5 Guitar Playing Challenges You Struggle With When You Don’t Track Your Musical Progress

by Tom Hess


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Your guitar playing improvement is determined by the quality of your guitar practice. Tracking your musical progress every week makes your guitar practice a lot more effective. You learn your exact strengths and weaknesses as a guitarist, so you can focus your practice time on things that make you better quickly.

Guitarists who don't track their musical progress usually struggle with several common challenges in their guitar playing. These obstacles make your progress slower and keep you frustrated.

Guitar playing challenges caused by not tracking your musical progress include:


Guitar Playing Challenge #1: Long Plateaus In Your Maximum Guitar Speed

Your maximum guitar speed is a byproduct of mastering many elements of guitar technique and integrating them together.

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These elements include: 2-hand synchronization, accuracy, consistency, picking hand articulation, guitar playing cleanliness and integration of guitar techniques.

Improving these guitar technique nuances closes the gap between your theoretical top guitar speed and your real-life guitar speed.

This video shows how training your 2-hand synchronization helps you play with effortless guitar speed & make fast musical progress:

Guitarists who don’t track their musical progress are usually unaware of what to focus on to master guitar speed. Most only measure how fast they can play to a metronome and hope that more practice will make their overall guitar speed go up. This keeps you stuck at a long (and unnecessary) plateau.

Solution: focus strategically on mastering the core elements of guitar speed technique and track your progress with them.

This guitar speed report shows how quickly your technique improves when you start tracking your musical progress. 


Guitar Playing Challenge #2: Sloppy Mistakes

Sloppy guitar playing is caused by some combination of:

Tracking your musical progress tells you which elements cause your guitar playing skills to sound sloppy. This helps you to clean up fast guitar playing. Those who don’t track their musical progress only hear the result of the problem (sloppy guitar playing), but cannot identify its causes. 


Guitar Playing Challenge #3: Not Knowing What To Focus On When You Practice Guitar

Effective guitar practice is only possible when you know:

Tracking your musical progress tells you what skills hold you back from your goals as a guitarist. This allows you to focus your guitar practice on areas that improve your guitar playing most quickly.

Guitarists who don’t track their musical progress rely on assumptions and guesswork…and make slower progress as a result.


Guitar Playing Challenge #4: Lack Of Consistency

Consistency of your guitar playing is your ability to play near your maximum guitar speed after warming up. Better guitar playing consistency is a trainable skill. You can practice it, improve it and track musical progress with it. Guitarists who track consistency of their playing are able to play guitar at or near their best, even on their worst days. Those who don’t, play great one day and play like total crap the next day.
 

Question: “Tom Hess, how do I get better guitar playing skills by tracking consistency?”

Answer:

Step 1: Set a consistency goal with any guitar playing exercise. For example: you may want to play an exercise 7 times in a row without making mistakes at 150 beats per minute on the metronome.

Step 2: Determine where your level of guitar playing consistency currently is. For example: you may only be able to play your exercise 7 times in a row at 110 beats per minute.

Step 3: Use effective guitar practice strategies that train your consistency and help you close the gap between 110 and 150 beats per minute. (An expert guitar teacher helps you do this.).

Track your progress through the process of closing the consistency gap.

The Guitar Playing Accelerator is the best tool to use for tracking your musical progress. 


Guitar Playing Challenge #5: Lack Of Musical Creativity

Musical creativity is a result of mastering skills that make it possible for you to be creative. These skills include:

Note: mastering these skills occurs on 2 levels:

Level 1: Mastering a topic or skill in isolation.

Level 2: Applying the skills to music and integrating them together.

Both levels of guitar playing mastery need to be worked on simultaneously. You can begin applying and integrating a skill long before it is fully mastered in isolation.

Tracking musical progress with creativity tells you what elements of music you have yet to master to become a truly expressive musician.
 

Question: “But Tom Hess, isn’t creativity determined by one’s level of natural talent?”

Answer: Absolutely not. Guitar playing creativity can be learned and taught by anyone. That said, guitar players who don’t track their musical progress often struggle to express themselves with their music.

This happens because their musical skills aren’t sufficiently mastered or not integrated together well enough.

Solution: make time in your guitar playing for tracking your musical progress every single week.

Effective tracking doesn't take a lot of time and makes your guitar practice feel like a game. The more fun you have practicing guitar, the more you enjoy the process of reaching your musical goals, gaining guitar speed and guitar playing in general.

This guitar speed report shows how quickly your guitar speed improves when you start tracking your musical progress. 


Learn how to accelerate your progress on guitar