If I were to give the best practice technique ever, it would be this: Variation.
Take the same exact thing that you are practicing, be it a chord progression, a lead guitar lick, or a scale, and practice it in as many different ways as possible.
Doing this strengthens the synapses needed to execute the skill faster. The synapses become coated with more Myelin, and because the circuit is more insulated, the skill becomes faster.
Last night, I was helping a student practice variations of the chord progression D to A. I asked him to play on different strings, different frets, different tempos.
Of all the practice techniques I know, just this one will make you a 10X better guitar player.
Hit me up to learn how to apply variations to your guitar practice routine!
practice
When Not To Practice (and how to figure out when to move forward) /
As guitarists, we are constantly subjected to a restless energy that pervades our personal, practicing lives: The need to always get “better” at guitar. As a result, countless people are burning themselves out from this wonderful instrument!
I have seen plenty of students make practicing guitar into a super heavy commitment. Anyone who is familiar with my teaching method knows that I only assign practice exercises that can be completed in under five minutes of practice each day. The result is this: We tend to get more momentum with smaller, more targeted amounts of practice.
Sometimes however, we have to be mindful of how we are practicing because in no other activity on guitar do we spend so much time relating to the instrument. Sure there’s performance, but how many beginners are interested in that? My point is, sometimes we take practicing guitar a little too seriously and we need to chill out!
The following are four situations where I think it would be a smart idea to practice less, or even not to practice at all. Let’s jump in!
Don’t practice guitar when life is overwhelming you
Do you need any reminder about this? Life is challenging enough without adding extra weight in which might complicate things.
When my father died, I didn’t bother to even think about practicing. Rather, I let it go and allowed myself to grieve naturally. When I was ready, I found myself back in the saddle and practicing with gusto.
Don’t practice guitar when you’re extremely tired
Again, we can say this is common sense. Practicing guitar is a mentally heavy activity. Why go at it when we are tired?
Lately, I’ve been getting into my studio early in the morning. I’ve found that I can get more done when I’m fresher and have experienced less in a day. There are times however when I just need sleep and I forced myself to get to the studio only to realize that I just wanted to take a nap! It’s better just to take the nap and come back later.
Don’t practice guitar when your hand, or any part of your body is hurting
Many times, we practice more and more and more for no good reason, which is misguided. That saying “No Pain No Gain” doesn’t apply to guitar. It’s the type of instrument that will punish you if you try to practice it and ignore pain.
As a graduate student at the Eastman School of Music, studying classical guitar, I often put in 6-8 hours of practice every single day. I would ignore pain, and as a result my body felt fatigued with practice. That experience came close to ruining my relationship with guitar, which I believe is far more important than “being good at guitar.”
Don’t practice guitar if you’re feeling a lot of tension in your body
One reason I love music is because it offers me a chance to just relax and enjoy the music I’m playing. Why on earth would I want to make that very enjoyable experience into a tension-filled one?
One student I worked with years ago often practiced with so much tension that she stopped feeling like it was fun anymore. She played with so much tension that she was unable to play without it. Technique on the guitar can be built on tension, but the problem is you’ll need that tension to be able to play what you practiced.
In conclusion
It’s not often that you’ll want to put the guitar down, especially after you get some momentum on the instrument! But sometimes, staying still and not approaching it is the best way to get better and to enjoy playing it.
Micro-Practicing: The Most Underrated Way to Practice Guitar /
One of the most commonly heard adages that guitar teachers are fond of is this idea of practicing "an hour every day." I think this advice is the product of an un-enlightened tradition of music educators who's ideas aren't in line with the expectations of who they are teaching.
What is really interesting to me is this ratio:
The amount of time you practice : How interested you are in the instrument.
What I find truly crazy is how guitar teachers will berate a student for not practicing an hour when he or she is brand new. What's completely insane is that guitar teachers haven't figured out exactly what that student must do in that entire hour anyways!
What I mean is this: Just because you practice five hours a day doesn't mean you're actually getting anywhere. Don't believe me?
Lessons From Graduate School Guitar Programs
In graduate school, learning classical guitar at the Eastman School of Music, I practiced no less than 6 hours per day. I taught beginners who were just starting to learn the instrument and I told them this:
As long as you come to your lesson each week, you'll get an A. If you skip one, you get a B, and so on and so forth. Attendance based.
The idea was to experiment with how much time they really needed to practice guitar and get more interested in it. This was at Alfred University, about an hour or so south of Rochester NY. Most of the students thrived with this format. There were a few students who found out they weren’t at all interested in guitar, but after they dropped the class I'm sure they felt a lot better.
I noticed a pattern: The more a student got into guitar and made it his/her own, the more time they spent practicing. The more we are interested in guitar, the more we'll practice it.
To expect a brand new student, someone who has never played guitar before but is looking to try it out, how can we expect them to create an extra hour of time for practicing guitar when even they don't even know if they want to continue?
This is exactly the reason why micro-practicing at the very beginning of learning guitar is absolutely essential. If a person's interest in guitar slowly grows, the amount of time grows naturally and organically. Best of all, I never told them they had to put in outrageous amounts of time.
In other words, five minutes of practice each day is totally doable.
Try watching TV when practicing /
Though I really hate to admit it, practicing guitar could be a whole lot easier if we watched TV while doing it. Why?
When we first learn something new, it is at the cognitive level. Unless we have Super-Man-esque concentration levels, we need a distraction. Thankfully, there is Seinfeld and Parks and Recreation reruns. After we learn something new, we need to play it, not just understand it.
Try this out for starters:
Try learning two new chord progressions. It could be something easy like say: G-Bminor-A-E (the Bminor is thrown in there because it isn't the most used chord in pop music). Or it could be something more in line with where you are at with your skill level. Then just sit down on the couch, watch your favorite Indiana Jones movie, and then when it gets to the part where Indiana Jones is punching some evil dude, check on your progress (which is like every three minutes in those movies).
Voila. Watching TV gives your brain a break, and allows your fingers to get more nimble at playing guitar.
Easiest Way to Learn Guitar /
Street musicians guitar by ejaugsburg, CC0 Public Domain
What's the easiest way to learn guitar? I'll give you a hint: it's not free. If you are interested in learning guitar online, in person, over the internet, or through osmosis (joke), this post covers it all. Let's hit it!
Read More3 Tips to Solve Guitar Frustration /
2 Become 1 Rhythm by Mith Huang , Attribution 2.0 Generic
Learning guitar is sometimes about struggle, but when struggle turns into frustration we have a problem.
Are you frustrated with learning guitar?
The rest of this post shares three time-tested tips to help solve guitar frustration. Let's jump in.
Read More6 Tips to Kill The Fun on Guitar /
Guitar sunset by geralt, CC0 Public Domain
There are many ways to kill your enthusiasm for guitar. Want to assure yourself that you hate guitar in the long run? Want to make sure you regret ever picking it up? These biting, sarcastic, and fake tips will help you hate the guitar forever.
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