#46
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I can empathize. I have done all the things suggested, including various courses mentioned and trying a real teacher again. I never stick with the teachers because at some point we end up diverging on my goals. I've had better success being self-taught actually.
Over the past several years (and because being in my mid 50's, well time seems to go faster) I've discovered that I really want to learn the songs of my childhood, i.e., 60s and 70's folk, pop, classic stuff, with some blues tossed in). I have found just what I want in the offerings of Jerry's Guitar Bar (e.g., individual lessons and tabs and video step by step very professionally done for very reasonable prices per song). My advice to the OP would be to start with what song/s do you burn to learn to play and go from there, whether an online lesson or course, teacher, or some other means. |
#47
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#48
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Yes, this is the way to get started. Keep it up, keep practicing, keep following your lessons.
You know the way to Carnegie Hall, don't you? Practice, man, practice! |
#49
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#50
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I always think everyone is like me, and has a regular playing repertoire that they play regularly. I can read musical notation, but for several reasons, play from memory when I playing tunes in my playing repertoire. In order to remember tunes, they have to be played regularly - not just when you have to play them.
If I try to learn too many tunes or playing techniques at the same time, I end up learning slowly. I think a person learns more if they just focus on a very few new tunes at the same time. The tune a person struggles with most is often then one that teaches them the most new things. |
#51
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Many here recommend learning the easy parts of songs first and the rest later as skills increase. Some recommend getting an instructor. And some cite getting frustrated and moving on once student/teacher interests and methods diverge. I endorse easy parts and instructors with a couple caveats.
Regarding the easy parts, I taught myself to play rock in 1970, standing by the record player/radio in the family basement (Supro electric plugged into a tube PA amp and a couple 15" Jensens). There was such great music happening then. Stacking the easy parts of songs together like Legos led me to basic all-around competence and half a century in various bar bands (after work) playing rock, blues, pop and country. So yes, I recommend that approach. I also recommend trying a teacher/instructor (or at least supportive friends with skills) if at all possible. The trick, of course, is finding a mentor who'll keep you engaged, curious and moving forward. I could never read black dots on paper and I'm not interested in starting now. So I'd quickly part ways with any teacher who'd insist on that before moving forward. Shop around and find someone who can help identify things within your reach/interest (with some stretching of course) and learn a few songs from beginning to end. Whole songs! A student of mine got a guitar just a few months ago and started at ZERO. By setting incremental goals right at her horizon (and not too far beyond), we've managed to get her going with quick "no peeking" chord changes (cowboy and barre), strum patterns, arpeggios, timing, and singing at the same time. She brightened up a boring mandatory staff meeting on Zoom last month, entertaining her co-workers with Good Riddance, Stand By Me and a couple Creedence numbers. Last edited by tinnitus; 06-18-2020 at 03:53 PM. |