Six months
Posted: 6 Nov 2008 5:59 pm
It has been just about six months since I first touched a PSG and I was allowing myself a quick look back at how far I've come. I have never actually taken a logical focused approach to learning an instrument before, having just picked something up and gone to it, and I can tell you, having a teacher with clear method not only keeps the motivation going, but greatly accelerates the learning curve. I've been taking lessons for about four months now.
Looking back I can remember when finger picks were so foreign and awkward I didn't see how anyone could possibly play with them. Now I have only my fingers to blame when they don't hit the right string. The picks aren't the big problem anymore. Now I just have the fear I'll misplace the only set I have that feels really right.
I remember when ten strings seemed insane and they still do, but now I can sometimes actually pick the right ones, and I've worked some grip exercises and scales up to 120 BPM. And that blocking thing is coming around.
I know some simple songs I can play when my brain is ready to implode from 45 min of playing scales up and down the neck.
I can tune a 3x4 in less than a half hour now, and most of the time can grab the right tuner. Ain't I special?
I've actually used all the pedals and levers on my guitar...at least once.
My brain is getting trained to get used to string 2 being lower than string one. This just doesn't seem logical somehow but after about two straight weeks playing single note scales, it's coming around.
I'm sorta getting the idea of chord positions. Just like Astronomy, when I learned where the Big Dipper was. Can Capricorn and Orion be far behind?
A better instrument is a good thing.
My dog Sparky has learned I get mad when he jumps into my lap while I'm trying to play.
You can drive your wife stark raving loonie listening to non stop steel guitar music all day.
Looking back I can remember when finger picks were so foreign and awkward I didn't see how anyone could possibly play with them. Now I have only my fingers to blame when they don't hit the right string. The picks aren't the big problem anymore. Now I just have the fear I'll misplace the only set I have that feels really right.
I remember when ten strings seemed insane and they still do, but now I can sometimes actually pick the right ones, and I've worked some grip exercises and scales up to 120 BPM. And that blocking thing is coming around.
I know some simple songs I can play when my brain is ready to implode from 45 min of playing scales up and down the neck.
I can tune a 3x4 in less than a half hour now, and most of the time can grab the right tuner. Ain't I special?
I've actually used all the pedals and levers on my guitar...at least once.
My brain is getting trained to get used to string 2 being lower than string one. This just doesn't seem logical somehow but after about two straight weeks playing single note scales, it's coming around.
I'm sorta getting the idea of chord positions. Just like Astronomy, when I learned where the Big Dipper was. Can Capricorn and Orion be far behind?
A better instrument is a good thing.
My dog Sparky has learned I get mad when he jumps into my lap while I'm trying to play.
You can drive your wife stark raving loonie listening to non stop steel guitar music all day.