Lessons. News. Reviews.

A better way to set goals for your guitar practice
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

A better way to set goals for your guitar practice

A lot of guitarists set objectives around achieving specific things: learning a certain song, mastering a scale, or nailing a technique. These kinds of goals can be useful in situations when there’s a deadline. But, most guitar players aren’t working under this kind of time pressure. So, if we’re not going to set goals around deadlines, how can we set achievable goals for our guitar practice?

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Improve your guitar technique by asking these two questions
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

Improve your guitar technique by asking these two questions

Good guitar technique doesn't mean you have to follow rigid rules to avoid "bad" technique. Instead, good guitar technique is guided by principles that, once understood, can help you develop your best playing style. Recently, I've been defining technique as: The most effective and efficient way for your body to move when playing the guitar.

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This will stop you getting better at guitar
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

This will stop you getting better at guitar

Your preferences are what make you unique as a guitar player. But, if you're not careful, those preferences can turn into prisons, locking you into habits and limiting your growth. In this lesson, we'll learn how to tell if your preferences are actually prisons and what you can do to fix that.

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Not being able to practice guitar isn’t a big deal
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

Not being able to practice guitar isn’t a big deal

You’ve missed a few days of guitar practice. Maybe it’s been a week? A month? Longer? Life got busy—work piled up, you went on holiday, or maybe you were dealing with an injury. Whatever the reason, you’re feeling guilty about not practicing as much as you think you should have. I want to share some ideas to help you reframe this problem and feel better about your progress—even during those times when life gets in the way.

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Should you choose an acoustic or electric guitar when you’re learning?
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

Should you choose an acoustic or electric guitar when you’re learning?

In the past, I thought beginners should start on an acoustic guitar to build strong hands. But that’s not the case. You’ll develop strength and dexterity no matter what guitar you choose. Acoustic guitars often have heavier strings, which some say makes them “harder to play.” Electric guitars have lighter strings, but pressing too hard can push notes out of tune. Both have their quirks, and neither is objectively easier—it’s all about your personal goals and preferences.

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Guitarists who are honest about this progress faster
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

Guitarists who are honest about this progress faster

I want to introduce you to a concept I like to call the practice continuum. This idea explores how a guitarist’s approach to their practice affects their progress. Whether you play for fun or want to get as good as possible as quickly as possible, understanding where you fall on the practice continuum will help you maximize both your enjoyment and your rate of progress on the guitar.

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This will make you a better guitar player
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

This will make you a better guitar player

A guitarist who has learned all the notes on the fretboard: Can more effectively learn scales and chords; Has a better understanding of keys, intervals, and scale degrees; Is able to more easily memorise songs; Has a greater capacity to understand music theory; Is more effectively able to develop their aural skills; Gets ‘lost’ far less frequently when they are improvising on the guitar.

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Your first 9 guitar chords are easy when you know these tricks
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

Your first 9 guitar chords are easy when you know these tricks

In this lesson, you’re going to learn why it’s best to start learning these 9 chords in this order. I'll show you some useful memory hooks that will make it easy to remember the new chord shapes and some songs you’ll be able to start playing immediately with these chords. You'll also discover the game-changing concept most beginner guitar players don’t even know exists.

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Beginner guitarists shouldn't learn by ear
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

Beginner guitarists shouldn't learn by ear

I think there is often a stigma around using TABs when you could learn something by ear. It’s true; there is a huge benefit to developing your ear. But, I don’t think it’s always the best use of our practice time. As it turns out, there’s actually a lot you can learn from looking at TABs (especially when you’re starting out).

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How to learn the notes on the fretboard
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

How to learn the notes on the fretboard

Learning the fretboard is easy and can be done in as little as 30-seconds per day. To do this, call out a random note from the diagram below and THEN play it. A lot of students end up calling out a note and playing it at the same time when they try this exercise. Don’t do this. Call out the note and THEN begin moving your hand to play it. Resist the temptation to do both at the same time.

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The most effective way to memorise notes on the guitar fretboard
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

The most effective way to memorise notes on the guitar fretboard

You don’t need to know the notes on the fretboard to enjoy playing the guitar. But no one who actually knows them fluently is going to suggest you shouldn’t bother learning them if you’re interested. The level of freedom you’ll get from knowing the notes on the fretboard will make everything you do on the guitar so much easier.

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The most important musical concept for learning guitar
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

The most important musical concept for learning guitar

The most important concept to understand when you’re learning music is the idea of context. This doesn’t just apply if you are learning how to play the guitar - this is more fundamental than that. Context is the only thing that matters.

There are 12 possible notes we can play on the guitar. Every one of those notes can suggest a different sound or feeling depending on the context.

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How to master strumming as a beginner guitarist
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

How to master strumming as a beginner guitarist

Every strumming pattern you will ever play is going to fit inside one of four frameworks. This means that if we know what it feels like to play each individual slice of these frameworks, then we inherently have the muscle memory to play every strumming pattern we will ever want to play.

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Do this to get your fingers moving
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

Do this to get your fingers moving

Key points to keep in mind when playing the caterpillar exercise:

1. Use one finger per fret

2. Keep your index and pinky fingers both angled inwards

3. Keep your thumb halfway down the neck behind your middle finger

4. Keep your palm horizontal

5. Keep the knuckles at the base of your fingers forward

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The benefit of thinking in numbers
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

The benefit of thinking in numbers

If we recognise chord progressions based on their numbers, we are able to substitute those numbers with the appropriate chords from different keys as required. This means that we could play a chord progression we learned in the key of A in the key of G instead. The chords we use will be completely different, but the chord progression will have the same shape.

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How to improve your chord changes
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

How to improve your chord changes

Here’s how beginner guitarists should practice changing chords in order to get better at the guitar.

1 - Hold a chord shape tightly with good technique. 2 - Relax your grip while leaving your fingers on the strings. 3 - Grip the chord tightly again. 4 - Repeat this process moving your fingers further and further away from the strings each time.

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It can't be too simple
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

It can't be too simple

Over the years I’ve been teaching guitar, one thing I’ve seen consistently is students trying to practice something that’s too difficult for them simply because they think they should be able to do it. Who’s saying you should be able to do it? There’s no shame in simplifying something. The goal is for you to become a better player. You should simplify something to the extent that it will help

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How to practice effectively
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

How to practice effectively

When you’re learning the guitar, it’s important to remember that your objectives change as you begin to practice different things. If you’re judging your performance based on what success looks like in one area, when it requires a different metric of success, you can easily get discouraged. Even if you’re actually making excellent progress!

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How to practice triads
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

How to practice triads

If you don't understand what's happening from a musical point of view, then you have to come up with some kind of hack to explain to yourself why what you're doing works. You can either learn it properly and have an extensive understanding which will allow you to use the knowledge in any situation. Or, you can come up with your own explanation that is only applicable to one specific example.

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How to practice the guitar in 60 seconds
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

How to practice the guitar in 60 seconds

When we’re trying to develop muscle memory or apply a new concept on the guitar, the objective is familiarity. If you aren’t able to practice for an extended period of time, try and fit in a few moments of practice throughout the day. Five minutes here, 10 minutes there, and maybe you’re only able to squeeze in 60 seconds. All of it is good. All of it will help you build familiarity.

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