New To Guitar? Take Your Foot Off The Accelerator!

I happened to catch a TV show recently about a chap learning to drive a rally car for the first time. Not normally the kind of show I’d be inclined to spend my precious time watching but I was interested and intrigued quite frankly in the approach to learning of the beginner rally driver and the beginner guitarist. Sounds a little peculiar so far but go with me here. Soundhole B&W

I was very interested because I noticed that a good deal of the behaviours of the chap approaching rally driving for the first time were very similar to those of someone learning the guitar for the first time (or even a bit more developed students in some cases).

How so?

Well, I noticed the following:

* Novice driver and novice guitarist are both super eager to get behind the wheel and go, go, go! Such enthusiasm, of course, is very commendable!

* Novice driver and novice guitarist both want to go really fast. And really fast now! There’s an eagerness in both perhaps to go faster than is realistic without enjoying the journey (quite literally for the driver) of learning correct technique and the application of that technique.

* Oftentimes as a result perhaps of that fantastic eagerness there can be a tendancy for both the rally driver and guitarist to get very involved with what they’re doing. When I say involved I mean, mentally involved and physically involved.

Over involvement

It’s very easy when we’re so eager to learn and do well with our playing that we put a lot of our mental and emotional self into our playing. Which is a good thing to a point – it’s good to concentrate, to focus, and to feel the music. But we must make sure it’s the music we’re feeling as it’s moving through; not holding on to what we may have already played (good, bad or otherwise) or what we may anticipate to be coming up. Just learning to take it a little bit easier and learning to let go can make for a lot more relaxing and enjoyable playing experience!

We may also push a little too hard physically – the rally driver on this TV show was over-steering, over-braking and over-accelerating! The result was that he ended up in trees with a smashed up car!! The guitarist is not likely to wreak as much havoc as this (hopefully not!), but by getting too physically caught up in what we’re doing, being too physically intense – pressing too hard with the left (fretting) hand, creating a pincer type grip between thumb and fingers of the fretting hand or using some other kind of extraneous movement with fingers, hand or arm – can lead to tensions creeping in, making it more difficult to play well and wreaking havoc over time on the body with all sorts of niggling little injuries and complaints potentially creeping in.

Learning guitar the novice rally driver way

So, to use the rally driving novice analogy, if you’re new to guitar, want to maximise your learning and playing experiences and minimise risk of injuring yourself you might want to think about the following:

* Take your foot off the gas! Speed will come in time. Master the basics first, learn how to use them and use them well. Speed will come without you even noticing it.

* Relax! You tensing up is not going to make you play faster, better, louder, more smoothly and so on. It’s going to have quite the opposite effect! To play faster, better, louder, more smoothly relax and let the road roll to you.

* Keep that enthusiasm up and persevere. Even when it feels as if you’re not progressing and things don’t seem to be going as you’d like, it may be that you’re just in a bit of slow phase or plateau at the moment. These things happen in waves. Keep at it and you’ll notice the difference soon enough.

Taking my own guitar-learning advice

If you’d been in the Prahran area of Melbourne around the start of January this year you may have heard the sound of madly flailing arms and legs and desperate gasps for air emanating from the Prahran Aquatic Centre.

That sound, ladies and gentlemen, would have been the sound of me attempting something which I’d not really done since my school days (which were some time ago now) – swimming front crawl/ freestyle (I’ll say freestyle from here on, but you know what I mean).

Swimming breaststroke I’m all good with. Love it. Could swim for miles and miles (or kilometers and kilometers if you’re metric). All day long. Very efficient at that one. I wanted to give freestyle a bit of a bash though.

Why? If you’ve even been swimming in an Australian swimming pool you’ll quickly realise that around 90% of the folks swimming are doing freestyle (or Australian crawl as I’ve also heard it referred to). Well, I’m all for individual style, but I felt kind of left out just doing my breaststroke. I wanted to see what all the fuss was about.

But what the heck has this got to do with playing guitar? A perfectly legitimate question and one I have an answer for.

Well, first up swimming is a great form of exercise for guitarists – it works the whole body and is particularly good for building strength and conditioning through the arms, shoulders and back. Very important bits of kit for any guitarist.

Secondly, I was interested in learning or re-learning how to swim freestyle properly as a little experiment to:

(1) Test out some of my own pieces of advice and approaches to learning and development of a skill;

(2) Put myself in the position of students (perhaps someone like yourself) coming back to the guitar after a very long time away or for the first time. I wanted to test out feeling like them a little, like being thrown quite literally into the deep end!

I could have applied it to my (sadly lacking these days) piano playing or picking up the liquorice stick again (clarinet), or even starting anew with an instrument I’ve always fancied giving a bash – violin. But I thought I may as well kill two birds with one stone and get the benefit of the physical exercise into the bargain of the experiment.

As I mentioned above, I’m finding that swimming is very beneficial to the guitar playing actually. It’s great cardiovascular exercise with very limited potential to either(a) get myself killed or (b) break a collarbone, hand or wrist which was always a very real possibility in my former sport of choice, road cycling and racing! It also makes for great resistance training and exercise for the back, shoulder and arm muscles – very important for maintaining good posture when playing – and helps stretch you out (again very important if you spend time sitting practicing, plus couch time plus computer time, seated work time etc).

So, yes, testing out the acquisition of a new or very dusty old technique. I’ve been working on this experiment now for around 10 weeks and I can report that it felt VERY alien initially. I must have looked like I was drowning. Seriously.

But first piece of self-advice: don’t give up just because it feels weird and feels uncomfortable. Of course it’s going to. Whether it’s swimming freestyle for the first time in years or playing guitar for the first time, if your brain and your body haven’t been doing it as a matter of daily life then it will feel strange. And the only way for it to not feel strange, and for you to improve, is to just dive in (quite literally in my case) and do it.

Second piece of self-advice: you’re not going to be a maestro (i.e. a Michael Phelps or a Julian Bream) from the get go. In fact a loooong way off it. But that’s ok. Acquiring a new skill is as much, if not more, about the journey, about the “getting out there and doing it”. Again, just do it, do it consistently and cut yourself some slack. It will take as long as it needs to take for you to learn.

Third piece of self-advice: each time you practice/ swim/ do whatever it is you’re doing aim to do something a little better. Observe yourself critically, but not judgmentally. Think. Understand what needs to change. Tweak things up just a little bit at a time. I’m pleased to say that I’m no longer drowning and in fact I’m going quite well with a total immersion-type technique, finding no difficulty in now doing 750-800m of freestyle non-stop (I’m quietly pleased with myself having nearly drowned at the 25m mark around 9 or 10 weeks ago!) and now attempting alternate side breathing. This has been through an exercise of not giving up at the discomfort of trying something new, not concerning myself with what other people might think about my learning and importantly of “practicing critically” – asking myself questions like “what do I need to do differently to do x, y or z?” , “is this the best way to use my arms/ legs? What would happen if I did something else? What might that something else be?” and “ow that hurts. What do I need to change up to make sure that doesn’t hurt anymore?”

Now I’ve had a little help in this little experiment of mine  – Mr Classical Guitar n Stuff is a bit of a whizz in the swimming pool, practically being able to swim before he could walk, and swimming elite times in the pool at the drop of a hat – Fourth piece of self-advice: get a good mentor or at least someone to watch and point out where you can improve.

So far this little experiment has made me really realise and appreciate all the more the fact that most of us are not born with natural abilities to do certain things (we may have a propensity for them), but skills can be acquired through:

  • consistent and regular practice
  • critical (but not judgmental) observation of how you’re doing something;
  • making changes to how you’re doing something one small step at a time

All this combined then leads to incremental improvements over time and the start of a rock solid technique to build on and do you thing with.

Dive in!