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Monday, October 12, 2009

Fretting Over Frets

One thing I always wondered about when it came to musical instruments was the handedness of an instrument. Most instruments are designed for right handers. In the case of the piano, the structure makes intuitive sense. The right hand plays the more dexterity heavy melody, with the left hand playing the supportive chords. It's in the string instruments, such as guitars, that things get weird. I would have thought that the left hand would do the picking whereas the right hand would have the more difficult task of choosing the notes. However, this is obviously not the case. Now, I'm not a player of any musical instrument, so for all I know, this arrangement is actually better for right handers. But it doesn't look like it.

One argument in favour of having the instrument played the other way is the prevalence of great left handed guitarists who play/played the traditional'right handed' guitars. A cursory look reveals the following:

David Bowie
Paul Simon
Steve Morse (current Deep Purple)
Billy Corgan (Smashing Pumpkins)
Michael Stipe (R.E.M.)
Duff McKagan (Guns 'n' Roses)
Michael Anthony (Van Halen)
Noel Gallagher (Oasis)
Chris Martin (Coldplay)
Adam Jones (Tool)
Tom Hamilton (Aerosmith)
James Root (Slipknot)
Robert Plant (Led Zeppelin)
Bob Dylan

By contrast, comparatively few left handed guitarists actually play/played 'left handed' guitars:

Kurt Cobain
Paul McCartney
Iggy Pop


(Jimi Hendrix played a Strat turned upside down and restringed for left hand.)

(source: http://www.frihost.com/forums/vt-46800.html)

Of course, they are really talented musicians who would probably have been great at music regardless of their handedness. And lack of ready availability of left handed guitars would be a reason these guys took up right handed guitars. Nevertheless, the fact that they were forced to play to their strengths may actually have helped them.

2 comments:

GreenOnion said...

Not that I'm a guitarist either, but I would think it easier to keep pace and strum with your dominant hand. The hand that picks out the notes doesn't seem to move much once it's on the correct note, it's just getting to the notes that would be a problem...or maybe the person who inveted guitars was just left handed, but didn't know it :P

Yogababy said...

You may have a point. If that is the case, then it would be easier to play 'right handed' when the guitar is being used to provide accompaniments but 'left handed' when it is used to play heavily melodic pieces, where the note selecting hand would have to move a lot.

Heck, maybe there are people out there who switch depending upon the circumstances. Crazy people.

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