05 — gear & setup

Anatomy, tuning & setup

The parts of the instrument, the different families of guitar, how to tune one, and the basic care that keeps it playable.

Know your instrument

Anatomy of the guitar

Every guitar, acoustic or electric, shares this same basic layout.

1. Headstock — holds the tuning pegs; the guitar's "name tag" location for logos.
2. Tuning pegs — wind the string to raise or lower its pitch.
3. Nut — a grooved strip at the top of the neck that spaces the strings and sets their height.
4. Neck & fretboard — where the left hand presses strings against frets to change pitch.
5. Frets — the metal strips dividing the fretboard into half‑step increments.
6. Body — the resonating chamber (acoustic) or the solid slab housing electronics (electric).
7. Sound hole / pickups — where an acoustic projects sound, or where an electric's magnetic pickups sense string vibration.
8. Bridge & saddle — anchors the strings at the body end and transfers vibration into the top.
Choosing a family

Types of guitar

TypeStringsSoundGood for
Classical (nylon)Nylon, wider neckWarm, mellow, gentler on fingertipsFingerstyle, absolute beginners, classical/flamenco
Acoustic (steel-string)Steel, no amp neededBright, projects loudly on its ownFolk, singer-songwriter, strumming
ElectricSteel, thin/light, needs an ampShaped entirely by amp and effectsRock, blues, jazz, metal, lead playing
Bass4–6 steel strings, an octave lowerLow end, the rhythm section's foundationAny band context, groove and low harmony
Before you play a note

Tuning

Standard tuning, low string to high string: E A D G B e.

Electronic tuner (recommended)

Clip a tuner to the headstock, pluck each string, and adjust the peg until the display centers on the correct letter. This is accurate regardless of experience and is the standard method.

Relative tuning (5th fret method, no tuner)

Fret the 5th fret of any string — it sounds the same pitch as the next string open (except the G string, where it's the 4th fret for the B string). Tune the open string to match, then move up.

Alternate tunings worth knowing

NameTuning (low to high)Common in
StandardE A D G B Eeverything
Drop DD A D G B Erock, metal — easy power chords with one finger
Open GD G D G B Dslide guitar, blues, The Rolling Stones
Open DD A D F♯ A Dslide guitar, folk
DADGADD A D G A DCeltic and modal fingerstyle
Instant key change

Using a capo

A capo clamps across all six strings at a chosen fret, acting as a movable nut. Play the same open‑chord shapes, but the sounding pitch shifts up by however many frets the capo covers.

Shape you playCapo fretChord that sounds
C shape2D
G shape2A
D shape3F
A shape5D

Capos are how singer‑songwriters play easy open shapes in a key that actually fits their voice.

Keeping it playable

Strings & basic maintenance

String gauges

GaugeFeelBest for
Extra light (.008–.038)Easiest to bend and fretbeginners, lead electric
Light (.010–.046)Balanced standardmost electric guitars
Medium (.012–.054)Fuller tone, more tensionacoustic strumming
Heavy (.013+)Maximum volume and sustaindrop tunings, some acoustics

Basic care

  • Wipe strings and the fretboard down after playing — sweat and oil corrode strings fast.
  • Change strings every 3–6 months, or sooner if they sound dull or look discolored.
  • Keep acoustics away from extreme dryness or humidity; a small case humidifier helps in dry seasons.
  • Loosen strings slightly before air travel to reduce neck tension changes.
  • If the action (string height) feels too high or the neck won't stay in tune, it's time for a professional setup, not more force.
The big first decision

Electric or acoustic first?

There's no universally right answer — the best first guitar is the one that matches the music you actually want to play, because motivation is what keeps you practicing.

Start acoustic if…

You love folk, singer-songwriter, or pop; you want something you can pick up and play with no amp or cables; you value simplicity and portability. Downside: steel strings are a little harder on beginner fingertips.

Start electric if…

You love rock, blues, or metal; you want lighter strings and a slimmer neck that are easier to fret; you don't mind buying an amp. Downside: more gear, and you can't play it silently unless you use headphones through the amp.

Consider classical (nylon) if…

You want the gentlest strings on your fingers, you're drawn to fingerstyle or classical music, or you're buying for a young child. The wider neck suits fingerpicking but can feel large for small hands.

The honest truth

Technique transfers between all of them. Whichever you start on, the core skills — chords, timing, fretting — carry straight over if you switch later. Pick the one you'll be excited to hold.

Every player is welcome

Left-handed players & kids

Left-handed players

You have three options: buy a genuine left-handed guitar (strung and built in mirror image — the usual recommendation if you're strongly left-dominant); learn right-handed like most lefties do, since both hands are busy anyway and right-handed gear is far more available; or restring a right-handed guitar (workable but the controls and cutaway end up awkward). Try both orientations early — switching later means relearning.

Guitars for kids

Full-size guitars are too big for young children and cause frustration. Use scaled sizes: 1/4 size (roughly ages 4–6), 1/2 size (6–9), 3/4 size (9–12), then full size (12+). Nylon-string classical models are a common, finger-friendly, affordable starting point. The guitar should feel like a fun toy they reach for, not a chore.

Beyond tab

Reading standard notation (the basics)

Guitarists mostly read tab, but a little standard notation unlocks sheet music, communicating with other musicians, and understanding rhythm precisely. Here's the minimum that's genuinely useful.

ElementWhat it means
The staffFive lines; higher on the staff = higher pitch. Guitar uses the treble clef (the fancy spiral symbol).
Note positionWhere a note sits on the lines and spaces tells you its pitch. Lines from bottom: E G B D F. Spaces: F A C E.
Note shapeFilled vs hollow heads, stems, and flags tell you duration — the same values covered on the rhythm page.
Key signatureSharps or flats at the start of each line tell you which key you're in.
Time signatureThe two stacked numbers at the start set the beat grouping (e.g. 4/4).

You don't need to sight-read to play guitar well — but recognizing rhythm notation especially will make you a noticeably tighter player. Learn tab first, add notation gradually.

Getting started

A beginner's buying checklist

  • Play it before buying if at all possible — comfort matters more than brand.
  • Check the action: press any string at the 3rd fret — if it takes real force, the setup is poor.
  • Budget for a clip-on tuner, a handful of picks, a strap, and a gig bag alongside the guitar itself.
  • Electric guitars need an amp and a cable — factor that into the budget from the start.
  • A guitar that's been professionally set up will always be easier to learn on than a cheaper one that hasn't.