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Adopt Their Training and Philosophies

Paul Gilbert once said, “Practice this until it sounds like a popsicle stick stuck in your bicycle spokes”. He would also practice the most difficult thing he could find, so that the easier stuff would be a piece of cake to play. Steve Morse once said about John Petrucci – “to get as good as John, you will need a metronome and a whole bag of picks. You’re going to be needing them.” Also, Steve Morse used to actually practice guitar while driving! (Not recommended! But it’s nice to be inspired by his commitment) Eddie Van Halen’s philosophy is “if it sounds good, play it”. Nuno Bettencourt once stated that he wishes they’d invent a pill that would replace eating a meal because he hated taking a break from practicing. There are stories of Frank Zappa working and recording until he was finished with what he was working on – no break, no food, no sleep etc. John McLaughlin would rehearse with his band 10 hours a day – that’s rehearse, not just practice on his own. Jimi Hendrix would constantly fall asleep playing guitar. People would find him the following morning asleep with a guitar in his lap. There’s a fable that says that when he was at Berklee College of Music, Mike Stern would regularly wake up, and start playing guitar, sitting on the edge of his bed still in his underwear. His friends would go to classes all day and return to the dorm room later that day to find him still practicing, still at the edge of his bed and yes, still in his underwear!

Maybe all of these stories are true. Maybe some are fiction. Either way, they are inspiring to me and perhaps to you. Learn as much as you can about your favorites. If you learn more about your favorite guitar players and their practice habits, you can adopt all of the good ones. You will start to adopt the mindset of a true giant, a MONSTER guitar player. In time maybe others will be adopting your practice habits! 

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If you talk to any of my students, you’ll quickly realize that I’m a big fan of racing, Formula One in particular. There are so many similarities between the two “sports”. Let’s explore a couple of them.   Practice slowly and accurately first: One thing I always tell my students is “if you can’t play… Read More

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We all use what I call a “focus pool”. This concept is quite evident in particular to beginners. Say for example you are a beginner (maybe you are!). When first learning a scale, the thing you are focusing on the most is where the notes are. This more than likely requires 100% or your focus… Read More

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I feel like starting with a “back when I was learning guitar” kind of statement. Because… back when I was learning how to play guitar we didn’t have quality transcriptions of our favorite songs in abundance like these days. I was lucky to find a page or two of transcribed music is guitar magazines. Tablature… Read More

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Eight.   Oh, did you want me to elaborate on that? I guess I can do that. Here’s my humble opinion on getting your kids started with musical instruments including guitar. It all depends on the kid. I’ve taught kids as young as five. That was pushing it a little. Eight years old is my… Read More

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For so many decades, our beloved E, A, D, G, B, E tuning has served us well. There has of course been the rare instance of an artist retuning to an alternate or a drop tuning, but for the most part our standard tuning was just that – the standard. Isn’t that enough to keep… Read More

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