As an expecting father of a boy in 2 months, this gives an amazing feeling. Thank you and great playing. Also reminds me I need to learn how to change out floyd strings.
My dad play metalica on guitar with me and we full on jam he can even play suicide and redemption out of the one hundred songs he can play 😂, this sounds amazing mate
@bebemanden don't play for anyone else's enjoyment but your own. Only play what inspires you to learn and what you can see yourself playing. If people like it, bonus. Trust your ear first, not all tablature 100% accurate. Find your way around the guitar neck and frets on your own and develop your own style. Do not focus on one thing for too long. When you think about playing guitar, prioritize it in your free time. Look forward to it. But do not make work of it. It's about having fun. If you are having fun impressing yourself, play until you become tired or hungry. Realize that not everyone is going to like your music, especially if you play metal. Music theory is overrated. Music is an art form, not to be constrained. Think of music and the guitar as part of who you are. Bond with your instrument. Liking the feel and look of the guitar is important. If it doesn't speak to you, save up for one that you know just by looking at it that it will. Practice with a drum machine, backing track, or metronome. Timing is of utmost importance. This is my philosophy and approach to guitar.
@@bebemanden I've been playing guitar for 6 years now, I'll give some advice from myself. Don't turn a blind eye to hard parts, even if you think that if you played better you wouldn't play them anyway. Practice them at a slower tempo. It really helps to understand how the guitarist thinks, even if you can't play it as fast as he does, you'll understand what he's playing and how he thinks. I also recommend you to watch video schools from good guitarists more often. Some people have been playing for years, but when you come across their videos you realize that they don't even know how to move the brush and hold the pick more comfortably and economically, as if they have literally never seen it done correctly, even though they may have been playing guitar for 10 years. I also suggest mixing up the songs for learning. When I first started out, I got pretty good at playing fast riffs with a gallop or downstroke. And as I was sad to realize that I can not play a simple riff on a clean sound as for example in call of ktulu or verse riff fade to black, because simply did not train to rearrange the chords, although at the same time I could play some more or less fast solos. And so the most important thing is persistence, I wish you good luck in your guitar way
As an expecting father of a boy in 2 months, this gives an amazing feeling. Thank you and great playing. Also reminds me I need to learn how to change out floyd strings.
This is the best thing i have seen for a long time!!
I bet you wish your dad was this cool
@xx_senshi_xx he is my grandson. He will be 2 next month. Loves guitar.
@jriff79guitar oh epic.
My dad play metalica on guitar with me and we full on jam he can even play suicide and redemption out of the one hundred songs he can play 😂, this sounds amazing mate
Coolest shit I've ever fuckin seen. And I've seen some fuckin cool shit. Love. 🤘👍
Amazing 😅
Sick dude, and dad wasn't bad either lol
underrated \m/
Nice work dad
That was amazing, how long have you played? i can only dream to be this skilled
@bebemanden thank you. Close to 30 years.
@@jriff79guitar oh my that really shows! I am a little over 8 months on my journey, do you have any tips that you wish you knew sooner?
@bebemanden don't play for anyone else's enjoyment but your own. Only play what inspires you to learn and what you can see yourself playing. If people like it, bonus. Trust your ear first, not all tablature 100% accurate. Find your way around the guitar neck and frets on your own and develop your own style. Do not focus on one thing for too long. When you think about playing guitar, prioritize it in your free time. Look forward to it. But do not make work of it. It's about having fun. If you are having fun impressing yourself, play until you become tired or hungry. Realize that not everyone is going to like your music, especially if you play metal. Music theory is overrated. Music is an art form, not to be constrained. Think of music and the guitar as part of who you are. Bond with your instrument. Liking the feel and look of the guitar is important. If it doesn't speak to you, save up for one that you know just by looking at it that it will. Practice with a drum machine, backing track, or metronome. Timing is of utmost importance. This is my philosophy and approach to guitar.
@jriff79guitar some seriously eye opening stuff here, thank you so much this is really really good advice!
@@bebemanden I've been playing guitar for 6 years now, I'll give some advice from myself. Don't turn a blind eye to hard parts, even if you think that if you played better you wouldn't play them anyway. Practice them at a slower tempo. It really helps to understand how the guitarist thinks, even if you can't play it as fast as he does, you'll understand what he's playing and how he thinks. I also recommend you to watch video schools from good guitarists more often. Some people have been playing for years, but when you come across their videos you realize that they don't even know how to move the brush and hold the pick more comfortably and economically, as if they have literally never seen it done correctly, even though they may have been playing guitar for 10 years. I also suggest mixing up the songs for learning. When I first started out, I got pretty good at playing fast riffs with a gallop or downstroke. And as I was sad to realize that I can not play a simple riff on a clean sound as for example in call of ktulu or verse riff fade to black, because simply did not train to rearrange the chords, although at the same time I could play some more or less fast solos. And so the most important thing is persistence, I wish you good luck in your guitar way