Want to set and track your guitar goals to help you become the guitar player you want to be?
Having some kind of ‘system’ to follow can really help, in fact, it can mean the difference between hitting your goals or missing them!
You’ll find a step-by-step method for setting, tracking and crushing your guitar goals inside my book The Guitar Practice Workbook.
You’ll also find killer practice hacks to get you stellar results, essential scales, chords and other useful resources plus over 50 worksheets for documenting your own awesome lick, riff and song ideas! It’s the ultimate practice workbook for today’s guitarist and is available now on Amazon in paperback.
Grab Your Copy of The Guitar Practice Workbook Now and Download the Free Accompanying Goal Sheet Below!
The goal sheet will download automatically to your device. Print it off and start using it to reach your guitar goals quicker!
Good luck!
James
Learn how to avoid and how to fix some of the most common mistakes beginner and intermediate guitar players make when it comes to learning to solo. Overcome these and you really can supercharge your progress, improve faster on guitar and stop getting held up.
Common Guitar Mistake 1- Weak Finger Independence and Accuracy
This can cause you to press down on the strings too hard making notes sound out of tune. Poor finger accuracy can also lead to lifting up the fingers after playing a note., slowing you down and making it hard to play smoothly.
Common Guitar Mistake 2 – Picking Problems
Don’t use too much pick when you play. It’s way harder to get good controlled picking. Just use the very tip of the pick. And make sure your picking hand stays close to the strings when you play. If your picking hand is too far away you may never develop awesome picking!
Common Guitar Mistake 3 – Weak Pull Offs!
To get strong sounding pull offs ‘flick’ your finger off the side of the string. If you pull the string out of tune as you pull off it’s probably due to poor finger independence. Follow the simple trick in the lesson to fix this.
Common Guitar Mistake 4 – Bending Mistakes!
Here you’ll learn how to control and ‘cut off’ bends before you let it down. To do this we use left and right hand muting techniques. Practice these techniques: they will tidy up your bending.
Common Guitar Mistake 5 – Bad String Muting Technique (here’s how to fix string noise!)
String noise can be a big problem on guitar. Muting or ‘string damping’ technique is how to fix this. The picking hand wants to rest lightly on any unplayed strings to keep them quiet and the fretting fingers need to lie slightly flat across the strings. The fingertips can also help by muting neighboring strings. This also helps control unwanted string noise.
Good luck fixing up these common guitar problems, you’ll definitely find they make a massive difference to how your playing sounds. Good luck!
How to Stop Playing the Same Old Pentatonic Licks.
Sick of the same overused pentatonic rock licks? Did you know you can easily transform them using the blues scale and dorian mode? In this lesson learn how to breath new life into common pentatonic rock licks to create awesome repeating licks, double stop licks, stretch licks and more.
Learn 3 fast rock licks in the style of Michael Schenker, Tony Iommi, and Angus Young and discover how to make up fast rock guitar licks of your own to use in your rock solos.
Having a few fast rock licks for your rock solos can really help your solos stand out. In this guitar lesson I’ll show you how to play 3 fast licks in the styles of big-name rockers like Tony Iommi, Michael Schenker and Angus Young.
Lick 1 is similar to a lick that Tony Iommi plays in his solo on Blasck Sabbath’s ‘Paranoid’
Lick 2 shows you a cool fast lick like Angus Young plays on his ‘Back In Black’ solo
Lick 3 shows you a cool fast rock lick mixing a Michael Schenker style repeating lick with some Iommi style double stops.
Have fun with these fast rock guitar licks: remember to take them apart and recycle them to create some wicked licks of your own!
David Gilmour Quick Licks.
This David Gilmour guitar lesson will teach you step by step how to play 3 famous David Gilmour guitar licks. They come from two of Gilmour’s greatest solos with Pink Floyd: ‘Comfortably Numb’ and ‘Another Brick In the Wall’ and demonstrate important aspects of the David Gilmour guitar style.
-Lick 1 is in the key of B minor and is taken from the outro solo on Comfortably Numb. Notice how Gilmour adds the 9th to his minor pentatonic scale for a more interesting sound.
-Lick 2 is also taken from the outro Comfortably Numb solo.
-Lick 3 comes from the David Gilmour solo on Another Brick in the Wall. It’s the lick that starts the solo and is in the key of D minor.
Once you know the licks shown in this guitar lesson, you should take them and use them to make up your own David Gilmour style guitar licks!
I started my channel to you the kind of ‘BS free’ and no nonsense guitar lessons I think you want. So if you want to understand ‘how to play’…rather than just learn ‘what to play’ then subscribe and look out for all my regular weekly (mostly!) lessons.
Dig in, have fun…and thanks for watching!
Check out my premium Blues Guitar Training in my Total Guitar Lab academy! Learn more HERE.
Blues Guitar Lesson High Energy British Blues Licks Eric Clapton, Peter Green, Mick Taylor Style!
Check out this blues guitar lesson and discover how to play powerful British style blues licks in the styles of groundbreaking blues guitar players like Eric Clapton, Peter Green and Mick Taylor. These short but powerful blues licks are the kind of thing all the blues guitar legends use…so grab ’em and get them in your blues guitar solos now!
In this blues guitar lesson you’ll learn:
And with on screen guitar tab you can quickly learn and be using these blues guitar licks in your blues solos for more high impact playing.
Dig in and have fun!
Carlos Santana Quick Licks.
In this Santana licks lesson you learn how to play 3 awesome Carlos Santana licks step-by-step as heard in Black Magic Woman., This is one of Santana’s most famous recordings and showcases the Santana guitar style perfectly! Black Magic Woman is essentially a minor blues in the key of D minor and all three of these Carlos Santana licks are using the D minor pentatonic and blues scale patterns up around the 10th fret.
To get that Carlos Santana guitar tone use the neck pickup on your guitar with a small amount of distortion. Backing off the tone control on your guitar a touch will also help make these Santana licks sound authentic.
Let’s get started with the Santana quick licks lesson!
Carlos Santana Lick #1 – this is the lick Santana uses to kick off his intro solo on Black Magic Woman.
Carlos Santana Lick #2 – This lick shows you how Carlos ends the intro solo on Black Magic Woman.
Carlos Santana Lick #3 – Carlos uses this lick in one of the later Black Magic Woman solos. Notice his cool phrasing and use of rhythm at the end of the lick!
Stevie Ray Vaughan Blues Licks
In this lesson you’ll learn how to play two Stevie Ray Vaughan blues licks step by step. Both licks are using the E blues scale played up around the 12th fret and feature classic SRV style bends, double stops and more. Check out ‘Pride and Joy’ to hear lots more Stevie Ray Vaughan blues licks and tricks like you hear in this demo solo.
Remember it’s not just the notes and licks that gave Stevie his awesome style! You need to ‘dig in’ and play these licks with lots of attack to get them sounding authentic. This will help you capture the ‘high energy’ vibe so characteristic of the Stevie Ray Vaughan guitar style. Let’s get started…
0:30 Here’s a quick reminder of the scales used to play these SRV licks.
1:00 Here is the ‘Texas Pride’ solo study these licks are coming from. Listen to the solo to hear how these licks fit into it.
1:34 Here’s Stevie Ray Vaughan lick 1. It’s using a wicked double stop move from the sliding blues scale.
3:02 Stevie Ray Vaughan lick 2. It’s using similar SRV trademarks as lick 1.
4:15 Let’s give these licks some context now. Here’s how they fit into the Texas Pride solo.
Want to learn guitar scales fast? Well …playing up and down them like most players do is not the way to do it! In this lesson you’ll discover 3 powerful and simple scale practice exercises to learn your scales fast…and more importantly be able to use them when you play.
Imagine if you could learn the essential guitar scales fast…instead of spending hours playing them up and down. Well there are some ways that you can, but we’re not normally shown them. Instead we often play them round and round with the notes in the exact same order every time. Problem is you’re not going to use them like that when you solo and jam!
0:20 Just playing up and down doesn’t help you learn scales fast! It’s also got nothing to do with how we use them when we play. You need some different ways to practice themif you want to nail those guitar scales fast!
0:55 Scale exercise #1: The ‘Random Note Exercise’
1:25 Scale Exercise #2; The ‘One Note Per String Exercise’
1:58 Scale Exercise #3: The ‘Pivot Exercise’