I’m so confident that you’ll find my lessons to be superior to anyone else in the area that if you’re not satisfied within 30 days of your first lesson, just ask and I will refund 100% of your money, no hassle, no questions asked. It’s that simple. You have nothing to risk. Start today!
Monthly Archives: June 2013
How to Master a Difficult Passage
It doesn’t matter if you started playing guitar a week ago or 20 years ago. You are going to come across passages of music that are difficult to master. For beginners, this can be simply changing between chords or moving from one string to another with the picking hand. For advanced players, difficulty can come from a variety of sources. A new technique. A difficult chord series that requires quick movements. A long, fast solo like passage. Whatever the trouble is, there are smarter and better ways to practice. Trying harder doesn’t always work. In fact, sometimes trying harder is the problem. You fail to stop and think about the movements involved. You don’t think about the passage in parts, only as a whole. Here at some ways to break down a passage into manageable parts. This will help you master whatever you are working on much faster than just trying harder.
Principle #1 – Slow down
I’m sure you’ve thought of this before. You probably do it already. But you’re probably not slowing down enough, and you’re probably not slowing down long enough either. What I mean is, you’ve slowed down but you’re not going slow enough. You’ve slowed down, and you’ve practiced it, but you haven’t done that for a long enough time for it to make a difference in your playing. Here’s what to do.
Take out a metronome. You do have a metronome, right? Set your metronome to the lowest setting possible. Hopefully this is at least down around 50 bpm. Now look at the passage you’re working on. Each tick of the metronome is one note. Forget about rhythm. Now work through the passage at this speed several times. It will be boring, but you need to focus and work through it. Now increase the speed slightly and repeat. If at any point you make a mistake or feel rushed, stop and turn the speed of the metronome down. You should not play any passage at a speed that you cannot play it at perfectly.
Slowing down to a speed this slow forces you to think about each and every note and every movement. It forces you to stop relying on muscle memory, which may have been trained to play the passage wrong. Apply this patiently and you will see much better results.
Principle #2 – Master One Hand
This is a god technique for faster passages that involve a lot of string changes, or for fast arpeggios; however, this has numerous applications, so it is a good principle to keep in mind. What you’re going to do is focus on either the right hand or the left hand and forget about the other. If you choose to focus on the left hand, you won’t strum or pick any notes. Play the passage slowly, as explained above, while fretting all the notes in the left hand. Relax as much as possible. Make sure you press every note perfectly. When that has become easy, perform that same passage with only the right hand. This will be harder because you’ll have to figure out when to skip strings without the advantage of the left hand leading you. It’s harder than it sounds, but it’s worth figuring out. You may want to write it out in notation (or TAB, if that’s what you read). Finally, put the two together. If you’ve worked on this properly, it should be much easier to play the two hands together.
There are also other techniques that will help you master difficult passages, but these two basic principles will give you a good start and help you conquer those pieces of music that seemed out of reach before. They will also save you hours of wasted trial and error practicing.
If you found this article helpful, consider signing up for lessons.
How Good is Your Guitar Teacher?
Not all guitar teachers are created equal. Most teachers are average. Only a few are excellent. If you have a teacher who is average, you will probably just get by. If your teacher is excellent, you will excel, assuming you put in the work required. Do you know if your teacher is average or excellent?
An excellent teacher has a well thought out plan to teach you. I put the emphasis on you in that sentence. An average teacher has a plan to teach guitar to people. There is a vast difference between a teacher teaching you and a teacher teaching guitar. An average teacher thinks they can take the same model and apply it to everyone they teaches. This saves them time. It makes their planning easy. It also makes them a lousy teacher. Below are some examples of how an average teacher approaches his lessons.
- He teaches the same material to every student the same way
- He doesn’t plan lessons according to each students ability and need
- He doesn’t know how to effectively isolate problems his students encounter
- He isn’t passionate about teaching
- He does not have clear goals set specifically for you.
- He offers only one way to take lessons – one on one instruction
I could go on, but you get the idea. An excellent teacher doesn’t try to just get by with a lesson curriculum and the same formula for each student. An excellent teacher can take the same curriculum (a good curriculum, that is) and apply it skillfully to each students particular abilities and needs. An excellent teacher is able to recognize, identify, explain and isolate problems the student is having. He is able to not only show and explain concepts, he is able to actually teach the student to understand and execute each concept. Most guitar teachers do not understand the difference. In fact, most guitar teachers don’t even know there is a difference. However, many students do. Not consciously, but intuitively, they know when a teacher is just ok and when a teacher is excellent.
So, how good is your teacher? If you’re not sure, I know the answer. Make the switch today.
