When it comes to playing classical music, a conventional guitar always is a better choice than the electric guitar or acoustic guitar.This is mainly because the technique of playing classical guitar is very much different from playing an electric or acoustic guitar. For your right hand, you need to rest your right arm on the top part of the guitar’s body. When you practice, sit up straight in a chair and place a footstool under your left foot to lift the fretboard up towards your hand. Your right hand should effortlessly float directly overhead the sound hole on an acoustic guitar or in between your bridge and neck pickups on an electric guitar. However, to get this sound, you must carefully manage both the length and shape of your nails. I have dealt with the topic of playing loud on the classical guitar in another post, so in this post we will discuss the topic of right hand speed. Playing fast on the classical guitar is relative. So, therefore what do players want to do? The first step of learning how to play classical guitar for beginners is ostensibly choosing the right guitar. Guitar Right Hand position. Hand Below Sound Hole. Timbre depends on nails shape and right hand position. Right Hand Position. And to play all the musical parts of classical guitar music (melody, bass, accompaniment), the right hand needs to move consistently well. Right-hand Arpeggios – These are “fingerpicking patterns”, and make up ~80% of classical guitar music. Right Hand Classical Guitar Technique. To play classical guitar, learn that your thumb plays the top 3 strings, your index finger plays G, middle finger plays B, and ring finger plays the lowest string. As a beginner, right hand technique can be very subtle and difficult, so make sure you carefully pay read all the guidelines on this page. Right Hand Technique for Classical Guitar. Strumming is the next right hand technique that we will look at. This helps them to produce loud, clear, and brilliant sound. Almost every serious classical guitarists uses fingernails on their right hand to pluck the strings. A lesson on right hand articulation for classical guitar covering how to play legato, staccato, pizzicato, and chords (playing solid, rolled, strummed, and rasgueado chords). If you try to shake off the feather that is pretty much the exact motion that you want when you are strumming. Play loud and fast! The right hand has to produce sounds determining volume and timbre peculiarities, but it has the task to stop sounds as well. In classical guitar music, most of the right-hand technique falls into two categories: arpeggios and scales. After all, nails for classical guitarists are like reeds for wind players, or bows for string players. In classical guitar, the right hand produces sound by plucking the strings. Place your right hand on the strings around the bottom of the sound hole. I once heard a great guitar player say that good strumming technique is like pretending that you have some honey on your finger and that a feather is stuck to the honey. The classical guitar excels in producing soft, dulcet tones. Volume depends on finger strength, it has to be compact and solid when touching the string from knuckles and phalanxes. The right hand creates the sound.