Maltozombie
Junior Member
- Messages
- 113
Blue313 said:Wow, a three page lefty thread without Dick Dale

Damn ol' dick kicks ass!
Blue313 said:Wow, a three page lefty thread without Dick Dale
Blue313 said:Wow, a three page lefty thread without Dick Dale
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mNqnlRxg9tU
Nightclub Dwight said:I have always wondered why "righties" fret the guitar with their left hand, and vice versa. It seems like it should be the other way around. I'm glad you posed this question.
SPRINKLES said:I'm lefty going righty for the simple fact that I want to be able to afford a decent guitar.
SPRINKLES said:I'm lefty going righty for the simple fact that I want to be able to afford a decent guitar.
Ahhhhh, but see there lies canundrum.....If your playing lefty then your left hemisphere is controling your fretting hand...Us righties are using our right hemisphere for fretting, so who is actually in thier right mind....A classic test to see how much of your right hemisphere you are using, is to take a drawing and tun it upside down, the draw the picture....Heavily artistic people tend to use the right side more.... :toothy12:Super SauroPOD said:As they say, lefties are in their right mind...
Which explains why we rule the galaxy.
Max said:I've wondered the same thing. Actually, I may try learning to play the other way around sometime or another.
I would think that blues with it's use of 9ths 11ths cords inverted a few times would be the hard one to do upside down, Metal would be the easy one using power chords and chromatic leads.reluctant-builder said:I can play a righty, upside down and backwards, reasonably well. It's a matter of necessity for me. If I'm at a friends house and I want to play, all I have at my disposal are right-hand guitars. Power chords are easy, single note runs are easy, blues is pretty manageable on an upside down and backwards guitar ... but there are some shapes I can't make. I can play every regular chord in the first pentatonic box upside down and backwards (B7 is the only one that gives me trouble), but to play up the neck is a lot more difficult. Heck, I'm not even that great of a guitar player when it's made for my dexterity!
I've heard this topic a number of times where it's been put forth that the dominant hand's dexterity better serves the rhythmic functions of the picking hand. Sure fretting has to be learned, and is totally unlike anything not stringed instrument related, but ultimately rhythmic definition requires more precision than mashing down strings.
StubHead said:In general, the early ideas about "handedness" as a definitive, simple and fullblown categorization issue have fallen away. There is a broad continuum of people who do one thing better with one hand but other things the opposite, people who can write with both hands ...