crescenze wrote:
Years ago (1963) I started out playing on a right handed guitar. I had been working at it for about a month and was just getting comfortable at very basic playing. One of the top guitar players in a very popular band at school out of the blue invited me over to play with him on afternoon. I was blown away. Shortly after I got there I mentioned that exact point - I felt that I had an advantage being left handed. "Why are you playing right handed" he asked. I was puzzled I hadn't ever seen a left handed guitar and didn't know it was an option. He made me put down the guitar and tap out a beat on my legs. After watching me for a bit he told me that my natural rhythm was in my left hand and that I should be playing left handed. He explained when he began playing the first thing is instructor had him do was tap out a beat to see which way he should play. He explained that fretting can be taught, but natural rhythm was important for the picking hand. So he insisted that I restring the guitar right then. I wasn't going to argue with a well respected hot shot guitar player, so I did. I had every intention of switching back when I got home, I had worked too hard to get to the point of being comfortable playing right handed. However, after a few hours of working with him, to my surprise, I was doing everything left handed that had taken a month to learn right handed. So I figured there must be something to the theory and I didn't switch back. Don't know if there is really any truth to the theory, but it seemed to work for me.
Good story, and it makes perfect sense to me. Rhythm is everything. Of course, rhythm can be taught. But if you have a natural rhythmic sense playing a certain way you're already ahead of the game vs. having to learn that additional skill.
When I first took up guitar (age 10?), I went for my first lesson at a local music store. I had my mother's righty guitar strung righty (she was a lefty too and had just bought a guitar but never bothered to learn guitar or realize that the guitar was wrong for her so it sat dormant). I sat down with the teacher and instinctively turned the guitar upside down. "What are you doing?" the teacher said, "Turn the guitar back around". "But it feels better this way," I replied, to which he said, "What do you know about how it should feel? You don't even know how to play yet." That was my one and only lesson and it turned me off from learning to play until I was in high school and formed a band with some of my friends. My first bass was a righty Westbury Track II flipped and strung lefty.
Don't ever mess with someone's instinctive natural feel, IMO. It makes the learning process and patience for learning that much easier.