Easy Fingerstyle Melody for Beginners
Dark Ages Symphony
Today I want to show you this easy fingerstyle melody for beginners called Dark Ages Symphony. I was
inspired by a soundtrack I was listening to a while ago for a documentary on the Dark Ages, Medieval period between the 5th and 15th Century.
The melody is easy but also challenging as we will play it on two different octaves.
This is the perfect fingerstyle melody for beginners, so start with this lesson if you want to familiarize yourself with fingerstyle acoustic guitar.
Let’s get started.
Fingerstyle Melody – Video Lesson
As always, let’s start with the video lesson to have an idea of what we are going to learn. You can also have access to the tab 100% free as this is part of the BlitzGuitar Melody lab program.
The melody
Fingerstyle Guitar Lesson for Beginners
Let’s talk about the fingerstyle melody you are about to learn. The idea was to create a straightforward melody that could be played on two octaves.
The first octave based on the first position of the guitar will be played within the first three frets of the fingerboard, and it’s pretty simple. The second octave is more challenging, and even though it is the same rhythmic and melodic part, it will require more practice to become fluent.
The fingerstyle pattern is also pretty straightforward.
The melody, highlighted with the red color, will be played with the fingerstyle technique, always using alternate fingering (index and middle finger).
The bass note, which is in yellow color, will be played with the thumb with no exceptions.
Fingerstyle Melody on Different Octave
Fingerstyle Acoustic Guitar
Once you become familiar with the first part of the fingerstyle melody, you should then move on to the second part of this exercise, played on a different octave.
The melody will now start on the 10th fret of the second string, and the entire melody will be played in that position. Even though it might sound challenging, I am pretty confident you will easily play this guitar part!
As you already learned the first octave, playing the same melody one octave higher shouldn’t be too difficult. The rhythm is the same, so it’s all about left-hand finger movement and fingerstyle.
Here’s the second part of the melody!
Notice that the only thing that is different from the first part of the melody is the last two bars.
How to Practice
Fingerstyle Guitar Tips
Let me give you a few guitar tips that can help you practicing this exercise correctly so that you can make the most out of your guitar practice and really nail this exercise as quickly as possible.
Practicing fingerstyle guitar isn’t about piling up hours of practice. You can play guitar for as many hours as you can, but if you don’t have the right method, you will probably end up wasting a lot of time.
Step 1 – Start with the Melody
Steps by Step Guitar Practice!
The first awesome thing we can do when you start practicing this exercise could be focusing on the melody only. You can easily avoid the bass note and play just the top melody with alternate fingering.
This is indeed the perfect way to start learning any guitar part of the fingerstyle melody.
By breaking it down into sections, you will focus on one element at a time and learn the melody step by step.
Step 2 – Bass note and Harmony
Guitar, Fingerstyle, and Chords.
For the next step, we are going to add one guitar part at a time. Usually, after I learned the fingerstyle melody, I start by adding the bass note. Now I can hear the melody much better, with the bass note giving me the harmony!
Usually, adding the bass note shouldn’t be difficult. However, it could be challenging at the beginning to give grove and flow to the melody. Keep practicing slowly and keep trying for a few days. You will get better.
At that stage, I am not quite focusing on the rhythm yet. Take your time learning the melody and bass, then move on to step 3 and add the rhythm.
Step 3 – Add Rhythm
Putting it Together
The last step would be adding the rhythm and any other musical feature that this melody needs. This is the step that every guitar player enjoys the most. With the rhythm, the song becomes more musical and fun to play. It also feels good to perform the exercise finally.
Step 3 is highly motivating and extremely important if you want to build momentum and drive.
Now you should spend a little bit of time enjoying playing this exercise and evaluate your progress. It’s now time to grab the next exercise and make some improvements in your fingerstyle guitar playing.
Learning guitar is a process that never ends.
Keep learning and pushing forwards.
Good luck, guys.