The Best Way To Learn Guitar?

A wee post to kick off the week for you today folks 🙂  My beloved Allan Bull guitar

I was asked recently by a fellow guitar blogger (it’s so great to be connected to such a fabulous world wide community of fellow guitar nuts!) what were my opinions on the best way to learn guitar. Well, I thought it might be good to share those thoughts with you guys too:

In my opinion, the best way to learn guitar, classical guitar or otherwise (and if you’re serious about it), is to approach it with a long term view. Approach with the understanding that the guitar is not something that can be mastered overnight and that one never truly arrives at a point where one says “this is it. I’ve learnt everything”. Learning guitar is very much about the journey and less so about a destination.

That’s the philosophical “best way” to learn guitar.

The more practical “best way” is really with a good quality teacher (that someone can recommend to you ideally) and taking weekly lessons. A good quality teacher will help you reach your guitar playing goals much quicker than you ever could on your own – there’s the stuff you know you don’t know or don’t know how to execute right? You can puzzle through that stuff eventually (although at a slower pace possibly than with a mentor to guide you). But what about the stuff that you don’t know that you don’t know?! This is where a teacher is worth their weight in gold to the student of the guitar.

You can find this, along the thoughts and opinions of  various other guitar teachers and guitarists, here: http://www.guitarrank.com/learn-guitar/

What are your thoughts on the best way to learn guitar?

Playing Legato on Classical Guitar

Legato – no not a kind of pasta, Italian composer or some kind of giant plastic building blocks.

Nope. For the initiated in Italian musical vocabulary (and for those that need a little reminder), it is the act of playing smoothly and connected with very little, if any at all, space between each of the notes you play. Think how a violin might play something, with its nice bowing action, able to make all the notes connected together. Not. A. Gap. Bet-ween. Each. Note. But-a-nice-fluid-phrase-notes-connected-to-one-another….

We have it a little more challenging on the guitar, as a plucked instrument, to get that nice connected, legato feel in our playing. It is certainly, by no means, impossible however. Like most things on the guitar it just needs a little awareness of what you’re currently doing, how you could change that up and do it differently and then practicing it!

Prepare your left hand

One of the key elements of playing nice and smoothly is getting your fretboard hand (left hand if you’re right handed, right hand if you’re left handed) prepared and ready, loaded up and ready to fire*.

What does that mean?

That essentially means putting fingers down before you need them. And I don’t mean just immediately, a nano-second fretting a note prior to playing it. To get that lovely, smooth, connected feel we need to pre-load fingers behind fingers – first, second or third fingers (depending on what you need) down behind a fourth finger, for example, before you need them.

Say what?

OK, it’s a bit difficult to explain this kind of thing via the written word sometimes,s o I have recorded a wee video snippet for you (how exciting!). In this little clip you’ll see me playing just a simple one octave descending C major scale – watch how I have prepared, or pre-loaded, my fingers well before I need them. My fingers also don’t come too far away from the fretboard either. Less distance to travel = less time to get them back to where they need to be = easier, smoother playing.

Get prepared, get slurring

Taking this approach is also going to make things WAY easier when you come to play slurs.

Same dealio. Get the fingers pre-loaded and ready. Don’t try to start a slur with the finger you’re sluring to up somewhere in the ether. Get it down on the fretboard and ready before you play the slur. It will create a much smoother sounding slur and it will likely produce a stronger sounding slur too as you have something that you can counter the string movement with as you pull off.

Here’s another little video of me demonstrating that for you:

 

See if you can find the opportunities in your music to “pre-load” the fingers

Admittedly we don’t always have the choice or the luxury of putting fingers down or leaving them down to be used again, but it’s probably a good idea to get into the habit of looking through your music and seeking out places where you can comfortably do that. It’s such a tiny little thing, a tiny little movement really, but it can make such a massive difference in how a piece of music sounds.

Get smooth!

*To play smoothly there is also certainly an element of ensuring that the right and left hand are well co-ordinated with one another (but that’s a subject for another time).