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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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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 strum
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

How to strum

Rhythm is one of the most important skills you can develop as a guitar player. When you strum, make sure you are moving from your elbow. The wrist shouldn’t move at all. Rather, the wrist is there to cushion the impact of hitting the strings in order to provide a smoother motion. Just like suspension on a car.

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How to hold a guitar pick
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

How to hold a guitar pick

 How to hold a guitar pick: 1 - Imagine holding the pick like a key and putting it in a lock. 2 - The point of the pick should be at right angles to the direction of your thumb. 3 - Try and maintain a straight line from your elbow through your wrist to the point of your thumb. 4 - Make a fist, put it on the strings and relax it slightly.

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How to play better-sounding chords
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

How to play better-sounding chords

There are three things we need to get right to play a good-sounding chord. If we do each of these things correctly, our chord will sound fantastic. If it doesn’t, we’re doing one of the three things wrong. To get great-sounding chords, make sure you: Push hard, use the tips of your fingers, and demonstrate good fretting position.

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What is a chord?
Matthew Stuart Matthew Stuart

What is a chord?

A chord is a collection of three or more different notes played simultaneously.  When we play a G major chord on the guitar, we are not playing a G major chord because of the particular shape we’re making with our fingers, but because the shape we are making with our fingers allows us to play the three notes (G B D) that, when combined together, make up a G major chord.

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