Like the headline says, here are seven habits — habits you'll need to
get into — that will, simply put, make you a better guitarist.
01. Visualize: You don’t just have to practice when
there’s a guitar in your hands. There’s plenty of time in the day being
wasted that you can use to improve your playing. Whenever you have a
spare few seconds to daydream or are zoning out in class or at a meeting
or waiting in line at the DMV, etc., use the time to go inside your
mind’s eye and ears and visualize yourself perfectly executing the lick,
riff or song you’ve been working on.
See and hear yourself playing the part with an expert ease, gliding
as one with the strings, “virtually” feeling your fingers and your pick
in precise synchronization. Repeat this whenever you can and you’ll find
you’re better than you were before the last time you picked up the
guitar and that the experience of the real guitar in your hands is
enriched for the process.
An added bonus of this is that when you get better at connecting the
disparate experiences of the imagined and the real, you’ll find that the
accuracy of translating what you hear in your head through your fingers
to the fretboard will significantly improve, as will your ability to
transcribe things you hear while away from your guitar (if nothing else,
you’ll be floored at how realistic your air guitar playing will be!).
02. Learn Something New Every Day: This is one of
the easiest things you can do to enrich your guitar playing,
musicianship and, most importantly, your discipline and motivation.
Simply put, find one guitar-related thing a day that you didn’t know
already and learn it. And play it. It can be a riff, a lick, a chord, a
scale, an exercise, a song, a melody, an altered tuning, a strum
pattern, the part of a song you know all of the cool riffs of but never
bothered to learn the “boring” connecting transition sections of,
whatever.
The discipline of seeking out, playing and internalizing a new piece
of guitar knowledge on a daily basis will feed your subconscious musical
instincts, add new concepts to your muscle memory and ultimately aid in
your ability to express yourself and perform effortlessly on the
guitar.
Make this a part of your day and you’ll find that as you continue on
your journey, one thing will become two, then three, and on and on until
you are devouring as much as you can absorb on the guitar, every day!
03. Jam! While it’s awesome to have perfected that
ripping 128th note shredfest in your bedroom or basement, perhaps the
most important thing for a guitarist to do is to play along with or to
some sort of accompaniment.
Obviously, playing with another live musician or group of musicians
in the same room is the perfect situation (And you should put yourself
in those situations as often as possible), but there are many
alternatives that can be just as beneficial. Today we have innumerable
options, such as virtual backing bands and tracks through the Internet,
computer programs such as EZ Drummer (highly recommended for its ease of
use and versatility) or Garageband loops, plus apps on our phones that
can act as stable backdrops against which we can hone our performance
skills.
Playing with accompaniment such as this will greatly improve your
consistency, your endurance, your improvisational ability and your feel
for locking into a groove.
As another fun and educational option, jam along with your favorite
songs. You can play along with the song note-for-note as written and
improve your chops by executing the nuances and fitting in seamlessly
with the rhythm, or you can use the track as a launch pad for exercising
your improvisational muscles and integrating the licks you have been
practicing. Play along with songs outside of your comfort zone of style
or technicality to gain further benefits from this. Jamming along with
TV, commercials or movie soundtracks while you’re relaxing with a guitar
in your hands can be fun and rewarding.
04. Record Yourself: There is no better way to see
your guitar playing objectively and to motivate yourself to work to
become a better player than to record yourself. There are countless
affordable media for recording yourself on your own, and when you
record, you can listen to yourself with fresh ears and hear the things
you like and dislike about your playing. You’ll find it’s infinitely
easier to pinpoint your strengths and weaknesses and focus your practice
accordingly.
Record yourself playing rhythm and then record other complimentary
parts such as leads, melodies, counterpoints and complimentary alternate
rhythms and you’ll learn about composition, production and ensemble
performance. When you begin to focus on these complimentary parts,
you’ll find that your vision and scope expands, as do your goals, and as
you work to create complete songs, your abilities grow exponentially
while you work to write and perform to the best of your ability.
The other benefit of recording yourself is that you will consistently
maintain a record of your growth as a player. The journey of a
guitarist is always (or should be) one of constant growth, and recording
yourself is an awesome way to measure how far you have come.
05. Take Lessons: As a guitar instructor by trade, I
am clearly biased, but the most obvious and productive thing any
guitarist can do to improve their playing is to take lessons. While
there is an ever-expanding universe of Internet resources, books,
instructional videos, etc., available, nothing can compare to the
one-on-one interaction with the expertise of a skilled guitar teacher. A
teacher will identify your strengths and weaknesses, sharpening your
skills and eliminating your flaws. A good teacher also will help you
save time in your development by helping you sift through all of the
information out there and lead you on the right path toward quickly
realizing your goals as a guitarist.
Guitar teachers get paid to make you better, and spending the money
will make you take your study seriously. Every story of a “self taught”
guitarist still involves some part where they learned a lot from someone
they knew who was more proficient and knowledgeable than them who
helped shape their development, and even the extremely educated and
virtuosic Randy Rhoads (who was a guitar teacher himself) was known to
seek out guitar teachers whenever he had available time while making
history touring and recording with Ozzy Osbourne, so break out of your
rut, accelerate the evolution of your playing to the next level and get
some lessons!
06. Focus your practice time: We’ve all heard
stories of guitarists with marathon 12-hour or daily three-hour practice
sessions, but for most guitarists, a tight, focused 10 to 30 minutes of
consistent daily practice will prove more efficient. There is a
difference in “practice” and “playing” time, and oftentimes the two get
confused.
Practice should involve (after warming up) maintenance exercises to
keep up your chops and emphasize your strengths, and focused work on
specific goals that deal with integrating new knowledge and technique.
Keeping the time spent on practice to an intelligent minimum, breaking
up the topics to be addressed into small chunks, will help avoid wasted
effort and will leave time to play.
In an ideal world, we’d all have three to six or more solid hours
each day to spend with a guitar in hand, but for most of you reading
this, the time you have available is substantially less. Oftentimes,
setting out to practice for an extended period of time becomes a chore
for some, and then the practice gets put off if something else comes up.
Planning for at least 10 minutes of consistent daily practice time
isn’t much of a chore for anyone, and if you get into the habit, you’ll
find that you find ways to make more time to practice more.
Break up your practice regimen into skill sets and techniques,
practice them daily, and then use them more efficiently when you’re
playing. Let a guitar teacher mentor you through the process of
designing a suitable practice routine for your schedule, or do your best
assessing yourself and create your own. They key is consistency and
brief, yet physically and mentally intense sessions.
Twenty minutes every day of truly focused practice is tremendously
more conducive to development than a two-hour session every once in a
while. And if you keep up with a reasonable, steady schedule, you’ll
find that those occasions when you have time for an all-day practice
session are all the more fruitful for it.
More importantly, keeping a consistent, intense practice regimen will
leave all of your other free “guitar time” available for jamming,
improvising, recording and experimenting, all of the while being able to
do so with your skills at the highest possible level.
07. Track Your Progress The growth of any guitarist
can be greatly improved by the simple awareness of the development of
that growth. As you develop the discipline to be learning and
practicing on a daily basis, it is extremely important to keep a log or
diary of the process of your improvement in order to further maximize
growth. The easiest way to do this is to keep a consistent log of your
daily routine.
While this may seem a bit obsessive, you’ll find that keeping track
of your daily practice will help you focus future practice sessions,
maintain and continue awareness of steady progress, and also locate
particularly fruitful practice phases in your past that can be
replicated and upgraded when you feel your growth has stalled.
Create your own daily “workout log” or click, save and use the example below:
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