Top Classical Guitar Tips of the Year

Hi Folks, here are some of my favourite top tips featured on the blog from some of the fantastic classical guitarists I’ve been privileged to interview this year. Read on for some top tips from the likes of Xuefei Yang, Lily Afshar and Johannes Möller!

Andrew Blanch’s top tips for someone thinking of picking up the classical guitar:

I guess have fun is pretty important! Having a good teacher probably helps a lot too.

In fact, you know what, I think it can be really tough for adult learners. They’re often really good at what they do, wherever they work. That’s their thing that they’ve been going at – I teach people from the public service, something like that. They’re experts at something. And maybe the skills involved in music aren’t necessarily the same as the ones in whatever they’re doing. It can be hard learning from someone younger than you too. A lot of teachers are students and that sort of thing.

With regards to getting a teacher I think, as a classical guitarist, is assumed. I’d really think about what the teacher is saying. Really just have some trust, I would say. Allow yourself to trust this new concept, this new way of thinking and approaching a way they may be trying to get you to think. Just have trust and just give it a go, thinking in the way they’re teaching you. And don’t necessarily assume that the thought processes to do what you’re doing are going to music as well.

andrew-blanch-black-and-white

Check out the full interview here: https://classicalguitarnstuff.com/2014/11/20/interview-with-ascendant-aussie-classical-guitarist-andrew-blanch-part-2/

https://classicalguitarnstuff.com/2014/11/17/interview-with-ascendant-aussie-classical-guitarist-andrew-blanch/

 

Xuefei Yang’s Top Tips for somebody just starting out on the guitar:

For beginners – that’s a hard question! Hmmm….to be honest for beginners, I think it’s really important to have a good teacher. I really think so. I think that with the violin, the piano, the reason why they have so many great players is that they have a longer tradition of teaching and they have more perfect systems of teaching, that’s why they can produce so many good players. I think in way, I personally feel that the guitar teaching system is still developing, we don’t have such a tradition. As a beginner, it’s very important to have the right method, for your technique. It’s very important, for adults or children, it’s very important. I really think that a good teacher is very important for beginners.

But I do want to say something to more advanced students – I just feel that lots of guitarists, guitar students, or maybe amateurs, tend to focus on the guitar world. Maybe they play the guitar because simply they love the instrument, which is no problem at all, nothing wrong with that. But I just feel that they’re more fanatic about the instrument. I hope that they can put themselves in the sea of music. Myself I love guitar as an instrument, but I think of guitar just as a method, just as a medium, of music. It’s a media to express music and I like to think about music more than about the instrument. I think that  for more advance students, if they want to be a musician, to make a career, I think it’s quite important to put yourself in the sea of music and think more generally about music, rather than just guitar.

Since I moved to London I play concerto a lot, I play chamber music a lot, and this has helped meimmensely! Musically and technically too. Musically, you know, if you just play solo guitar, which is a beautiful instrument, there is a great limitation. But if you play chamber music, or you listen to an orchestra the music becomes richer, so much more possibility. If you’re soaked in that music and you’re forced to do more on your instrument, do more musically, that forces you to push your technique. It forces you to do the things that you want. So I really feel that the technique improves, in the more advanced stage, when you want to play more music.

The beautiful Xuefei Yang Photo credit: Neil Muir
The beautiful Xuefei Yang Photo credit: Neil Muir

Check out the three part interview here:

https://classicalguitarnstuff.com/2014/09/01/interview-with-classical-guitarist-xuefei-yang-part-1-of-3/

https://classicalguitarnstuff.com/2014/09/04/interview-with-classical-guitarist-xuefei-yang-part-2-of-3/

https://classicalguitarnstuff.com/2014/09/08/interview-with-classical-guitarist-xuefei-yang-part-3-of-3/

 

Rick Alexander’s top tips for someone currently learning or thinking of learning the guitar and/ or writing their own material?

To the extent that I’m qualified to give tips – here goes!   For someone starting out playing, I think that the key thing is to find guitar music at your level that you love hearing and then work on that with a good teacher.  There’s good, interesting, modern music even at the earliest stages. For example, Andrew York’s Denouement album has some great early level pieces which are very musical and fit on the CD perfectly well with the more advanced pieces. Set yourself the challenge of playing pieces you love as well as you can, with a feel and sound that you make your own.

For someone thinking of writing their own material:  If, like I did, you find it hard to start writing I would advise persevering and keep trying. You have to start somewhere and I’ve found that writing has gotten easier as I’ve gone along. It’s something that practice improves, just like playing. I think that the main point is that you don’t have to apply any rules. Just experiment, noodle around on the guitar and find what sounds good to you. For example, make up a 20-30 second chord progression that sounds good to you by starting with an arbitrary chord and then experiment to find a chord that sounds good after it. Then one after that, and so on.  Record it on your phone and then play it back on a loop and experiment to see if you can find a melody line that sounds good over the top of it.

For the full interview with Rick head here:  https://classicalguitarnstuff.com/2014/03/17/qa-with-rick-alexander/

 

Johannes Möller’s top tip for beginners on the classical guitar:

“The most important thing, the number one, is to practice every day. I think even it’s just 10 minutes it’s better than doing one hour just once a week. Because that creates a routine, you create space for it.

It’s also because it becomes discouraging sometimes, but if you do a little bit every day things develop along very well I think. Even if it’s just 10 minutes. Regularity!

And for those progressing a bit further, or slightly more advanced students, on the classical guitar:

“It’s important to practice the very basic technical aspects, the very simple things, like doing the perfect stroke, doing the perfect slur even if it’s just one. The very most basic things. Because whatever you can’t do on its own, really slowly, you’re not going to be able to do it fast. So that’s kind of the secret. If you can’t play it slowly, you’re not going to play it any better fast! We all know that!

Guitar is a very difficult instrument, and so you do need to practice the technique separately to just playing the pieces. You can destroy pieces by playing them in so technical a way. If your technique already is strong you’ll much quicker master a piece.”

For the full interview with Johannes head here: https://classicalguitarnstuff.com/2014/07/07/interview-with-classical-guitarist-johannes-moller/

How to Juggle Learning Classical Guitar With Your Job and Life In General!

This is a subject I have some particularly direct experience of at the moment!! I’ve pretty much always had something career wise in one form or other on the go as well as classical guitar, and of course family, friends and life in general to juggle in the mix.

And I dare say that this will be the same for most of you too, dear readers. As suchI thought it might be helpful to share some of my own experiences and thoughts on this topic.

Here are my top five tips:

(1) Keep doing it. Keep going. 

I know in the past I’ve said it’s important to set goals and aim for those. And I still stand to that to a degree. In addition to that I think it’s even more important think in a process mindset.

Keep picking the guitar up out of its case, every day if you can. No sweat if you can’t. As much as you’re able. Even if it’s just five minutes. Even if it’s just a couple of scales and a brief look at a tricky element you want to work out. Just doing it is vitally important. Keep the momentum going.

I read this article recently that elucidates a little further on this concept:

http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2014/nov/07/systems-better-than–goals-oliver-burkeman

(2) Don’t keep apologising!

As a former teacher of primarily adult students I used to hear “oh I’m really sorry, I’ve not done much practice this week because the kids were sick/ I had to go away for work/ I was bloody knackered!/ some other permutation therein involving the busy-ness of every day life!”.

It’s all good. It’s fine. Most teachers worth their salt will completely understand – they have lives too you know!

And if you don’t have a teacher, or see them infrequently stop making yourself feel bad (I know I used to do that!). Accept that sometimes things just don’t conspire to enable you to practice. That’s OK. Accept it and let go. But also, remember to ask yourself whether it is something that’s really preventing you from practicing or whether you might be being a little bit lazy….. 😉

Don’t forget this is all about you and your journey. So what if it takes a little longer to get a piece under the fingers or whatever? No dramas.

(3) Look for the opportunities for practice

In the lead up to my Eighth Grade performance examination a number of years ago I began looking for time slots in my day where I could get a bit of extra practice in. Now admittedly at that time I probably wasn’t being the most efficient in my practice in general (which is the next tip…), but I didn’t appreciate that at the time! So, as I say, I was on the look out for extra time slots.

At the time I was working in an office in the city. We, like many offices, had an hour break for lunch. Ching!! Light bulb moment! I decided to bring in my oldest beginner guitar – just something with strings, a body and a neck basically, that I could practice technical elements on like scales, arpeggios and the like – and practice of a lunch time.

I got some interesting looks from my colleagues when I went to enter the shower and change rooms to practice (great acoustics in there!), but they understood when I explained and were very supportive.

Of course, I didn’t get to play it every single lunch time, but a couple of times a week for just 15 or 20 minutes on average which was fantastic.

And it must have done some good as I ended up getting an A in the exam! Are there time slots in your day you could use? Getting up earlier? Lunchtime? Have a look.

I didn’t end up doing that for my further studies on the guitar, AMusA and so because I’d then learnt to make my time a little more efficient which leads on to……

(4) Scrutinise what you’re doing

Are you using the five, ten, fifteen, thirty, whatever period of time as efficiently as you possibly could? Are you fluffing around? Are you playing through whole pieces where focussing on specific sections, phrases, bars or chord changes would produce better bang for your practice buck?

Take a look at that and really reduce the essence of your practice sessions down to the most concentrated elements and you might be surprised at what you can achieve in a relatively short time scale.

Putting a bit of a schedule together on when you want to practice and what you want to practice each week can also help with this.

(5) Have fun and enjoy the journey!

Sure, set your practice schedules, examine your practice efficiency and so on, but don’t forget to cut loose and have fun every now and then!! If an intense block of planned practice is just too much for your over-worked, marginally frazzled brain then skip it! Bust out your favourite piece and play that. The important thing is to enjoy yourself and play!