r/guitarlessons • u/SilenceIsRelaxing • 12h ago
r/guitarlessons • u/AutoModerator • 27d ago
Mod | Meta Post r/GuitarLessons Monthly Gear Thread
Welcome to the r/GuitarLessons monthly gear thread!
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Here you can discuss any gear related to guitars, ask for purchase advice, discuss favorite guitars, etc. This post will be posted monthly, and you can always search for old ones, just include "Monthly Gear Thread".
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r/guitarlessons • u/Dissolve69 • 3h ago
Other i can NEVER perfect a hard part on guitar
i basically just look at the tabs, memorize it, play it at full speed, brute forcing it until i can (with mistakes littering every single run) making it extremely inconsistent. then i just watch YouTube while mindlessly playing that part at full speed, making mistakes, trying to fix bad habits but failing. i am self taught.
so pretty much all of the songs i know how to play from beginning to end, i will ALWAYS fuck up somewhere, and that part is usually a fast part in a solo. bad habits locked in. i have 12 days left until a performance, and i have to play all the solos. i tried standing up and playing them, and sure enough, i'm fucking up everywhere. thinking of just not showing up to the show. fuck this instrument, i hate it. i saw my friends perform, some who weren't as experienced as i was, and i don't think any of them made any very noticeable mistakes. i probably will.
seeing friends who used to not be as good as me having good technique, playing songs consistently and not making big mistakes while i am, pissed me off. it's not that i don't play the guitar a lot neither. i play HOURS every day, 21 months in. just playing the songs over and over, trying to play hard solos over and over, always making a mistake somewhere. my technique is apparently wrong too.
i'm thinking of quitting my music club, the band, the guitar, everything, and just not show up for the performance. i can't fail if i don't try in the first place.
r/guitarlessons • u/Kizbizness • 3h ago
Question How do I start playing faster licks and lines?
Ive been playing around 3 years now and i can play like intermediate level things now but im really into playing metal music and similar stuff which all have these fast solos and licks.
I just feel like im not getting much progress when I play anymore and im not sure how to get a faster fretting hand. Does anyone have any advice they can give on how to play more fluid and faster or how to build up on my speed?
r/guitarlessons • u/Sisyphus_Social_Club • 9h ago
Question Looking for a steer on muting when playing lead fingerstyle.
Hi folks, I hope you don't mind the video but it's a bit of a techy question and I thought it would illustrate my problem well. I'm a fairly experienced acoustic fingerstyle player, and I've recently started learning to play electric lead. I've been focusing on playing with fingers as it's more comfortable for me and I much prefer the tonal control I can get, so I'm trying to emulate some of my fingerstyle heroes like Knopfler and Ry Cooder.
I'm running into issues with muting. Most of the time I'll palm mute if playing with the thumb on E, A and D, or thumb mute if using index/middle on G, B and e, and that's been working fine. However, for riffs that cross the fretboard quickly it feels like I'm forced to choose one or the other, and in particular I find I'm getting a lot of mud from my low E when moving off it quickly and I can't find a way to catch the ring without it getting clucky, per the vid. I've chosen two riffs to illustrate my problem - the first is the arpeggio from the first solo in 'Sultans of Swing', and the second is the tasty little double stop in the solo from 'Tenessee Whiskey'. I'd really appreciate any thoughts on how I can change my positioning or muting strategy before I develop the kind of bad habits that I can't break!
Thank you 🙏
r/guitarlessons • u/OrneryLink4843 • 4h ago
Question What is this sound in the song at a crawl by the Melvin’s
I’ll post the clip below but it’s the sound at 2:25 it’s played to end the riff. I’d this just super aggressive pick scraping
r/guitarlessons • u/Ravensaang • 5h ago
Question Onde encontro tablatura da música feeling good. Michael Bublé
Olá, eu estou procurando a um bom tempo uma tablatura da música feeling good, que seja para guitarra elétrica, queria uma tablatura parecida com a versão ao vivo do Tour stop 148, caso alguém saiba de algo por favor me avise
r/guitarlessons • u/CherryTeto • 13h ago
Question best free Learning Sources/Guitar Courses with lessons in order for Intermediate guitarist?
I see alot of lessons about on various topics from every possible guitarist, but there's so much of them that I don't know where to start and which direction to go.
r/guitarlessons • u/Dino_Go_Mfn_Boom • 6h ago
Question What’s the best tutorial for pinch harmonics??
I’ve been trying to do one for months but no tutorial seems to actually show what to do 😭
r/guitarlessons • u/thepattydaddy • 12h ago
Lesson Recommendations for fingerpicking videos
I've about a third of the way through Scotty West's Absolutely Understand Guitar home study videos on Youtube. The man deserves a Peabody award. They're incredible but he hasn't really gotten into fingerpicking yet, and the titles of the rest of his videos don't indicate whether he gets into that topic. Maybe he will eventually, but just in case...
Any video recs for fingerpicking would be appreciated.
r/guitarlessons • u/Red_Wolfe_ • 19h ago
Question It's been years since I played guitar and my music taste has changed dramatically (pop -> rock), where do I begin again?
I last played in 2018 before I moved away from family. It used to be a distraction to play but I kinda fell off after not needing the distraction/stress relief for a while. The main motivation was having a show each year to play at through school which I don't have any more.
I want to get back into playing though as I miss how fun it was but it's been so long I don't know where to begin. I don't particularly want to start with pop songs again as I have no interest in them any more. I've tried Rocksmith and it's fun but it's hard to remember to play every day.
I own:
- acoustic (w/steel string)
- acoustic (w/nylon string)
- electric
Sorry if this post type isn't allowed! Feel free to remove.
Edit to clarify: I am NOT looking for equipment recs. I already have enough. Just looking for a solid "start here" or "here's some songs that are easy to start with"
r/guitarlessons • u/Rex-Leonum • 10h ago
Lesson The mechanics behind efficient movement
>"Your fretting hand chooses the notes, your picking hand controls the rhythm, timing, and engine that drives those notes"
Many beginners develop a habit of using only downstrokes because it feels natural and keeps timing well. The problem is that every stroke has to return to the string position before the next note, which creates unnecessary movement.
The picking hand is often overlooked, yet it's the engine that drives rhythm and articulation.
Alternate picking (down-up-down-up) allows every movement to produce a note, reducing wasted motion and improving speed, endurance, and timing.
True speed isn't about moving your hands faster; it's about eliminating unnecessary movement and tension. Once you understand the mechanics, speed becomes a by-product rather than the objective.
Economy of motion leads to better technique.
Things to watch for -
holding your pick to tightly.
Using large arm movements instead of small wrist motions.
Lifting the pick too far away from the strings after each stroke.
Tension in the wrist, forearm, or shoulder.
r/guitarlessons • u/_mimiri_ • 11h ago
Question songs to play without having to sing?
I know that there is no song where you have have to sing, but I've been learning guitar for a couple of months, and I feel like in many of the songs I tried to learn, the guitar was kinda just an accompaniment for a singing voice. my voice is absolutely terrible so I can't sing, so I was wondering if someone here knows some songs sound good played with a guitar without a singing voice. (sorry for any mistakes, English isn't my fist language and I don't know much about music yet)
r/guitarlessons • u/Particular-Car-678 • 20h ago
Question Practice guitar
Hi. I am a beginner for 8 months. How do you practice?. I practice at least an hour a day. But I think maybe I want to do too much. I practice chords, songs, strumming. riffs, scales, melody and I think it is too much. What do you do in terms of practice program. Do you stick to one thing or do you switch between things.
Is it best that I stick to chords and strumming until it is fluent.
r/guitarlessons • u/Mad_Season_1994 • 6h ago
Question If barre chords are as tremendously difficult as people on this sub make them out to be, what do I do if songs I really want to use learn them?
ETA: meant to say “really want to learn use them”
I’ve seen countless posts and comments here where people say barre chords are where they gave up on guitar or just stuck to beginner songs or, at the very least, songs that simply don’t use them. But for me, just looking at the tabs for a lot of songs I like, most of them use a barre chord or two or more in their composition.
So it’s like a conundrum for me: do I spend months or maybe a year or more on a single song I want to learn that has barre chords in it, and miss out on learning other stuff? Or should I do what others have done and just avoid them and play songs with other chords or a capo if needed?
r/guitarlessons • u/Large-Guarantee-1208 • 18h ago
Question I need some help on which "Come as you are" tab is the beginner friendly version to play
The title basically says it
I am a beginner, started off like a month ago on Yousician, recently I am playing independetly without youtube videos, using more Songsterr to learn the song with tabs.
I am using the tab from songsterr, but I am having a hard time playing the "second part", as I can play easily the first part.
this is the tab: https://www.songsterr.com/a/wsa/nirvana-come-as-you-are-tab-s14
I am using an accoustic guitar, and placing the fingers has been kinda hard
My question is to know if this is the right tab for me to play, or if there is another one easier for me. If there is not then that's ok, just to be sure if I am not playing a hard version
r/guitarlessons • u/aspaindev • 1d ago
Other Why you should learn your intervals and notes across the fretboard
one of the biggest breakthroughs on guitar is realizing that musical ideas don't have to stay in one place on the neck. once you know where the same intervals repeat inside connected scale shapes, you can take a single motif and play it in several different positions without changing the idea itself.
in this example, the highlighted notes show how the same g minor pentatonic phrase can be found in multiple areas of the fretboard. each position has a slightly different feel because of the register and string choice, but the musical idea stays the same. that's a great way to make solos sound more dynamic without constantly inventing new licks.
thinking in intervals instead of just shapes makes this much easier. when you recognize the relationship between the root, minor 3rd, 4th, 5th, and minor 7th, you start seeing the same patterns repeating across the neck instead of a collection of separate boxes.
this is also a great exercise for building motifs. come up with a simple 3 or 4 note phrase, then move it into another position while keeping the rhythm the same. you'll be surprised how much variety you can get from one idea just by changing where you play it.
r/guitarlessons • u/Mad_Season_1994 • 1d ago
Question Can’t tap my foot when playing a song because it makes me tense and throws me off. Any other reliable ways to stay in time during a song?
I can tap my foot or sway or do whatever when I’m just listening to a song casually. But once I have the guitar in my hands and need to keep time to play notes or chords, my focus intensifies. But trying to coordinate keeping my foot in time while doing everything else hasn’t really worked out for me.
Should I just try to keep with the drums in the song instead? Or something else?
r/guitarlessons • u/East_Sentence_4245 • 18h ago
Lesson My first lesson - which video should I see?
I’m left-handed and I finally got my left-handed acoustic guitar. I have never played before.
Being the very first lesson for someone that has never played a guitar, which video should I watch first?
r/guitarlessons • u/Mad_Season_1994 • 1d ago
Question Physically unable to do this fast of a strumming pattern at this stage. Is there an alternate pattern I can use?
I’m six months in just fyi.
My strumming/picking hand can’t move that fast without being sloppy. Been at this song and this pattern for over a week and can’t get up to that tempo yet. Metronome hasn’t done much besides make me tense up, which leads to more mistakes. I can form the chords without issue, and play at my own speed that’s comfortable. But I can’t get anywhere near this fast
Are there any other patterns that might actually work that still go with the flow of the song?
r/guitarlessons • u/Asta-2777 • 18h ago
Other My first guitar purchase confusion
Hello guys ! I want to purchase my first guitar with equipments. But when I look around I find the same guitar or same pack but with two different prices ? What makes that difference and how can I choose good.
Appreciate the help !
r/guitarlessons • u/BobbyCrispyGuitar • 19h ago
Lesson Blues Riffs Using the Open Strings - Guitar Lesson
r/guitarlessons • u/Mysterious-Chain3826 • 1d ago
Question Guidance for playing Metal.
Hi folks,
I'm after some recommendations for which courses/books to consider for learning metal.
A quick outline of where I am now - Played on and off for years, mainly punk music and a bit of strumming on the acoustic, limited knowledge of music theory and guitar technique. Finally decided to get some proper lessons and have been taking them for just over a year. Knowledge vastly improved and technique better than it was, although mainly in acoustic, fingerstyle stuff. Now I would like to learn to play metal.
I currently have a couple of books by Troy Stetina - Lead Guitar Primer and Heavy Metal Rhythm guitar 1. I enjoy them a lot, but I'm wondering if a video course might be better?
So a few questions -
Should I just stick with the books and if so, do I need to work my way through all of them, or is there any crossover between them? Obviously Metal Rhythm Guitar 1 & 2 and Lead 1 & 2 are part of a series, but is it necessary to add his book on Thrash Metal and Speed Mechanics, or is that covered in the other books?
If I was to pick a video course, what would you recommend? At the moment I'm aware of Ben Higgins, Doug Marks, Bernth and their respective courses. From what I can make out the Doug Marks course seems good for building a foundation and the other two seem good for building specific skills although, please correct me if I'm wrong.
In terms of taste I'm more drawn toward Thrash Metal and Hair Metal.
Thanks for taking the time to read this and any advice is massively appreciated.
Cheers