TOPIC AREAS

Discover key knowledge and learning areas that will be covered in my guitar course. These areas provide you a good idea of what to expect in your lessons with me. Click on the following links to watch a lesson, or scroll down to read about them.

 

Fundamentals

For beginners, learning the instrument properly is important as it is very easy to form bad habits along the way. This applies to music in general, for example understanding theory and reading standard notation rather than TABs. Even for players with a few years’ experience, sometimes they have to rewind and sort out technical issues which are affecting their progress, simply because they haven’t built up from a solid foundation.

Essentials

Once the foundations have been properly laid out, it’s time to grow and expand musically. 

Exponentials

At this stage it’s time to specialise and develop in style. Innovation and pushing boundaries will require some creativity in practice.

Advanced Techniques

Sweep Picking

A technique where a guitarist plays single notes on consecutive strings with a sweeping motion of the pick.

Hybrid Picking

Using a combination of pick and fingers to pluck the strings simultaneously, enabling two or more strings be attacked simultaneously, sounding more like a piano.

Harmonics

Producing high-pitched overtones by lightly touching the strings with the picking hand.

Whammy Bar

Using the guitar's whammy bar for pitch bends, dive bombs, and other expressive effects.

Tapping

Using the fingers of the picking hand to tap the frets, producing fast and intricate passages.

Legato

Emphasizing smooth and connected notes without using much of the pick, often using hammer-ons and pull-offs on the left hand. 

Artificial Harmonics

Creating harmonics by touching the string with the fretting hand after picking with the other hand.

Double Stops

Playing two notes simultaneously, often used in blues and rock for added richness.

Economy Picking

Combining alternate picking (up and down pattern) together with sweep picking for a fluid and efficient motion across the strings.

String Skipping

Playing non-adjacent strings, skipping over one or more strings to create melodic patterns. Particularly good for fast shreds. 

Tremolo Picking

Rapidly picking a single note to create a trembling or shimmering effect.

Chord Melody

Playing melody and harmony simultaneously with fingerstyle technique, often seen in jazz guitar and instrumental music.

FOOD FOR THOUGHT:

Since music is a language, learn it in the same way as a new foreign tongue. First learn the alphabet (notes), then learn the grammar (how notes are used), lastly the vocabulary, phrases and idioms (licks).

Articulations like slides and bends, tone and timbre can be compared with the accent which is acquired in different regions of the world.