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August 19, 2008

Improve Your Guitar Playing With Easy To Follow Methods

The great guitarists never stop learning. The late, but legendary Randy Rhodes despite being among the top players of his day was never satisfied with his level of playing. When he was on tour with Ozzy Osbourne, Randy would search out a classical teacher in every city they played in to take lessons. He had the rock down, but was trying to push himself harder to become a better classical player. That story is a good example that no matter who you are and how good you you are, there is always something more about the instrument that you can learn. For that reason alone, every guitar player should be making an effort to try to improve their playing. Guitar lessons, easy or not should be a part of every players routine.

One Step At A Time

The beginning guitar player is simply trying to make sense of an instrument that can be very trying. The lessons and instruction that they require are very specific and quite rudimentary in nature, but as David Lee Roth would say, you need a foundation before you can build a skyscraper. This kind of scaled down instruction can be hard to take for the new player. Easy beginner guitar lessons will help them out and inspire them to want to play more by giving them a taste of what they can aspire to. Instead of playing folk songs from the 1950’s, (not that there is anything wrong with them) a more modern approach is going to give students something to work with. It’s easier for the student to know how a U2 song should sound as opposed to ‘Little Brown Jug’.

Getting Your Satisfaction

The intermediate player will be familiar with chords and structure. They may be comfortable or at least familiar with different scales for playing lead parts, but they are at a spot in their musical journey where they need to take the next step or else they risk regressing in their playing. It is a shame that some aspiring players will lose interest in guitar because they have become bored with the monotony of practicing the same music over and over, but this is where changing up your approach to practicing will work wonders. Can you imagine how many times Keith Richards has played “Satisfaction”? Night after night though he still plays it with the same gusto as he would for any of the brand new songs. The intermediate player needs to be in that headspace where they are challenged to keep the music fresh, interesting and challenging for themselves.

Teaching The Old Dog New Tricks

The seasoned player just may be the toughest nut to crack in terms of getting them to advance their skills. A veteran player can be either comfortable with where they are and have a practice routine that is effective and works for them or else they can be in a state where they practice bad habits and start to develop lazy techniques that can eventually harm their playing. Sometimes the advanced level player needs to be reminded of where they came from and where they should be. It would be useful for the more seasoned players to start to work on invaluable musical aids such as ear training and learning to read music.

An easy guitar lesson for beginners can easily continue on to become an intermediate lesson that will quickly move the middle of the road player into a new peer group of solid guitarists. It can happen as quick as you make it happen. Keep on strumming!

I am proud to call myself an “ex”beginner guitarist. I’ve got a pocket full of chords and a head full of ideas. Now I need some earplugs and the amp turned up to 11! Get jammin’ with me, this site totally helped me out: http://www.squidoo.com/easybeginnerguitarlessons

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