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  • Loraine

    Member
    October 28, 2024 at 6:56 am

    I agree the C chord was extremely hard to nail down without deadening a string when I first started. Mine was more I was deadening the D string. I had to move my finger on the A string up and deadened the low E, which luckily was not part of the C chord.

    There are several different reasons why you might be muting the high E.

    The first thing is to make sure you’re first placing your fingers correctly. Put your fingers in place and strum each string individually to see if they ring out clearly. If they are then the issue is when you go to strum, because you’re moving your fretting fingers from their original position. This is a common issue with many chords, so your goal would be to make sure you have the Individual strings ringing out clearly . Then keeping the hand in that same position, strum. But you have to be conscious about it at a micro level when you first start guitar. Visualize placing your fingers and strumming a clear chord. Take your hands off the neck, replace them and strum a clear chord. Do this 10x without error, and you’ll be set. you’re placing your fingers and strumming and then strum.

    If your fingers are not in the right position when you do each string individually, there are a few things to try.

    Make sure your fingers are as close to the fret and as curved as possible you will always get a more clear note when your fingers are by the fret. Strum each individual string again and see if they come out clearly. If not,

    Then you need to focus on making sure your fingers are curved enough and that you’re placing the fingertip directly onto the string. To make your fingers curve more you pull your palm down and push the palm out a little bit towards the neck of the guitar, and this will automatically make your fingers curl more. Again from each string individually.

    You may have to play around with some of these to eventually find your sweet spot so that the strings do ring out clearly. Once you are able Play the C chord clearly, make note of your hand position, finger placement, etc. Play the chord, then take your hand off the neck, then again place your fingers on the neck and strum. When you can do this 10 times in a row and strum a clear chord each time, you will be good.

    Yeah the C chord is a difficult one to get all the strings to play correctly , but you’ll eventually get it.

    Ss a reminder to everyone the low E can be muted because that’s not part of the C but the high E is part of the chord, so you do want that one to bring out clearly.


    Keep on plunking!