Skennington, Uploads and Discussion |
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Skennington, Uploads and Discussion |
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Feb 2 2009, 09:10 PM |
Steve, I have to tell you that these takes look really good. The BS lesson has a few timing issues and that’s really it. This could be fixed by just practicing the lesson more, but I think we have gotten what we need out of it and it is time to move on.
Same thing with the second take on Muris's lesson. You just need to practice it some more and you will get to 100bpm before you know it. I think you have made some great progress in the short time we have been working together. Here is how I would like us to move forward. Lets keep working with Muris's lesson and add two more exercises. This is going to give you I well round practice routine. I am figuring that maybe you have 1 hour a day to practice so lets break it down like this. 15 minutes with https://www.guitarmasterclass.net/rhythm-gu.../pop-strumming/ This will be a good warm up for your right hand. 15 minutes with Muris's lesson 30 minutes with https://www.guitarmasterclass.net/solo-guit...inger-work-out/ This will get your fingers moving and build strength. Also you'll notice it's all alternate picking and will help to get your hands working together. Start slow and learn a small section first. Once you memorized the pattern he is using then add another section and so on. The goal is to learn the lesson and be able to play it comfortable at 60bpm. Let me know if you have any questions or concerns. Edit: typo This post has been edited by UncleSkillet: Feb 3 2009, 12:47 AM -------------------- "Think of a guitar solo as a paragraph. You need a clear beginning, a middle, and an end. Look at musical phrases like sentences, and make sure you break them up using punctuation—or space. You pause naturally when conversing, right? If you don't, you'll bore the listener. The same thing will happen with your audience if your solo is one dimensional. You'll wear them out and lose their attention." —Tom Principato
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