Hi Efe!
Wishing you and your family a great two weeks! On Saturday December 13th I won’t be teaching, so you have two weeks to work on the following material.
General notes
- Warm up before practice sessions. It doesn’t matter what strings or frets you play. Just start picking the strings on the guitar at a fairly brisk speed so that the blood starts flowing in the right hand. Then do some simple but physically straining fingerings on the frets while strumming the guitar so that the blood starts flowing in the left hand. — 5 minutes altogether is enough for one session.
- Make sure to give your hands rest during all practice sessions. Then at the very end, do some stretching on your hands and arms.
String Crossing melody
- 65BPM fastest. Practicing without a metronome is fine. But you must also learn to be able to play with a metronome much more comfortably. It should feel like a helpful tool to get you on the correct, steady speed of the melody or piece at hand. It can help to tap your foot on the ground as you play, or nod your head to its beats.
- Be mindful of the picking pattern. It is always down-up-down-up.
- It might look like a simple melody. And it is. But the reason this should be a challenge is because of all the things you have to pay attention to while playing it. Right Hand: picking directions. Left Hand: use only fingers 4, 1, and 2.
- Do 2 repetitions of this whole melody in a row and then rest for at least 2 bars. — Those huge colon looking things and the double lines at the start and end of this melody mean repeat what’s between them.
- See my picture of the added guitar tablature for this melody in this Google Drive: https://drive.google.com/drive/u/0/folders/1cURXZdyFoL_6FZX5V4COTxCljwXKq8wO
- That Blues piece from the Guitar Method 1 book is going to be left out for these 2 weeks. This melody is covering things that the Blues piece was aimed at getting you to improve on.
D & G chords’ transitioning exercise
Well done on getting the D major chord fingering right today.
- Stick to this correct D major chord fingering.
- One bar per chord. 4 beats per bar. Transition to the next chord at the next bar. Don’t feel rushed to get to the next chord. Music should almost never feel too fast to play. Only transition on beat 3. — This being said: Just do this exercise slowly. 55BPM at the very fastest.
More chords
Play the E major chord, as you normally would. (The picture is in the above Google Drive. The fingering is indicated with the numbers there.) Then play the B major chord the way we covered it in class. Repeat these 2 chords over and over. Just like the G & D chords’ exercise.
- No strict timing for this. I just want you to learn how it physically feels to play these chords, and how these two in particular complement each other. — We were discussing musical keys today. If you were to play something in the key of E (in this case, major), then these two chords are beautiful together. B should feel like you want to play it loudly, and E can be the quieter chord. (Although: it can feel extra energizing to play E major at least as loudly as you did B major, haha.)
- I know you’ve played the E minor chord in a previous song. Here is where we cover the E major chord.
B major chord
- This B major chord is played up the guitar neck, with the thumb.
- Fingerings from the E string up to the G string: 5, 3, 4, 2. — by “finger 5,” I just mean the thumb.
- Frets from the E string up to the G string: 7, 9, 9, 8.
- Really feel like you’re clamping down on the low E string from behind in order to get a proper sound out of it. — I know this was tough to do. I’d like to see how much you improve on this over these two weeks. It should only be somewhat sore after doing it properly. If it hurts a lot, definitely take a rest. But when done enough times, and properly, this should end up feeling like a comfortable way of playing this chord. It is physically straining, but still comfortable. Remember: strong, straight, comfortable. Keep trying it.
Little Drummer Boy
- Keep trying this with its respective videos. (They’re in the same Google Drive folder.)
- Don’t worry about being fast. Go as slow as you need in order to play it accurately.
- Do it both sitting and standing.
Today was a good lesson. There is plenty of work for you to do here, haha. But I know you can do it. Remember: if it wasn’t hard then you wouldn’t be improving as a guitarist. I look forward to seeing your progress in 2 weeks, Efe. Good luck in school and I’ll see you on December 20th!
