Tag: Practicing

Guitar Technique: Left Hand Posture Tips

I have seen too many times young or inexperienced guitarists having to go back to basics because of poor left hand posture. In this video I’ll give you some tips on how to better your left hand posture following a few simple concepts:

2. Keep your thumb opposite your fingers on the other side of the neck

1. keep your knuckles parallel to the fret board

3. reach out for frets bending each individual finger

4. ‘scroll’ down the neck in a relaxed way like it was a rail, in a relaxed way

I think the most important thing is that you have to be very relaxed in doing all of the above.

THIS IS THE 2021 UPDATED VERISION OF THE VIDEO…the original from 2008 is below

Jog Scale

This is a scale I know as ‘Jog scale’. I am sure even though you might not know it by name, you have heard its sound before, as it is featured in a lot of Beatles tunes, and also a favorite of guitarist Eric Johnson. It has an Indian flavor to my ears…just watch the video and you’ll understand what I mean. In the PDF file below you’ll find the 5 inversions/modes and relative fingerings in the key of G. It sounds best over G7 (or G7sus4), Fmaj7#11, and B7#9, but feel free to experiment…

Download: Jog Scale PDF

Good Luck.

On how to find new and original material

   A lot of musicians seem to have to wait for the magic inspirational moment  to write new material…but as we know, that does not always come very often…and usually it always comes at the wrong time, when you have noting to write/record your new ideas on. Even though there might be moment of your life where you are more ‘in the zone’, I think sometimes you should make things happen, rather than wait for things to happen. This is actually a lot simpler than you think…this is how to do it in 5 easy steps. 

step1. Get in a room with your instrument of choice. Close the door behind you.

step2. Clear your mind

step3. Press record on your recording device of choice

step4. Play for at least 2 hours (maybe) taking a couple of very short breaks, focusing on breaking away from your clichés.

step5. Repeat steps 1to4 as many time as needed to achieve desired results

   Listen to all you have recorded and try to isolate good ideas or themes…I am sure after a few minutes you’ll get to play some good ideas and you will automatically start trying to manipulate them to make a tune or some sort of form out of them. It is great to keep an archive of the stuff you record, because listening to the material the next day with a fresh set of years might bring up parts and ideas you might have missed. Try to do this on a regular basis, after all, most of the work of learning the craft is based on repetition…

Considerations on practicing – the power of your mind.

       Your mind is a very powerful thing. Have you ever thought how many single actions are necessaries to play an instrument? Even in its simplest form, play a single note on the guitar, it must involve hundreds, if not thousands of impulses in our brain and around our body. This never ceases of amaze me. At the same time something so incredibly complex and powerful, can be our own worst enemy. How many times during your first attempts at playing a C major chord have you said to yourself ‘this is too hard’ or ‘I suck at this!’. Your little inner thoughts are silent for the rest of the world, but they resonate very loudly within yourself, don’t they?

      The best piece of advice I can give to my students when they approach an instrument is to be critical, but in a positive way. How is this possible? An example: let’s say I want to play a piece of music I like, but I find it challenging. The worst thing you can do is get frustrated with it and go ‘sod it!’* and throw the music out of the window. You know then for sure that you will never be able to play that piece of music. A better approach to the problem is to ask yourself ‘why can’t I play this tune?’. Am I playing it too fast? Trying to play it all in one go and I should rather break it down in smaller pieces? I assure you this ‘find what’s wrong with what  I am doing-and fix it’ attitude will get you to your goal quicker.

       To sum it up: avoid negative thoughts from the very beginning as negative thoughts feed only other negative thoughts, and nothing else. As time passes you will look back and realize how much you have improved and how easy it is now to play that C major chord you thought it was impossible when you picked up your guitar the very first time.

 Good luck

 G

 * for the non UK population: sod it= a very British way of saying ‘forget it, I've had enough’