(5 Things) I Wish I Knew When I Started Playing Guitar

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Комментарии • 178

  • @azbluesdog
    @azbluesdog Год назад +37

    If I could go back in time 40 years and tell myself one thing (in addition to your 5 excellent tips), it would be to stop emulating your favorite players so much. Take what you need from them and move on. Find your own voice on the instrument.

    • @mknewlan67
      @mknewlan67 Год назад +3

      Excellent advice

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  Год назад +1

      @old Dog. For sure.

    • @BobbyCulpepper.srv3fender
      @BobbyCulpepper.srv3fender Год назад +2

      Its almost like we thought if we could copy them we could get their job lol

    • @franksutopiahead940
      @franksutopiahead940 Год назад +1

      So many of us have made that mistake

    • @ATX0705
      @ATX0705 Год назад +1

      I don't buy that at all. What's worked for me is learning other people's material. There's absolutely no way you can learn to speak a language by just learning the alphabet, which scales are the musical equivalent of. It's impossible. You have to learn other people's material to understand how to make your own stuff up. This is what works for me at least as well as many other people I've come across. Scales and theory is useful but not as useful as constantly learning other people's material, especially if you're not natural at creating. If anybody tells you different they are going to have you chasing your tail. Easiest way to get to making music is first spending a few years learning other people's music.

  • @stratman9449
    @stratman9449 Год назад

    sooo true Jeff...."At the end of the day, it's ALL about music"......not scales, etc.etc.....those are just the "Tools"....

  • @tommyraper3895
    @tommyraper3895 Год назад +11

    Love number 4, having some basic theory knowledge actually frees up your creativity not restrict it! Thanks again Jeff!

  • @rudiyantohalim736
    @rudiyantohalim736 Год назад +3

    I always love your playing sir 🙏

  • @Silvertip1958
    @Silvertip1958 Год назад +3

    I worked a lot through the years and didn’t have much time to practice on my guitar. Two things that changed things for me in my playing, 1. I stopped believing that I could never play like my favorite guitarists. I had hands and a guitar, I could learn, so then I did. 2. I got rid of my junky guitar and bought a strat. That might not work for everyone, but I found the strat so much easier to play and the darn thing stayed in tune most of the time with much less retuning. I check the tuning on my guitar when I’m finished practicing and put it on the stand, most times it’s still in tune or maybe one or two strings are slightly off. It is always that darn G string!! I guess I like stretching it the most?

  • @desmo999
    @desmo999 Год назад

    Wooonderfull!!!
    All is absolutely true!
    And this wooonderfull played Strat...!!!

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  Год назад

      Thank you!! I have to admit the Strat is a relic…. My ‘64 is real though!

  • @station2station544
    @station2station544 Год назад +1

    Here are mine: 1. Don't sweat spending hours memorizing the fretboard notes - play music. You'll find landmark notes and the dots will connect over time - sitting there memorizing where all the G's are is the fastest way to quit and sell your guitar on eBay. 2. Learn by playing new musical pieces that interest you, not practicing scales. 3. Stop with the pentatonic and blues cliche riffs. Play the interesting notes outside the these worn out boxes. You can only re-package the 1, b3, 4, 5, b7 (min.pentatonic) so many ways over 100 years. Example of good rock playing? Go listen to Tom Bukovak ("501ChorusEcho" on RUclips). He's a rock guy who makes everything about getting away from cliche riffs. He is the most musical session guy on RUclips.

  • @chucklee347
    @chucklee347 Год назад +4

    Great tips man. This is more for a intermediate level, but being self taught I wish I would have recorded my playing much much earlier than I did. I promise going back and listening to yourself you will hear every good and bad habit you have. It will stand out like a sore thumb. The bad that is.

  • @czukone
    @czukone Год назад

    Very useful and informative video. So true.

  • @jerrymcgeorge4117
    @jerrymcgeorge4117 Год назад +7

    Such great advice Jeff. Like in all disciplines, managing your time by focusing on the “critical few” things that matter most will get you to your goal.

  • @backauf
    @backauf Год назад +4

    Tip #4 is spot on. I circled back to my youth and returned to playing from charts (in community bands (R&B and Big Band with horn players, keys and yes, drummers playing off charts) - eyes on the chart rather than fretboard. Gradually grabbing the notation (melody) - the black dots, lines and spaces. The guitar comes onto an equal footing as a musical instrument. I suggest starting with the music notation (not guitar tab) for Chitlins Con Carne (Kenny Burrell who I believe Hendrix admired) SRV covered this tune. Learn it from notation - manageable. Then move onto Pink Panther theme, Bond Theme, Ennio (Good Bad and Ugly) - or even Munsters TV theme - audience favs. But read the notation - sleepy neurons will wake up. Riffs are good for noodling - think of yourself as a musician first, a guitar player second.

  • @50Something
    @50Something Год назад +2

    I am limited by my lack of knowledge of the fretboard. I say that every time I pick of my guitar. Oddly enough, I found my copy of the Fretboard Warrior today. I think it's a sign 🤘. BTW, your guitars all sound incredible, no matter what you play!

  • @kevinking2468
    @kevinking2468 Год назад

    Your playing style really speaks to me - Thanks Jeff

  • @kang-jinlee3888
    @kang-jinlee3888 Год назад +1

    Thank you for this video.
    As a beginner I find noodling helpful. It helps me get rid of all those buzzes and play more clean notes.
    I was always perplexed about the fixation to scales in uncountable guitar lesson videos. For me, music comes from my head and I practise to hit them with my finger. On one hand, don't let habit and convenience dictate your music, on the other hand practise scale pattern? So, what is it? I don't remember practising scales on violin, that is after I managed to hit the notes on an instrument without frets.
    When I started to look at theorie, it reminded me of learning languages. There are handful of gifted individuals for whom music is their mother tongue. They "know" how to speak "music". For most of us it is the second, third language we learn. Knowing rules helps us to reduce the amount of things we have to learn significantly. Also as with any artificially created language, it is much easier to learn than a real language that accumulated huge baggage. For me learning some basics of music theorie resulted in biggest progress in shortest time.
    I disagree with talent. It is everything. Music is luxury. This means we only want the best of best. You can make your living as an average electrician, carpenter etc. but you have to stick out of the masses if you want to be a professional musician. In asia uncountable children start at the age of four with 10+ hours per day drill until they have to make their own living at around 30. If they did something during all the lessons, music schools, universities, then it was practising. Yet, most of them never end up as musicians.

  • @jasong546
    @jasong546 Год назад +2

    So many heroes on the guitar, some who appeared “overnight” spent their whole teens and early 20’s practicing all day long. Edward, Eric, Page, all of them.

  • @jpalberthoward9
    @jpalberthoward9 Год назад +3

    This might be the best one of these you've done yet.
    Or at least the most reality based. I too had to figure out all of the points that you make here.
    I definitely share your pet peeves about the whole "anti knowledge" mentality. When you try to explain what a 5th or an octave or a diminished chord is, there are those who mock you and say " don't teach me that $#@!&
    I don't want to know it, that's not rock and roll, that's gay little #@&?! Stuff"
    I don't waste any time on these people any more.
    One more that I would address is the gear fetish.
    When I was 19, I worked all summer to save up for a great guitar, I found a '62 Gibson 335. I took it home expecting to sound like Chuck Berry, Freddie King, B.B. King and Clapton from the Farewell Cream movie all in one.
    ..... I sounded exactly like me. A 19 year old kid who still had a lot to learn, then I remembered something grandpa said many years before:
    "The skill isn't in the tool, it's in the mind that guides the hand that holds the tool."
    The reality of grandpa's words went all the way in that day.
    Thanks for sharing the wisdom, and for being one of the good guys!
    *CHEERS!*

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  Год назад

      Thanks man! You make excellent points here as well!

  • @petedambski3792
    @petedambski3792 Год назад +3

    Nice, Mr Jeff. Talent is the ability to focus and practice consistently for many years without losing drive.

  • @darrenc8776
    @darrenc8776 Год назад +3

    I think the old adage of its not how fast you play its what you play is a great one to remember. Learn all the notes on the finger board. And play with as many other musicians as you can this is so so important

  • @RupesMcDGuitar
    @RupesMcDGuitar Год назад

    05:12 - not nit picky at all! Spot on in fact.. Great video

  • @dmitriysemeshkin
    @dmitriysemeshkin Год назад +2

    Thanks Jeff! Your videos are really very useful and reasonable to take the instrument in hand, and get people to make music to get the right tone from the instrument, you do useful things and it sounds right to me, great work and great lessons.Thanks!!!

  • @david25876
    @david25876 Год назад

    Thank you Jeff. Good knowledge.

  • @jjjohny_a5965
    @jjjohny_a5965 Год назад +1

    5 great tips thank you

  • @mikedr1549
    @mikedr1549 Год назад +3

    You should have at *least* 500K subs Jeff! Seriously - this is one of the best guitar channels on the tubes and I thank you for all the great content!

  • @rogerweafer2179
    @rogerweafer2179 Год назад

    Practicing something "incorrectly" only ingrains bad habits which later on...WILL have to be RE-Learned in order to improve! Hendrix played in a Big Band along side fellow musicians that definitly knew what they were doing even if he was SHOWN or taught by them. But musicians that play for a LIVING will not put THEIR REPUTATION at RISK just to bring in a NICE GUY\GIRL.Everything that doesn't ADD...DETRACTS! Thanx Jeff you've been missing in my Subs and I don't know why.

  • @IfunkY1
    @IfunkY1 Год назад

    I agree, I studied theory during "COVID" & my writing and soloing has taken off to places I never knew I could go....

  • @paulv.7279
    @paulv.7279 Год назад +2

    Thank you Jeff
    I thought I was noodling all the time but you just made me realize I was actually practicing.
    Every session I try to apply a new concept in my noodling / improvisation and it has been pretty positive so far
    I try to express with the instrument. Theory is a tool that serves well the expression of inner feelings.
    Consistency is important. I believe keeping the instrument at reach is very helpful
    I agree on work on playing guitar rather than just playing but it is also important to always have fun 😊
    Cheers from France!

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  Год назад +1

      Cheers from Brooklyn!! Great points and thanks for adding to the conversation!

  • @AJMjazz
    @AJMjazz Год назад

    Well said! After 40 years of performing, I recently found a fault in my playing. Practice time is now devoted to relearning and avaoiding this fault.

  • @yetimatzenightcat8702
    @yetimatzenightcat8702 11 месяцев назад

    Hmmmm, that's not the whole truth, my own uncle mastered 5 instruments perfectly without ever having had lessons and he was in demand as a musician all over the world. I only play the guitar myself and only have a rough idea of ​​what he was doing 🤷‍♂️

  • @LLCoolJeanLuc
    @LLCoolJeanLuc Год назад

    I am guilty of doing every single one of these things poorly. I'm reapproaching the guitar at 37 after being a multi-decade "noodler."

  • @jerryk3280
    @jerryk3280 Год назад

    Guitar can be an incredibly difficult instrument to start on, especially if you are learning music theory at the same time. Expect some bumps in the road, be patient with yourself, and find the best teacher(s) you can. It is worth the effort!

  • @meeno_the_man
    @meeno_the_man Год назад +1

    They’re a great story told by one of Jimi’s early band mates of how they’d be just walking down the street talking, but Jimi would have his guitar and be playing. And then he come by the next morning and there would be Jimi, asleep with his guitar in his hands.

  • @yetimatzenightcat8702
    @yetimatzenightcat8702 11 месяцев назад

    I've honestly never seen anyone who knew as much about music as you sir, I always thought I was the only one who saw it all that way. somehow I don't feel alone anymore 😢...All the people have a stick in their ass or a concrete head on their shoulders, in truth there are no rules. People should really keep an open mind..

  • @robert_starling
    @robert_starling Год назад +1

    Love this one! To a varying degree I'm guilty at times on most of these except #4 & #5. I'm hungry for a cohesive course of fundamentals on theory. If any of your lessons or courses come to mind, and/or if you can recommend private instructors, I’d appreciate some direction. Wish I could find a teacher with private lessons for adults; online or in-person.
    BTW, loved the Peter Green / BB's Box masterclass today! We'll done as always!

  • @zazoomatt
    @zazoomatt Год назад +1

    Watched your for 4+ years after my stroke I am still doing the Hard stuff and now . . . . I am dangerous as I cry to my song of Heart in my my head since a 9 year old in my first band. Guitar has helped me get my stroke in the rear view of life. Your awesome thanks you Jeff

  • @thecaveofthedead
    @thecaveofthedead Год назад +1

    The last two are so inter-related. From way back the press and the musicians have sold this notion that great artists just 'have a gift' and actively avoid for the most part discussing the hours and hours they spent grinding. The take-home with Hendrix is the story that he took his guitar to the toilet. With Clapton his aunt recalls him playing the same tiny lick over and over.
    These stories were kept from us to a great extent growing up to suggest that these players' skills and knowledge were god-given. And then ironically, in the first shred era, many of us contrasted the shredders who were open about how hard they worked with the "soulful" players and "reasoned" that practice made you a guitar-as-sport kind of musician. And this got talked about so much. Billy Corgan even used to talk about his shred phase like it was a waste of time - like it had nothing to do with how he played grunge.
    Luckily I think this myth is much weaker than it used to be - thanks in no small part to videos like this one.

  • @azoiks
    @azoiks Год назад +2

    My thought on theory is it gives us more dots to connect to move from one thing to another, and easy escape routes from a possible lost feeling in a shady area. Great advice, as always Jeff!!

    • @brooksphillips2234
      @brooksphillips2234 Год назад

      I agree. I practiced scales and one day it's like a light bulb went off and I started being able to do some soloing.

  • @alanfisher1524
    @alanfisher1524 Год назад

    Thanks Jeff great advice as always, thanks have a nice day while my fingers bleed 😂 lol

  • @turkmusik
    @turkmusik 10 месяцев назад

    To be fair, noodling is practicing: practicing noodling.

  • @bryantcochran5065
    @bryantcochran5065 6 месяцев назад

    Talent is like genius, 99% perspiration 1% inspiration.

  • @srh361
    @srh361 Год назад +1

    If I could go back to '86 when I really started playing guitar it would be to practice practice practice and learn every last detail of my instrument. I got in a band in the late 80s and instead of continuing to learn the guitar I started making my playing more band oriented if that makes sense, then in the 90s I got in another band that was a national touring band and I really stopped practicing and just played when the band played or rehearsed, then in the mid 2000s when the band ceased to be I found that even though I'd been playing for almost 20 years I really wasn't that good on my own outside a band setting.

  • @davegallagher7428
    @davegallagher7428 Год назад +1

    Great video Jeff, I sometimes forget to try and be musical especially with scales, thanks for the reminder.

  • @johnmartin2597
    @johnmartin2597 Год назад +1

    Honestly, Jeff, you are one of the most erudite musicians around today. Love your channel and todays points were bang on. Thanks!

  • @jamiemorgan4146
    @jamiemorgan4146 Год назад

    I guess this is good for beginners. Although not myself.

  • @gasparepellecchia
    @gasparepellecchia Год назад

    To became artist is very important listen. What music you like? Here you will arrive...

  • @MartirosHakopianMarHak
    @MartirosHakopianMarHak 6 месяцев назад

    I agree with you 100 % .Time spent on guitar is health and inspiration. Love your professional simplistic approach of teaching and conveying your knowledge and expertise to us music Lovers.May you be happy and healthy my friend. With your teachings one can master every style they want. I am a painter Artist and a guitar enthusiast .Music opens me up on canvas .... Thanks a million for sharing your experiences. Regards MarHak .....

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  5 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you, I really appreciate you telling me this. It really makes my day! Best, Jeff

  • @LuckyDejardin
    @LuckyDejardin Год назад +1

    Your videos are always great pieces of advice. Thanks Jeff.

  • @robertclarkguitar
    @robertclarkguitar Год назад +1

    Sounds like beck and waters in Roger Waters 3 wishes. Great tune. Awesome playing.

  • @rockerbuck967
    @rockerbuck967 Год назад

    #1 can be a real stinger for a lot of players. I know it stung me LOL. BUT, I learned from it, and it's going to change they way I "practice" from on. I'm a 20 + years plus player and I wish I had learned this then. I have a lot of catching up to do.....thanks SO much for this little tidbit.

  • @DennisAlvarezMusic
    @DennisAlvarezMusic Год назад

    I just realized that I hadn't subscribed yet. So I just subscribed. You are teaching some great stuff here. But most of all, I just love your playing.

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  Год назад

      Thank you Dennis. I really appreciate that.

  • @lastofthe4horsemen279
    @lastofthe4horsemen279 Год назад

    Thats one beatiful Strat my friend.Alwayz love your advice and playing.

  • @Bob-Bakley
    @Bob-Bakley Год назад

    I hear that saying a lot “learning music theory will decrease your creativity “.
    I played for many years not studying music, but when I started I learned to express myself much better!!!

  • @torr71
    @torr71 Год назад +1

    Love that tune... Waters is at his best, and Beck sounds great--- Thanks, JEFF

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  Год назад +1

      Underrated record. Beck at his finest.

  • @djb3545
    @djb3545 Год назад

    Thanks Jeff! Do you offer lessons?

  • @b.mrinal7336
    @b.mrinal7336 Год назад

    Thanks Jeff, what you said has cleared my misconceptions.

  • @jonwanrocks
    @jonwanrocks Год назад +1

    man you ALWAYS have the most solid advice. number 1 was a hard lesson for me to learn early on but it for SURE made me more creative and an overall better musician. not just a gtr player

  • @Redheadedlady55
    @Redheadedlady55 Год назад

    ~This was good advice.😊

  • @eduardoprieto5267
    @eduardoprieto5267 Год назад +1

    Million $ tone.

  • @czukone
    @czukone Год назад

    I smell Jeff on amused to death

  • @roderickgful
    @roderickgful Год назад

    I have a friend who was a prodigy, was playing professionally at 12. But once he decided to dive head 1st into theory he became whatever comes after prodigy 🤷‍♂️. 😂😂
    You make 100% sense! I concur on all points! So much so, I think I’ll subscribe!✌️

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  Год назад +1

      Funny! Thank you for the note and thanks for being here! I appreciate it!

    • @roderickgful
      @roderickgful Год назад

      @@JeffMcErlain The main “regret” I have is when first beginning to play not incorporating hybrid picking. I just didn’t know what it was. Small town & YEARS before RUclips so I became a straight pick player. Even @ AIM, 90+% of students were alternate pickers(late 80’s-88-89)
      J. Herring was my instructor and he had/has such a unique, strange right hand technique, maybe I was simply overwhelmed 🤷‍♂️🤣
      ✌️

  • @azapura
    @azapura Год назад +1

    "talent is most definitely overrated" best quote of the week 😂

  • @ssblu2112
    @ssblu2112 Год назад

    Love Roger Waters Amused to Death album!

  • @azapura
    @azapura Год назад

    Hi Jeff! Awesome playing! Any chance you could let that playing rip on a future video? Tabs would be greatly appreciated!! Coolest vibe on RUclips!! Thank you

  • @Evy-1988
    @Evy-1988 Год назад

    I think 'putting the time in to learn theory, to know what is what', maybe doesn't work for everybody. But definitely everybody who come across this video and your channel. If you're gonna spend time on youtube searching for how to become a better player - be sure to watch educative video's.

  • @yetimatzenightcat8702
    @yetimatzenightcat8702 Год назад

    Johnny Winter was once asked why he sounds so fantastic and the answer was "a lot of practice". In his case, that was 6 hours a day 🤷‍♂️😄

  • @TS-nb9ko
    @TS-nb9ko Год назад

    Jeff what is your go to amp.just curious

    • @TS-nb9ko
      @TS-nb9ko Год назад

      Jeff I noodle alot but what I found is that the more expression the way you attack the strings and put simple emotion in your playing.has helped me immensely

  • @juanesquivelmadrid
    @juanesquivelmadrid Год назад +1

    Great video and beautiful playing, Jeff! Very inspiring.

  • @immanuelkuhrt8508
    @immanuelkuhrt8508 Год назад

    #4 may carry some truth for people with a strong tendency to overthink.

  • @jeffreyreid7036
    @jeffreyreid7036 Год назад

    Putting the truth out there instead of dividing them with lies... thanks! Great insight and sound advice.

  • @ae3898
    @ae3898 Год назад

    Been playing guitar for 32 years. Sadly, I think I’ve spent about 28 of those years noodling…

  • @limpindug
    @limpindug Год назад

    Enjoyed bud, a lot of common sense, I would gently disagree with talent being overrated. Take a kid of 4/5 playing a piano concerto to concert standard or 12 year old Joe Bonamassa playing with BB. Anyhow thanks for your time it's really appreciated. 👍👍🥃Respect to you mate

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  Год назад +1

      Thanks man!! I do make that distinction that not everyone can be the magical player. But I stand by my thoughts that hard work can override talent. Also I will argue that young virtuosos, as impressive as they are, do not usually have the depth of an older player. They certainly have a propensity for the instrument yet still practice their butts off even at that early age.

  • @autranmarc371
    @autranmarc371 Год назад

    Big thank you for that. Talent is overrated... i fully get the point, but at the same time, you"re living proof of the contrary. Thanks for your musicianship, and your generosity for sharing your so valuable insight and advice.

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  Год назад

      Thank you Autran Marc. I appreciate that. I don’t see myself as being all that talented, I feel I’m in the hard work category. Thanks for being here!

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  Год назад

      Thank you Autran Marc. I appreciate that. I don’t see myself as being all that talented, I feel I’m in the hard work category. Thanks for being here!

  • @WhiteEaglePerry
    @WhiteEaglePerry Год назад

    sounds like you're playing Jeff Beck on Roger Water's Amused to Death
    Great advice, thanks!

  • @politicus56
    @politicus56 Год назад

    one of the best video pieces of advice I've ever seen. Bravo!!

  • @alexandarcorda
    @alexandarcorda Год назад

    Thanks 🙏 Man! very good tips !!
    Gorgeous playground 🤩🤩🤩

  • @jasong546
    @jasong546 Год назад

    I had to spend time learning those scales and notes and making the connection to the key of a track, which took me into playing over the chords, and if I hadn’t learned that stuff, I would still be both not sure where so to speak to play, I would not know what would work or why. I did that beating or yelling you mentioned until I put in the time calling out the notes in the scale pattern in different positions. The theory at least basic theory set me free. Dynamics came with knowledge. I guess I was going to disagree with you but I think it’s important to play those and those exercises until you have facility, then you can play the guitar instead of playing at the guitar. Great way to put it Jeff.

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  Год назад

      Hi Jason! Glad you enjoyed the video and thank for the excellent comments. I appreciate it!

  • @kenkeyes8148
    @kenkeyes8148 Год назад

    I've discovered great well known guitarists who claim to know little about theory really know a lot, They either don't feel like talking about it or are trying to preserve their "mystique" as being naturally gifted.

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  Год назад

      I’ve often discovered there are gaps in their knowledge and actually are kind of insecure about it.

  • @emeryfry2808
    @emeryfry2808 Год назад

    the licks at 8:21....mercy...

  • @larryk3408
    @larryk3408 Год назад

    My illusions have been shattered again. But maybe I can make some progress now.

  • @JohnHorneGuitar
    @JohnHorneGuitar Год назад

    Great video Jeff. I think the idea that knowing less = more creativity is self-induced Dunning Kruger Effect. I understand why people feel this way. More understanding of one’s craft can make you feel less creative especially when you realize how much creative music has already been made before we even picked our guitars. Knowing more can be inspiring and disheartening for me simultaneously.

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  Год назад +1

      Interesting point. As I get older I kinda feel like f#ck it. I’m just gonna play my stuff and if people like it great, if not, wherever. Like bebop, once I came to the conclusion/epiphany that I don’t really care for it. It was quite freeing.

    • @JohnHorneGuitar
      @JohnHorneGuitar Год назад

      @@JeffMcErlain Yep. And BTW I actually love bebeop, but the freeing part for me was realizing that 95% of the institutional approach I initially took trying to learn it was completely useless and the stuff I can play will never be at the level of many others, but we've all gotta do our things.

  • @VitalBigras
    @VitalBigras Год назад

    Great advice ❤ THANKS

  • @georgechristiansen6785
    @georgechristiansen6785 Год назад

    I'd go one further and say practicing scales 1-7 is a waste of energy and counterproductive.
    I don't think it ever actually translates to fretboard awareness.
    But, then again, so much of guitar instruction is simply unquestioned tradition that really is more about making the instructor's job easier and giving the student busy work than the stuff that is useful, but requires much more intellectual focus in the woodshed.
    Your stuff seems to be a refreshing departure.

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  Год назад +1

      I think I have to do a series of these. I agree with you.

    • @georgechristiansen6785
      @georgechristiansen6785 Год назад

      @@JeffMcErlain I learned this the hard way by spending way too much money trying to learn how to play jazz (which I still suck at, but at least know HOW to get less sucky) and then coming across resources that explained what the classic players were thinking vs what the interpreters selling books and degrees assume they were thinking because they used their music theory knowledge as prescriptive when it was barely even accurate in being descriptive.

  • @JasonLoughlinMusic
    @JasonLoughlinMusic Год назад

    Nice video Jeff!

  • @chrisg5271
    @chrisg5271 Год назад

    Thanks Jeff as ever fantastic advice 😊

  • @sharihaynes816
    @sharihaynes816 Год назад

    Great Jeff !

  • @toneydavis9802
    @toneydavis9802 Год назад

    You or your tech really know how to float your bridge...so smooth and always in tune.

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  Год назад

      All me! It’s kinda of an obsession.

    • @toneydavis9802
      @toneydavis9802 Год назад

      @@JeffMcErlain good for you. I went to a Vega Trem on my Strat. Love it. Thanks for what you do!

  • @RedLion88
    @RedLion88 Год назад

    Valid points. Love the new strat!

  • @LenProbert
    @LenProbert Год назад

    Wait a minute, you're meeting women from this?

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  Год назад

      Shhhh… don’t let my wife know. 🤫

  • @kevinthebeagle
    @kevinthebeagle Год назад

    you play great; love it; #2 is my fav

  • @andrewcarillo2998
    @andrewcarillo2998 Год назад

    Excellat Jeff. Truth

  • @bluesboytony
    @bluesboytony Год назад +2

    Wish I knew it could later be a chick magnet

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  Год назад

      Ha! That’s the side benefit. 😉

    • @richardlewis1243
      @richardlewis1243 Год назад +1

      My former and current wife love the fact that I play music however the current one wants me out of the dining room with all my gear

    • @bluesboytony
      @bluesboytony Год назад

      @@richardlewis1243

  • @32aque
    @32aque Год назад

    Thanks, Jeff. Solid advise.

  • @michaelreis8266
    @michaelreis8266 Год назад

    Love that Strat Jeff, mid or late 60s??

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  Год назад +1

      It’s actually a Mike Landau 1968 custom shop RI I just picked up. Excellent guitar!

    • @michaelreis8266
      @michaelreis8266 Год назад

      @@JeffMcErlain Ooh, it certainly looks the part, but I do love a green guard 🙂

  • @mykneeshurt8393
    @mykneeshurt8393 Год назад

    Great content.

  • @david25876
    @david25876 Год назад

    How do I start learning theory? There are a thousand million resources and it’s overwhelming. What is a good resource for a beginner theory person.

    • @richardlewis1243
      @richardlewis1243 Год назад +1

      Learn the Nashville System

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  Год назад +1

      There are so many choices on YT but I did like this one to start. ruclips.net/video/_eKTOMhpy2w/видео.html. Also at TrueFire I can highly recommend Jeff Scheetz’s Street Theory. Fantastic course and for guitar specifically.

    • @denafitzgerald2554
      @denafitzgerald2554 Год назад +1

      Learn chord construction

    • @eddyblommaert5676
      @eddyblommaert5676 Год назад +1

      If I may sugest, start with : do re mi fa sol la si do,...major scale,..the rest is in it...I think

  • @benallmark9671
    @benallmark9671 Год назад

    great advice ! thank you , I'll take it all

  • @chuckabernathy467
    @chuckabernathy467 Год назад

    Great stuff Jeff! Thanks!

  • @Brunodowney1
    @Brunodowney1 Год назад

    excellent advice !

  • @Check-it-out
    @Check-it-out Год назад

    The Intro is very Beck'ish 👍

  • @MegaGecas
    @MegaGecas Год назад

    Why do you all RUclips guitar teachers were hats indoors?

    • @JeffMcErlain
      @JeffMcErlain  Год назад +2

      To bother you. It’s a conspiracy.