• Ernie Ball
  • MusicMan
  • Sterling by MusicMan

Doyler

Member
Joined
Dec 27, 2013
Messages
13
Location
London
Hi all

Just wanted to see what people think are the benefits of getting advanced guitar lessons. I have been playing for about 14 years and am just in a bit of a rut. I have never had lessons before but it seems like the time might be right... I feel like I should have been progressing over the last few years but have just stagnated a bit.

I'm at a point where I am trying to learn DT solos (The best of times, breaking all illusions etc.) and I am massively hitting a wall. My legato is poor and my right hand technique is sloppy, hence I am considering lessons.

Has anyone got experience of getting advanced lessons?

What do people think are the pros / cons?

Can anyone recommend someone in London?

Basically, I need to get some chops to go with my JP6 :)

Cheers

Matt
 

DrKev

Moderator
Joined
Jul 8, 2006
Messages
7,431
Location
Somewhere between Paris, Dublin, and Buffalo
I make most of my living teaching. I honestly believe that there is no substitute for a good teacher in the room with you. Online lessons are great for new material when you have the chops but cannot possibly diagnose problems with you playing and technique that could be holding you back.

Get in touch with a lot of different teachers and tell them what your goals are. Choose the best one for what you want. It's an investment in time and money but also in your future enjoyment. I say dive in! :)
 

BUC

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 16, 2011
Messages
398
Location
Phoenix, Arizona
I took lessons for a couple of months from a really great dude. I was already and "advanced" player by then and had been playing in bands for years. I really liked it and he taught me a bunch in a really short time. I was actually shocked by how much simple stuff I DIDN'T know even though I'd been playing for years.

I'd take more lessons except that I'm playing in 3 bands right now and all my available practice time is spoken for.

If you can find the right teacher, I'd definitely recommend it.
 

Rachmaninoff

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 13, 2014
Messages
230
Location
Brazil
What do people think are the pros / cons?

A teacher is just a catalyser. He will accelerate your process of learning: instead of trial-and-error, you'll know the right way to do something, straight away, and you just have to practice. I'd suggest you to try some lessons for a short period of time (say, 3 months). If you like it, go ahead.
 

wynn

Active member
Joined
May 17, 2013
Messages
38
Lessons are great, like someone opening a door for you that you didn't even know was there. Some great online Skype lessons available now. Check out www.electriccampfire.com run by Mile Outram. Helped me loads with jazz/fusion stuff.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

Jamie M

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 15, 2010
Messages
1,116
Location
U.K
Hi all

Just wanted to see what people think are the benefits of getting advanced guitar lessons. I have been playing for about 14 years and am just in a bit of a rut. I have never had lessons before but it seems like the time might be right... I feel like I should have been progressing over the last few years but have just stagnated a bit.

I'm at a point where I am trying to learn DT solos (The best of times, breaking all illusions etc.) and I am massively hitting a wall. My legato is poor and my right hand technique is sloppy, hence I am considering lessons.

Has anyone got experience of getting advanced lessons?

What do people think are the pros / cons?

Can anyone recommend someone in London?

Basically, I need to get some chops to go with my JP6 :)

Cheers

Matt

Jamie Humphries does online Skype lessons or one to one ( he is in Kent) or at least he used to.
 

Dr. Rock

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 20, 2014
Messages
85
Location
Houston, TX
Lessons...? Yes!! I'm a mere hobbyist, but taking a few tactical lessons periodically from a good professional instructor has really helped me start to overcome some limits to my playing. Summarizing some free advice I read, which has been working great for me with my teacher:

(1) Instructor listens to your specific technical/artistic need and addresses it. Have a clear topic/goal for each lesson.
(2) Time charged is for specific technical instruction, not just a pricey jam session. Practice jamming as homework.
(3) On-the-clock time is a teacher-student relationship. Learn something and don't worry about looking inept.
(4) Remember you're not paying for a guitar buddy.
 
Top Bottom