07-07-2019, 01:11 PM
(This post was last modified: 07-07-2019, 01:12 PM by Have at ye.)
Cool, man! To expedite learning guitar, find a set of exercises that develop muscle, flexibility and coordination in your hands - you can practice these even without an instrument. Roughly 90% of early work in learning guitar is developing the hands, especially the fretting one - afterwards, everything becomes way easier, because it then becomes a matter of hand-eye coordination. You should be able to find some solid stuff in the Interwebz. And you don't need that many fancy scales or anything for proper rokkin' \m/
Apart from that, watch for any undue physical tension while practicing, especially in the forearms, shoulders, back and neck. Whenever you feel anything straining when it shouldn't, take a break, loosen up, try to rock some more after whilst avoiding such. This happens quite often when learning guitar, especially when you're self-learning, so it's best to watch for it from the get go, as undue tension can be a royal PITA to untrain at a later time, once habits start setting in.
Give yourself permission to be a bit sloppy at first, sharpness with heavy distortion takes time to master. Channel your inner Hendrix, and then work from there.
All the best!
Apart from that, watch for any undue physical tension while practicing, especially in the forearms, shoulders, back and neck. Whenever you feel anything straining when it shouldn't, take a break, loosen up, try to rock some more after whilst avoiding such. This happens quite often when learning guitar, especially when you're self-learning, so it's best to watch for it from the get go, as undue tension can be a royal PITA to untrain at a later time, once habits start setting in.
Give yourself permission to be a bit sloppy at first, sharpness with heavy distortion takes time to master. Channel your inner Hendrix, and then work from there.
All the best!
"A man who is doing his True Will has the inertia of the Universe to assist him." - A. Crowley