Giving Lessons To Beginner

  • Thread starter Thread starter Natural Gass
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Back up and.......

Give him something to feel immediately sucsessful at: While simple chords, scales and alternate picking are all pretty basic, by themselves they may not offer much of a sense of accomplishment to a struggling beginner who might be feeling overwhelmed or bored. I would suggest preparing a small "jam track" on a CD with a simple drum & bass line so he has something to take home and jam with in between lessons. Even if you initially give him only 3 notes of a scale to downstroke as a rhythem over the tracks, so long as his guitar is in tune and he's playing in the correct key and within his tempo range, he'll at least feel like he's making music and will be more compelled to put in the practice time that will allow his advancemant. This will also teach him to "feel" the music which is just as important as the physical hand mechanics of playing. Once he finds the grove, throw a quickie lead over him playing to the tracks during a lesson and watch him really light up. My point is, we all need a little instant satisfaction along the way and this is especially important to the beginner. He needs something to affirm to himself "I can do this". It might make both your roles easier.

Even for a more advanced player: I can recall my guitar leads improving exponetially after getting my first keyboard (Yamaha PSR 510) just a few years into playing. It helped me tremediously because the keyboard had user controlled backing loops of various musical styles that I could generate in any key. I could also turn off/on individual instuments within the loops. Any sour notes or timing mistakes in my playing immediately became noticable after that and were quickly overcome. Also, when your jamming over something repetitave like that its helps your improvisation skills a lot.

One more word of advice: Learn to recognize and resolve body tension in your student. Being tense with the anxiety of trying to make your hands do something that doesnt feel natural to begin with can be physichally constricting. A relaxed body and mind is more conducive to learning an instrument and feeling the natural flow of music.
 
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It's amazing how much theorey, strengthening, position etc. stuff you can teach "incidentally on purpose" when showing an enthusiastic but slower learner how to play the riff from Black Knight.
Give a kid something they can show off then they'll a) want to learn more & b) take it all a little more seriously while having fun.
Instant gratification isn't great but motivation through enjoyment is a better way to create a life long learner/player than just hard yakka.
Blisters on fingers and blood on the strings are not a good call for a pre teen.
By the by the backing tape/CD method is GREAT. I've used it and it increases the amount of "homework" done expotentially.
Cheers
rayC
 
I tried to pick up guitar when I was about 18.. Simply to pick up chicks all ya gotta do is toss a guitar in the back seat of a TransAm and keep two fingers bandaged together so you've got an excuse when someone asks you to play something...

I actually did give playing a shot, but after 4 months my "teacher" insisting that I learn penatonic scales before he'd teach anything else, I said screw it and shoved it under a bed for several years.. A few years later I decide maybe there were to many strings on it to play so I swapped it on a bass.. 3 months later it was slid under the bed...

About 2 years ago someone gave me an accoustic... I figured that was Karmas way of telling me I needed to learn how to play.. So I went at it again.. This thime with a little more knowledge and knowing you could strum rather than having to figure out blistering fast solos for an entire song.. 3 months and a several open chords later I'm making music, I'm entertaining myself and impressing a few friends here and there...

What you may end up having to teach him is that there's more to guitar, or rather music, than those up front, behind the head lead solos... If he's in it for the chicks.. Teach 'em the simple chords (open) and strumming rythym for some of those old 80's Hair Band love ballads, Poison, Cinderella, Motley Crue (early Tommy Lee)... Maybe a Walk on the Wild Side w/ Lou Reed, or Wish You Were Here by Pink Floyd... RETRO Dude..!!!!

Get him started making sounds that sound like songs, SHOULD spark his interest again and inspire him to LEARNING how to play the guitar again...
 
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