"Guitar All-in-One" "For Dummies" offers a unique experience for beginning and experienced guitarists. This All-In-One includes content from: "Guitar For Dummies, " 2nd Edition "Guit
This book is pretty much what it says on the cover. Eight "For Dummies" books in one. Obviously, quite a bit of editing and condensing went into making what was originally over 2,000 pages into a single tome of 650 pages. The result is a book that tries to be everything at once, but doesn't really accomplish it. That's not to say that it's useless. It's more like that it's supplemental to other works, simply too much information has been cut out in order to make it all fit. The practice matter will jump from something extremely basic to something very technical very quickly. Moreover, It just seems really random. A reader looking for info on classical guitar playing is not likely to really be all that interested in rock guitar or blues guitar, and vice versa. It seems like it would have been far more germane to simply have this as a "Four in one" book, where the basic "Guitar for Dummies", "Guitar Exercises for Dummies", "Music Theory for Dummies" and "Music Composition for Dummies" were united into a more contiguous whole, leaving out the far more specific genre books, and the oddball "Songwriting for Dummies" as separate editions to buy for people wanting to go in that direction. That said, I'm glad I got the book. 2.5 out of 5 stars.
Although this doesn't make total sense as a unified book, it's still pretty good.
If you want to play guitar and don't know where to start, or you already play but are a relative beginner, this book has a lot of helpful content to select an instrument, understand different genres, learn music theory, and get some bits of technique.
For anyone else, I think the theory section is really well-written, one of the better treatments I've seen. So the individual Guitar Theory for Dummies or another of Desi Serna's books might be worth looking into instead. Otherwise, there are better books covering most of the other topics in this all-in-one.
Also, this isn't a workbook or a method book, so regardless of who you are, it's a good idea to read something that's more focused on exercises too.
Covers a lot of ground. Guitars and styles have a lot of variety, and the author does a good job of covering them. It's a bit dated about tuners and such, with the light tone and corny jokes sometimes getting in the way of the important material, but this still remains a good For Dummies starter reference and practice guide for this wide-ranging instrument.