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When you are new to guitar playing, you learn that there is a great number of skills and techniques you need to work on during guitar practice to reach your goals.
As months and years go by and you drill these elements in your guitar practice sessions, you think you are making progress in your guitar playing…yet you continue to freeze up when improvising, recording, or playing for others. Worst of all, “learning more things” doesn't seem to fix the problem - you continue to freeze up and make mistakes while playing guitar “when it really counts”. So why is it that your guitar playing doesn't seem to be getting better despite the efforts you put into practicing guitar?
The answer is you haven't mastered guitar playing fluency. What does guitar playing fluency mean? It means that, while you may know many things about playing guitar, you are not able to combine and use these elements easily in your guitar playing. The biggest reason this problem happens is because most players use guitar practice to get something right ONCE and then they think they’re done, and want to move on and learn something new. This kills your ability to integrate and use all of your skills with guitar playing fluency, which in turn kills your chances to become a great guitarist.
Learn In 10 Minutes
EMAIL TO GET ACCESS
By submitting your info, you agree to send it to Tom Hess Music Corporation who will process and use it according to their privacy policy.
2 Types Of Guitar Players Who Almost Never Become Great
Guitarists who most often fail to reach their goals with guitar practice often fall into 2 groups. Guitarists in the first group are not concerned with mastering anything - they only want to learn new things all the time. Having this mindset holds back your guitar playing due to lack of integration of your musical skills (more on this below).
You CANNOT master any musical skill with isolation guitar practice only (I explain why in this video about the best way to learn guitar). If you try doing this, at best you will only end up with pieces of musical knowledge that you can’t truly use. Most likely you will give up out of frustration when you realize how much time you are spending with isolation guitar practice.
Now that you know what does NOT work, here is the guitar practice process that ALL great guitar players go through on their way to true musical mastery of any new skill:
Guitar Practice Process Part 1 - Begin learning the new skill in isolation to learn it on a basic level, without worrying about application or guitar playing fluency yet. Most guitar players do this, but they end up spending too much of their guitar practice time on this step and never do the following steps.
Guitar Practice Process Part 2 - Practice applying the skill you learned in step 1. To do this during guitar practice, you need to recreate a real-life musical scenario. For example: after you learn a new arpeggio shape, apply it in soloing over backing tracks - creating many guitar phrases that include this new arpeggio.
Guitar Practice Process Part 3 - Use guitar practice to integrate this new skill into all the other aspects of your guitar playing. This is the biggest thing that will make or break your guitar playing fluency. You improve guitar playing fluency with integration by focusing on several skills at a time and practicing them together. There are hundreds of ways you can do this. For example: ascend an arpeggio using sweep picking and come back down through a scale sequence, or find 10-20 different ways to play the same arpeggio on guitar or add other notes to the arpeggio to achieve a new sound. Other examples of integration could include combining rhythm guitar with lead guitar phrases, or combining string skipping and 2 hand tapping, while soloing over a chord progression that changes keys. The guitar practice possibilities are endless…
No matter your overall skill level as a guitarist, you MUST use guitar practice to integrate your skills together to achieve great guitar playing fluency and reach your goals. Lack of guitar practice integration is one of the most common problems that guitarists at intermediate level and above suffer from and is one of the most important areas I work on with my online guitar students to help them become awesome musicians quickly.
Guitar Practice Process Part 4 - Review and refine your new skill. This means that you go back to step 1 and again use guitar practice to improve your new skill in isolation, having acquired deeper understanding of what elements of the skill still need to be improved. Then move on to applying the skill in more new contexts and integrating it with other skills/techniques until you are back to step 4 - review and refine. Going through this cycle during guitar practice helps you make giant leaps towards guitar playing fluency.
WARNING: you must avoid falling into the “perfectionist” trap of staying at each step for too long. You must also avoid skipping some of the phases just to learn more new things on a surface level that you never truly master. Instead, you should:
- Rotate your guitar practice exercises so that different aspects of your guitar playing are in different phases of mastery at any given time. This will keep your rate of progress very high. To do this right, you need to have the very best and most efficient guitar practice schedules customized specifically for you.
- Work with a master guitar teacher who knows how to pace the flow of new content (so that you never get stuck trying to master any one thing for too long) and who also doesn’t constantly bombard you with new guitar practice material.
- Understand that getting better at guitar is not a linear process. Instead, your guitar playing fluency is a byproduct of the overlap in the 4 areas of guitar playing mastery (isolation guitar practice, application, integration and review). When there is little/no overlap in the 4 areas of musical mastery(as is the case for most guitarists), your level of guitar playing fluency will be minimal - with a huge amount of potential left untapped. Observe the guitar playing fluency diagram below:
Your guitar practice goal is to maximize the overlap between the 4 areas in the diagram above, so they all reinforce each other and make it possible for you to achieve the highest levels of guitar playing fluency possible. Like shown in this guitar playing fluency diagram:
Now that you know how and why to focus on guitar playing fluency during guitar practice, watch this free video to learn more about the best ways to practice guitar and speed up the process of reaching your musical goals.
Make massive progress in every guitar practice session by studying with me in my electric guitar lessons online.