical U’s Content Editor and Product Manager Andrew Bishko, who has developed a very close musical relationship with the genre over the course of his decades-long career.

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Transcript

Christopher: Hello and welcome to the Musicality Podcast. Today I’m joined by Andrew Bishko from our team to talk all about a style of music called Klezmer. Now you may have heard of this on the podcast before, I have to confess I have not heard of it until meeting Andrew. So if you haven’t heard of it outside the podcast don’t worry, and if you haven’t even heard of it on this podcast before don’t worry about that either, we’re going to explain it all. Or well, we’re going to attempt to scratch the surface anyway. So we previously had Andrew as a guest on the show where we went in depth on his musical background and story, and Klezmer was a huge part of that learning journey for him. It was also mentioned in our interview with David Asher Brown when he talked about recovering and old opera manuscripts in the Klezmer style, some of them. And so you might have heard of this style, you might even have heard Andrew demonstrate a bit in articles on our website or in that interview.

But I wanted to sit down with Andrew and really dig in because this is a very distinctive style, and I know it’s one that had a big impact on Andrew’s own musical development and how his musicality came to express itself. So Andrew, say a quick hello and if you wouldn’t mind, I’d love if you could just recap a little bit of the story of how Klezmer entered the picture for you, in your musical journey.

Andrew: Oh yes. Well, I was from a young age very interested in many different kinds of music. And every time I’d hear something new, I would say “Oh, that’s it!” You know when I first heard jazz, I was like “OH!” That’s it, that’s what I’m going to do or when I heard the blues, or then I would often go to the library and I’d get out records, recordings from different places in the world and I heard some music from Egypt, some Arabic music, “Oh, wow, that’s it, that’s what I want to do; or I got into Irish music, and “Oh yeah that’s the one”. And I was always interested in jumping from one thing to another. And then a very curious thing happened in my life, I was at the time just finishing up a four year stint touring with a reggae band, and I had decided that I wanted to go back to school, so I could become better at communicating with my fellow musicians about the musical ideas in my head.

And I went to a tour of the New England Conservatory and I walked into this classroom and they were teaching the style of music called Klezmer music. Now I had grown up, Klezmer music is the Jewish folk, instrumental folk music of the Eastern European tradition and this would have been the music that my great grandparents had listened to and danced to at weddings. But I was at that time rather far from anything Jewish in my life and I had been actually very disappointed in it because it hadn’t provided me when I was younger the congregation that I was a part of was very watered down and hadn’t really provided me with a satisfying spiritual experience. And I went into this room and a guy named Hankus Netsky was teaching a class in Klezmer music.

And I had this huge emotional reaction. Unfortunately I was not sitting anywhere near the door so I couldn’t really escape. I was, I felt like crying and laughing, and I know I turned three shades of pink, purple, and red. And I just, it was so uncomfortable. And I said, “Okay, if there’s some music that makes me feel this uncomfortable, it’s something I should be looking into”. So that is where I began my journey with the Klezmer act in New England Conservatory. I wound up studying with Hankus and I learned about this music that had been the music of my ancestors. And it was very powerful for me because of, this is a typical lesson I would go, I received a cassette tape that was like a fifth or sixth generation recording of a rare recording that was made in like 1911. You know so it was totally scratchy, very difficult to make out and Hankus says “Okay, that’s the first piece we’re going to work on.” So I’m listening, and listening to this music. Now at the time there weren’t a lot of flute players playing it and the main instruments in Klezmer music were considered the violin and the clarinet, the main melody instruments.

So I was attempting to reproduce these sounds on the flute and I was listening to these very old recordings, and it became quite an experience. I’d go into my lesson, and I’d play and he’d say “Well no, not yet go back and work on it some more”. And listening back at these recordings, I had to use a lot of my imagination to fill in the timbres and fill in the sound of the instruments in distinct articulations and it was, almost like accessing a sixth sense to reach back in time and pull this out. At the same time I was working with a kind of music that was part of a whole culture that I was familiar with through my ancestry but that was really in other ways very distant from me. Part of a language and a culture, and in that culture music and language were very close together. And they spoke the Yiddish language, which was something that I’d heard but didn’t know how to speak.

And it was, I heard an anecdote once that people in the old Jewish villages, they would only stop singing to talk to you. You know, so everyone was always singing, always have a little melody going. And it was this characteristic melody and all the different cries and complaints and intonations and tones of voice that had been saturated into the way that music was played. In so in order to learn how to play this music, and in the absence of any flute players that were really doing what I wanted to do with the music; I had to develop many of my own techniques of playing it.
So I’ll give a little demonstration, this is actually that very first piece that I was learning by ear, but instead of playing it how it was played on the recording, I’m going to play these notes how they would sound if they were written out, if they were written out on a page. (music)

Okay so right off the bat, you may notice some different scales that are involved, but that isn’t how the music is played. I’m going to take that same little bit and I’m going to play it in the Klezmer language. (music)

Christopher: Terrific, well I’m sure everyone listening can hear the stark difference there, but I wonder if you could help open up our ears to what exactly we’re hearing. What are the different things you changed there or added, or did differently that suddenly made that sound so different in style.

Andrew: Okay, well the first thing that many people here when they’re listening to music is the ornaments, you know, the little trills. (music) That ornament right there is called a kvetch, which means to complain. (music) But what I’m doing actually, musically is I’m going up, I’m going in between two notes (music) those two notes, but in between them I’m going up to a higher note next note up in the scale and I’m cutting it off, so it sounds like I’m going (singing) is sort of a complaint that you would hear in the singing, you know so this is very closely related to the singing styles.
And so, but there’s a lot more going on even in just the ornaments, one of the things I learned had a huge part of what I was doing, was what I called in my mind micro dynamics. Where I’m using dynamics to shape every moment of what I’m playing. So rather than just playing ahead it’s like “Okay this is forte, this is piano”, I’m (music) dynamics to shape the notes and to shape each thing and in conjunction with the ornaments.

Another thing that’s really important in Klezmer music is that the rhythm is very very flexible. And yet it has to stay constant because this music was really for dancing. SO it’s like you have this box of your beat, but within it you have a lot of little, a lot of wiggle room, a lot of stretchiness. So one exercise that I learned was to instead of playing notes like this (music) yeah but I’m playing four notes (music) what I rush in pairs or (music) rush three notes and then land on the fourth note or rush four notes and then land, so it’s this idea of these little rushing things that you do and then it accentuates the beat where you land square on the beat. You have this little hesitation and then pouncing on the beat.

Kind of like coming off a diving board and hitting the water there’s that little moment of air time in between. And this kind of flexibility of rhythm and these kind of techniques, it’s when you know you’re leaning a foreign language for example, and you’re really working on your accent, you want to sound more like your speaking that language. You know let’s say you’re leaning Italian, and you want to say butter you want to say “burro” which is butter, but you have to roll that r. “Burrrro” or you know you’re not going to sound, it’s not going to sound right. It’s learning these little tricks and all these little things that you’re doing and very much with the flute it’s very much in my mouth and throat and breath and things like that; so it’s even more like speaking.

Where I just develop so much more facility and control of my instrument in the process. Which really changed my playing and my musicality for everything that came after. So when I stopped playing Klezmer music you know like exclusively, because for fifteen years that was like my thing, when I started to branch out again, those techniques, and those that sensitivity went into all of my musical expression.

Christopher: That’s fascinating. I was really reminded hearing you talk about that of speaking recently with David Barrett from bluesharmonica.com he was talking about how he had developed his understanding of how to do things on harmonica purely from listening to old recordings because there wasn’t really teaching material explaining how to do these techniques. And yeah, his story really parallels your own of having to listen really intently to these recordings and kind of reconstruct what the players might have been doing. And I imagine for yourself it was doubly difficult because you weren’t necessarily even listening to the flute. Let alone just trying to do it by ear.

Andrew: That’s very true, there was a couple of very old flute recordings that are interesting, but it still, it just I can’t tell you how many hours I spent with my headphones to with the cassette deck, and rewinding and listening and listening and imaging and putting myself back in that too, and of course you know I wasn’t thinking about this before we started but that’s affected the way I listen to all music now.

I listen to it with such a greater amount of detail, and it’s just helped me open up my ears. In a very deep way. And it helps me to learn different kinds of music, learn different styles and really to get into that style. And you know for me it was Klezmer and it, because it struck such a strong emotional chord in my body at that time period of my life; and which led me to a more spiritual chord as well. It, you know it was something that I was able to focus on and then branch out. But it could be the blues, which has a very particular language or anything and or classical music.
It made a huge difference in my classical playing where I was able to play like passages, you know when you play classical, you have these passages, you might have something like this (music) you know which you could play very metronomically and that’s how usually we learn it, you know? But if I add a little bit of my lessons from Klezmer music, just a little bit more dynamics, a little bit more shaping, a little bit more flexibility in my rhythm. It brings in a lot.

So more dynamics, and more shaping but the phrase in where it’s really speaking it’s you know there’s also a connection there because much of classical music has very strong Eastern European roots. And so the Klezmer music, there is a correlation, as different as they might sound, there is a connection there as well. Making things more expressive, I don’t know if that was clear in that example but felt like it to me.

Christopher: Sure, and I think it’s a fascinating thing because you know clearly there was this kind of global reward for you in doing that intensive listening, it trained you to have critical ear and to do active listening to whatever music you were tuning into. And there are clearly also these very specific ornaments or trills or vocabulary as it were of Klezmer music. But it seems like in between there are these transferable skills or transferable musical ideas that you’ve been able to redeploy. Now are there other places you’ve seen this come out in your playing in other genres?

Andrew: Well, I know it’s huge, not long after I began to expand my playing from just playing Klezmer all the time, I got involved in the Native American flute, and this you know, those techniques in the breathing techniques and the ornaments really serve well in this other context. (music)

So I have a lot of control over the different vibratos that I’m using, different ornaments, doesn’t sound like anything like Klezmer I don’t think. But I have all these techniques now that I can use and that transfer to that style of music. If I’m playing jazz, if let’s say that I’m playing (music), you know playing Summertime which is by Ira Gershwin who would have grown up hearing a lot of Klezmer music, but playing, I have so much more expressive capability than I did before. Because of the techniques I learn and the sensitivity to melody and where phrases are going; and what their meaning. You know that was one thing that I worked on tremendously in Klezmer music. Rather than just playing a slew of notes really just knowing where every phrase, every little, every little nuance was leading to. And finding a lot of meaning in the melodies, that’s a kind of universal now, sensitivity that I can use and that I do use all the time.

Christopher: Terrific. Well I want everyone to take two big things away from this episode. And first just to say a big thank you Andrew for coming on to share a little bit about your Klezmer, I was about to say journey but it’s more a immersion I think, a treasure quest. I think the two things are one is, the specific richness of Klezmer music. I think we’ll have to put some interesting links in the show notes for people to follow up on because it is such a distinctive and rich tradition of music that people should dive into. And the second I think is this generalizable or transferable idea that all of your appreciation for the subtleties of dynamics and phrasing and articulation and technique or maybe it’s overstating it to say all of your, but it’s certainly a great part of your skill with those things came from this deep dive into Klezmer; and I think that’s such a powerful idea for people to take away, you know whatever style of music moves you the most or whichever you’re most passionate about.

Take the time to really listen intently and see if you can kind of reconstruct things from first principle yourself rather than just jumping straight to the sheet music or jumping straight to a tutorial because as David Barrett and Andrew’s stories both show there is such treasure to be gleaned from doing that hard work of figuring things out by ear, and you know you don’t necessarily need to go to a scratchy 1920’s recordings, but take the time to pay attention and be willing to put in the effort to figure out yourself because as is I think very clear it really pays off. Any last words Andrew for those listening?

Andrew: Well thank you all for listening, thank you all for the opportunity to share these ideas and I hope that you’re inspired to whatever music you love to give it a big love up. Give it up your music a big hug, and just get into it.

Christopher: Fantastic. Thank you so much Andrew.

Andrew: You’re welcome.

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“I get by with a little help from my friends” The Beatles…

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“I get by with a little help from my friends” The Beatles nailed it when they sang this iconic lyric.

To get the most out of your musical journey, you need a mentor to help you. Musical U gathered these tips to help you find your mentor.

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Classical vs. Acoustic vs. Electric: The Best Guitar for a Beginner

So you’ve decided to learn guitar – congratulations! You’ve chosen one of the most versatile, expressive, and exciting instruments out there. Alongside finding a good teacher or a suitable online course, you’ll need to “choose your fighter”.

And choosing a guitar can be very exciting indeed – with three types out there and countless colorways available, picking out the instrument that will sit in your hands and help you make beautiful music is one of the biggest delights of starting out in guitar.

Classical, acoustic, and electric. These three different types of guitars offer different benefits, each type plays and sounds different, and each comes at a different price.

Now, as a beginner, you could begin your road to becoming a great guitarist with whichever one. However, depending on your guitar goals and preferences as a player, you may find that one type feels natural and pleasant to play, while another has you grinding your teeth in frustration.

Naturally, the type of music you want to play will have the most bearing on which guitar you go for. Aspiring rockers will go for the electric guitar almost every time, those with an inclination to play classical, flamenco, or Spanish music will choose the classical guitar, and those with an affinity for folk and country will find their match in the acoustic guitar.

Moving past stylistic preferences and thinking practically about the needs of a beginner guitarist, however, in my experience one of these guitars is objectively the best choice for beginners – a guitar ideal for learning and practicing the basics, getting used to the feel of the instrument, and best of all, the best option for eventually transitioning to playing the other two types of guitars.

Acoustic, Electric, And Classical Guitars: Similarities and Differences

Dreadnought acoustic guitar shape

The most common acoustic guitar shape – the “dreadnought”

Even though each guitar type is built in a different way, they all have the same essential parts – the strings, body, neck, fretboard, headstock, and hardware.

Classical guitars are usually outfitted with nylon strings, whereas most acoustic and all electric guitars come with steel strings, which are ostensibly easier to play on.

In essence, nylon strings feel gentle, but steel strings will give you the “locking” feel – once you position your fingers on a steel-string guitar, you will feel the tension, and your muscles will, in turn, remember how each chord/note felt. This effect is diminished on nylon strings.

Furthermore, the body of an acoustic guitar is the largest of the three types, if we’re taking the standard dreadnought shape as an example.

An interesting meeting place between acoustic and electric guitars is the advent of “semi-acoustic” guitars, which can be wired to an amp – the same, however, can’t be said about classical guitars.

In a nutshell, the core and purpose of all guitar types are the same, whereas nearly all the other details are different.

Electric vs. Acoustic vs. Classical – Which One Is The Best For You?

Let’s look at the features and idiosyncrasies of each type of guitar, and the purposes each is best suited to. Beyond the obvious matter of electric guitars being for rock ‘n’ rollers and classical guitars suiting classical and flamenco players, each type of guitar has practical advantages and disadvantages for beginners looking to wrap their head and their fingers around their new instrument.

Let’s look at each type of guitar and how it will impact your learning.

Benefits Of Beginning With An Electric Guitar

Electric guitars are exceptionally easy to play but very difficult to master. The reason why they’re good for beginners is because you’ll be able to play for hours without hurting your fingers – if you feel like you’re not hearing the fretted notes well, simply crank up the volume on your amp.

The strings are quite close together and the neck is narrow, meaning your hand will be able to easily make most chord and scale shapes without having to stretch. Plus, the cutaways on an electric guitar make the upper frets easily accessible, allowing for the exploration of soloing and playing higher up the neck right from day one.

Disadvantages Of Beginning With An Electric Guitar

Most people who begin with electric guitars seldom take up acoustic, let alone classical guitar, ever. The reason is quite simple – electric guitars offer more versatility and they are easier to play.

The real disadvantage here is skipping out on fully mastering the basics – if you want to master chords and scales, the best way to do so is by taking small steps on an acoustic or classical guitar.

Electric guitar is much easier to play as the strings are (usually) lighter, and the sound augmented with electricity will, in most cases, cover your mistakes and make them appear less obvious, so you won’t feel like you need to practice the things immediate beginners on acoustic (and nylon) guitars do.

Electric guitar

The basics are exceptionally important for your growth as a musician. The veterans and pros don’t do anything special aside from using their knowledge of the basic skills on a totally different level – the simplest techniques, through practice and repetition, become advanced and make room for even more improvement.

The second disadvantage lies in the price of electric guitars.

They’re substantially more expensive than their non-electric counterparts, and even the least expensive electric guitar costs more than most moderately priced acoustic and classical guitars. Add in the cost of an amplifier and patch cable, and you’re looking at spending at least double what you would to play acoustically.

Benefits of Beginning with an Acoustic guitar

Acoustic guitars are usually the weapon of choice for most beginner guitarists. They’re the most balanced guitar type in terms of sound, playability, and they require the least amount of time in order to grasp the basic concept of playing.

Cutaway on acoustic guitar

An acoustic guitar with a cutaway, allowing access to the upper frets

The acoustic guitar is great for practicing the basics – scales, chords, chord progressions, and riffs. You can easily hear if a note is wrong and can correct your mistake accordingly.

Similarly to electric guitars, acoustic guitars sometimes come with cutaways, providing you with a full range of “fretable” notes, which can’t be said for classical guitars.

The larger shape of acoustic guitars means that they’re a bit heavier, but this actually helps beginners rest their picking arm on the body of the guitar while playing, resulting in less hand fatigue than with electric and classical.

Lastly, some acoustic guitars can be plugged into amplification devices – these are called “semi-acoustic guitars”.

Disadvantages Of Beginning with an Acoustic guitar

There are only two real disadvantages of beginning with an acoustic guitar – firstly, they’re usually more expensive than classical guitars, and secondly, the steel strings will hurt your fingers at first, as you’re getting used to the guitar.

If we take out the price part, we’re left with some pain along the way, so what should you expect?

Steel stringed acoustic guitars are harder to fret than nylon-strung classical guitars, but there’s more resonance, and the chordplay is a bit easier. Steel is naturally harder than nylon, and chords will be easier to nail down on a steel-string guitar because the strings are usually thinner and will give you the aforementioned feel of “locked frets”.

In a nutshell, acoustic guitars are better suited for beginners if you’re able to save up a bit more money.

Benefits of Beginning With A Classical guitar

If you’re a complete beginner, feeling the nylon strings for the first time will dissuade you from trying out steel ones ever. They’re very mellow, feel nice to the touch, and are comfortable to play on.

The classical guitar also features a smaller, more lightweight body than both the acoustic and electric guitar.

Classical guitar
A big reason why many beginners opt for classical guitars is the fact that they’re quite a bit cheaper than acoustic and electric guitars.

Disadvantages Of Beginning With A Classical Guitar

Classical guitars are often taught by professionals in music schools as they’re the hardest guitar type to master. Why is that so?

First of all, the nylon strings feel substantially different than steel strings, and people who’ve had some practice with electric or acoustic guitars will feel like complete beginners right off the bat.

Secondly, the sounds that classical guitars emit are airy, and all of your mistakes will be more accentuated. This falls down hard on most beginners, but even though it could help with practice, it should be considered as a disadvantage over the other types.

Lastly, classical guitars lack the level of sustain of electric and acoustic guitars. Plucking down chords on a classical guitar will result in less resonance, which might make you feel like you need to pluck harder and can be a source of frustration.

So which guitar wins?

Ultimately, it all comes down to personal preference and style in which you want to play. People who are dissuaded by the sheer notion of “bleeding fingers” that most acoustic guitar players talk about should try out classical guitar while those who are taking up after their rock ‘n’ roll idols will pick electric guitars anyway.

However, strategically speaking and from an objective point of view, acoustic guitars are better for beginners – they sound more natural due to high sustain, they’re not overly expensive, and you can hear your mistakes clearly (unlike on electric) but not so clearly that they’re totally accentuated (unlike on classical). Best of all, if you manage to master an acoustic guitar, both electric and classical guitar types won’t be hard to play at all.

Remember: the basics and technique you learn as a beginner will stay with you as you work your way up in skill and complexity.

So though you may be tempted by the soft nylon strings of a classical guitar or the energy and excitement of an electric guitar, the acoustic guitar is the best choice for the beginner guitarist who aims to nail those scales, chords, chord changes, and guitar techniques right from the beginning – a decision that will pave the way for effortless musicality on your instrument.

The guitar virtuosos you look up to all started off the same way – learning the basics and getting the technique down, then working their way up to creating their trademark style. Making pragmatic decisions early on in your guitar journey can help get you to that natural, “effortless” level of musicality faster!

 

Austin is the music-obsessed founder of Consordini – a go-to resource for musicians choosing their first instrument, and an online community for discussing practice tips, music theory, genres, and instruments.

The post Classical vs. Acoustic vs. Electric: The Best Guitar for a Beginner appeared first on Musical U.

Singer-songwriter Kendra McKinley returns to Musical U wi…

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Singer-songwriter Kendra McKinley returns to Musical U with a special FREE masterclass this Saturday!

Whether you’re a songwriter looking to embellish, complement, and accentuate your melodies, or a music lover who seeks to better understand the vocal arrangements in your favourite tunes, you won’t want to miss this incredible songwriter’s no-theory-required primer on bringing background vocals to the forefront!

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