I can learn guitar fast, but I haven't got the nerve to sit and practice for hours, how to practice for long...












14















I've been playing an acoustic guitar for 5 months or so. I noticed a little problem on my way to success.
I feel as if I'm not getting to my potential of playing.



I'm not impatient - I know it takes a LOT of time to be good at guitar. I noticed that I'm progressing at a good rate, currently, but I think I could get even better. I feel like I'd progress faster if I practised more. But that's the problem.



I just haven't got the nerve to sit through long practice sessions. I get bored after, say 20-25 minutes. As I said, I think I'd progress much faster if I practised more, and I believe long practice sessions will help me.



Has anyone got any tips on how to help myself on this subject?










share|improve this question

























  • maybe in your environment are too many things that might take your attention as tablet, mobile, tv, football. I didn't have this all when I was a child, even not a ball. I had to steal one (and when I sat for dinner on the chair to hide it) it was rotten and the air went out. but I was fascinated by a bone fixed with two chords at the door and by drilling this it made a sound like a helicopter. or I played with bottles and glaces trying to make music with it, or fixing a file or a gum around a box and played it as a monochord. my advice: take your guitar and go out to the beach, just play.

    – Albrecht Hügli
    9 hours ago













  • How often do/can you practice?

    – ChrisW
    7 hours ago











  • I play a different instrument, so I don't know how well this translates to guitar (but I imagine it's similar): I was taught that frequency of practicing is more important than the length of practicing. A 15 minute practice session twice a day is better than an hour long session twice a week. As you progress, and develop a wider "vocabulary", practicing for longer periods of time just comes naturally - assuming that you enjoy playing, of course.

    – RToyo
    6 hours ago






  • 1





    What is your teacher's view on this?

    – Tim
    6 hours ago











  • One's potential is intimately tied to their discipline and desire. I could be a doctor or a lawyer - I simply have no desire (I'm an engineer). I could be a great golfer - but I don't have the discipline to work the 8 hours every day to make myself great. Talent only takes you so far - determination and persistence are the keys to success in just about every endeavor.

    – Tracy Cramer
    5 hours ago
















14















I've been playing an acoustic guitar for 5 months or so. I noticed a little problem on my way to success.
I feel as if I'm not getting to my potential of playing.



I'm not impatient - I know it takes a LOT of time to be good at guitar. I noticed that I'm progressing at a good rate, currently, but I think I could get even better. I feel like I'd progress faster if I practised more. But that's the problem.



I just haven't got the nerve to sit through long practice sessions. I get bored after, say 20-25 minutes. As I said, I think I'd progress much faster if I practised more, and I believe long practice sessions will help me.



Has anyone got any tips on how to help myself on this subject?










share|improve this question

























  • maybe in your environment are too many things that might take your attention as tablet, mobile, tv, football. I didn't have this all when I was a child, even not a ball. I had to steal one (and when I sat for dinner on the chair to hide it) it was rotten and the air went out. but I was fascinated by a bone fixed with two chords at the door and by drilling this it made a sound like a helicopter. or I played with bottles and glaces trying to make music with it, or fixing a file or a gum around a box and played it as a monochord. my advice: take your guitar and go out to the beach, just play.

    – Albrecht Hügli
    9 hours ago













  • How often do/can you practice?

    – ChrisW
    7 hours ago











  • I play a different instrument, so I don't know how well this translates to guitar (but I imagine it's similar): I was taught that frequency of practicing is more important than the length of practicing. A 15 minute practice session twice a day is better than an hour long session twice a week. As you progress, and develop a wider "vocabulary", practicing for longer periods of time just comes naturally - assuming that you enjoy playing, of course.

    – RToyo
    6 hours ago






  • 1





    What is your teacher's view on this?

    – Tim
    6 hours ago











  • One's potential is intimately tied to their discipline and desire. I could be a doctor or a lawyer - I simply have no desire (I'm an engineer). I could be a great golfer - but I don't have the discipline to work the 8 hours every day to make myself great. Talent only takes you so far - determination and persistence are the keys to success in just about every endeavor.

    – Tracy Cramer
    5 hours ago














14












14








14








I've been playing an acoustic guitar for 5 months or so. I noticed a little problem on my way to success.
I feel as if I'm not getting to my potential of playing.



I'm not impatient - I know it takes a LOT of time to be good at guitar. I noticed that I'm progressing at a good rate, currently, but I think I could get even better. I feel like I'd progress faster if I practised more. But that's the problem.



I just haven't got the nerve to sit through long practice sessions. I get bored after, say 20-25 minutes. As I said, I think I'd progress much faster if I practised more, and I believe long practice sessions will help me.



Has anyone got any tips on how to help myself on this subject?










share|improve this question
















I've been playing an acoustic guitar for 5 months or so. I noticed a little problem on my way to success.
I feel as if I'm not getting to my potential of playing.



I'm not impatient - I know it takes a LOT of time to be good at guitar. I noticed that I'm progressing at a good rate, currently, but I think I could get even better. I feel like I'd progress faster if I practised more. But that's the problem.



I just haven't got the nerve to sit through long practice sessions. I get bored after, say 20-25 minutes. As I said, I think I'd progress much faster if I practised more, and I believe long practice sessions will help me.



Has anyone got any tips on how to help myself on this subject?







guitar learning






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 4 hours ago









Glorfindel

1,25511218




1,25511218










asked 9 hours ago









NikadNikad

1118




1118













  • maybe in your environment are too many things that might take your attention as tablet, mobile, tv, football. I didn't have this all when I was a child, even not a ball. I had to steal one (and when I sat for dinner on the chair to hide it) it was rotten and the air went out. but I was fascinated by a bone fixed with two chords at the door and by drilling this it made a sound like a helicopter. or I played with bottles and glaces trying to make music with it, or fixing a file or a gum around a box and played it as a monochord. my advice: take your guitar and go out to the beach, just play.

    – Albrecht Hügli
    9 hours ago













  • How often do/can you practice?

    – ChrisW
    7 hours ago











  • I play a different instrument, so I don't know how well this translates to guitar (but I imagine it's similar): I was taught that frequency of practicing is more important than the length of practicing. A 15 minute practice session twice a day is better than an hour long session twice a week. As you progress, and develop a wider "vocabulary", practicing for longer periods of time just comes naturally - assuming that you enjoy playing, of course.

    – RToyo
    6 hours ago






  • 1





    What is your teacher's view on this?

    – Tim
    6 hours ago











  • One's potential is intimately tied to their discipline and desire. I could be a doctor or a lawyer - I simply have no desire (I'm an engineer). I could be a great golfer - but I don't have the discipline to work the 8 hours every day to make myself great. Talent only takes you so far - determination and persistence are the keys to success in just about every endeavor.

    – Tracy Cramer
    5 hours ago



















  • maybe in your environment are too many things that might take your attention as tablet, mobile, tv, football. I didn't have this all when I was a child, even not a ball. I had to steal one (and when I sat for dinner on the chair to hide it) it was rotten and the air went out. but I was fascinated by a bone fixed with two chords at the door and by drilling this it made a sound like a helicopter. or I played with bottles and glaces trying to make music with it, or fixing a file or a gum around a box and played it as a monochord. my advice: take your guitar and go out to the beach, just play.

    – Albrecht Hügli
    9 hours ago













  • How often do/can you practice?

    – ChrisW
    7 hours ago











  • I play a different instrument, so I don't know how well this translates to guitar (but I imagine it's similar): I was taught that frequency of practicing is more important than the length of practicing. A 15 minute practice session twice a day is better than an hour long session twice a week. As you progress, and develop a wider "vocabulary", practicing for longer periods of time just comes naturally - assuming that you enjoy playing, of course.

    – RToyo
    6 hours ago






  • 1





    What is your teacher's view on this?

    – Tim
    6 hours ago











  • One's potential is intimately tied to their discipline and desire. I could be a doctor or a lawyer - I simply have no desire (I'm an engineer). I could be a great golfer - but I don't have the discipline to work the 8 hours every day to make myself great. Talent only takes you so far - determination and persistence are the keys to success in just about every endeavor.

    – Tracy Cramer
    5 hours ago

















maybe in your environment are too many things that might take your attention as tablet, mobile, tv, football. I didn't have this all when I was a child, even not a ball. I had to steal one (and when I sat for dinner on the chair to hide it) it was rotten and the air went out. but I was fascinated by a bone fixed with two chords at the door and by drilling this it made a sound like a helicopter. or I played with bottles and glaces trying to make music with it, or fixing a file or a gum around a box and played it as a monochord. my advice: take your guitar and go out to the beach, just play.

– Albrecht Hügli
9 hours ago







maybe in your environment are too many things that might take your attention as tablet, mobile, tv, football. I didn't have this all when I was a child, even not a ball. I had to steal one (and when I sat for dinner on the chair to hide it) it was rotten and the air went out. but I was fascinated by a bone fixed with two chords at the door and by drilling this it made a sound like a helicopter. or I played with bottles and glaces trying to make music with it, or fixing a file or a gum around a box and played it as a monochord. my advice: take your guitar and go out to the beach, just play.

– Albrecht Hügli
9 hours ago















How often do/can you practice?

– ChrisW
7 hours ago





How often do/can you practice?

– ChrisW
7 hours ago













I play a different instrument, so I don't know how well this translates to guitar (but I imagine it's similar): I was taught that frequency of practicing is more important than the length of practicing. A 15 minute practice session twice a day is better than an hour long session twice a week. As you progress, and develop a wider "vocabulary", practicing for longer periods of time just comes naturally - assuming that you enjoy playing, of course.

– RToyo
6 hours ago





I play a different instrument, so I don't know how well this translates to guitar (but I imagine it's similar): I was taught that frequency of practicing is more important than the length of practicing. A 15 minute practice session twice a day is better than an hour long session twice a week. As you progress, and develop a wider "vocabulary", practicing for longer periods of time just comes naturally - assuming that you enjoy playing, of course.

– RToyo
6 hours ago




1




1





What is your teacher's view on this?

– Tim
6 hours ago





What is your teacher's view on this?

– Tim
6 hours ago













One's potential is intimately tied to their discipline and desire. I could be a doctor or a lawyer - I simply have no desire (I'm an engineer). I could be a great golfer - but I don't have the discipline to work the 8 hours every day to make myself great. Talent only takes you so far - determination and persistence are the keys to success in just about every endeavor.

– Tracy Cramer
5 hours ago





One's potential is intimately tied to their discipline and desire. I could be a doctor or a lawyer - I simply have no desire (I'm an engineer). I could be a great golfer - but I don't have the discipline to work the 8 hours every day to make myself great. Talent only takes you so far - determination and persistence are the keys to success in just about every endeavor.

– Tracy Cramer
5 hours ago










10 Answers
10






active

oldest

votes


















25














Don’t practice. Don’t force yourself to practice. Play. Have fun with it. Start learning to play your favorite songs. Every time you pick up your guitar, do some kind of warm up exercise for five minutes max, then start playing your favorite song, however well you can. Eventually you’ll be playing it very well. Work on other favorite songs. Join a band. You don’t need to be good to be in a band, you just need to find people who want to play with you regardless of how “good” you are, for fun.



Amplification:



To this day, I keep music fun. I have to cut myself off from playing piano, guitar, clarinet, and violin or else I won’t go to my day job or sleep or run errands, etc. One of my biggest challenges when teaching is resisting the urge to just play. The instrument is in my hands and all that’s stopping me from writing a song or playing some zeppelin is customer service.



Some have commented about learning “technique”. I’ve found that in order to play the music I love, I have to develop the techniques used by the original artists/composers. If I run into trouble with something specific, I do research and I may “practice” something like tapping or sweep picking, but it’s really playing for me. Starting really slow with sweep picking (for example) is boring for about 30 seconds but once I start to get in the groove it’s just like playing. And i don’t let the materials I’ve researched dictate what I do. Maybe I found a sweep picking tutorial that starts with a major 7th chord. Ok, a couple minutes of that, but then I’m going to make my own fun by doing a minor 7th or fully dimished 7th sweep. Whatever I like to hear coming out of the instrument.



The only reason I play is to be able to play and write the music I want to play, so playing anything else seems like a waste of time. And I’m doing it for fun, so doing anything not fun is almost always a waste of time. And this attitude has never held me back. I’ve played professionally (ok maybe semi-pro; paid at least) in musical theatre pit orchestras, I’ve taught many styles for over ten years, I’ve been in several gigging bands, and I’ve written and composed a lot of music. If you don’t like “studying” or “practicing” but you love guitar, then just do what you love with the guitar. Reading a book doesn’t have to be studying if you’re enjoying the read and you just take away whatever excites you the most from it.






share|improve this answer





















  • 3





    'Don't practice'. Do you say that to your students?!

    – Tim
    9 hours ago






  • 1





    I agree with @mowwwalker, No musician or music teacher I have ever met would equate playing with practice. technique needs to be applied to something to make it worth while but just playing songs you like does not lead to god skills.

    – ggcg
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    @ggcg I think this applies to beginners and amateur musicians in general. I never spent much time practicing, but I can play a few instruments in a sufficient level to play lots of songs I like, have bands, mess around with friends, etc... I think motivation is much more a key factor in the beginning than technique.

    – coconochao
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    I meant to say good skills not god skills, probably a Freudian slip, ;-)

    – ggcg
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    Todd thanks for your answer. Saved me a great deal of time composing a similar answer. Very few aspiring musicians will devote the time needed to learn to play an instrument unless they enjoy it. When I teach, my primary goal in the beginning is to ignite the passion and fan the flame by teaching the student simple arrangements of songs they want to play so they can feel the joy of making music. That will inspire them to want to learn more songs which will eventually require them to learn more chords and different playing techniques. I learned to play guitar by learning to play songs. +1

    – Rockin Cowboy
    1 hour ago



















11














You may not know enough yet to practice longer. If this is the case be patient.

So first of all 20 min is a respectable about of time for a beginner. The key to steady improvement is that you do this every single day (with some exception for vacations etc). Like going to the gym, you body (and mind) needs the constant reinforcement. So don't just practice a few times a week.



Even a pro would "get bored" or tired, back aches, etc after too long. They key to longer sessions is breaking it up into shorter sessions with breaks in between. You have two options here, (1) you could go for three consecutive 20min sessions with 5min breaks, or (2) do 20min in the morning then another 20min in the evening, etc.



Regardless of being bored you should take breaks. Now, as for getting bored rather than tired and sore, one thing that will help is making a practice schedule so you don't spend too much time on one thing. This will help prevent boredom and give your practice session some purpose.



Since you are a beginner, as I stated, you may not have enough to practice. I've been at it for 40 years. My regular sessions are about 4 hours (I wish it was more but just can't afford the time). I have learn enough that I need to drill several basic techniques every day and I do have enough to not get bored. I make a schedule every Sunday for what to practice the following week. The list of exercises and pieces (including just improving and composing) are fixed for the week but change every week. I pick a variety of things to do to cover everything. Some exercises I get out of books, other I make up. An example might be:



Basic Tech:




  1. Scales: Harmonic minor family, standard form, 3 note per string form, alternate + consecutive picking on all.


  2. Arpeggios: 3 string patterns, alternate + sweep picking.


  3. Cyclic patterns: One or two played over the scale of the week.


  4. Chords: A few pages from either Mel Bay Rhythm Guitar System, Chord Chemistry, or Another classic text.



Actual Music Work:




  1. Charlie Parker Heads: Donna Lee, Dexterity, etc.


  2. Paganini and/or Wieniawski violin pieces


  3. Improv over number 5.



This is just electric, there is another list for classical. I try to cover each basic technique to avoid getting stale on rhythm guitar for example, I get to spend too much time shredding.






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  • 1





    This seemed too tiresome to me, and may bore the OP even further. I think Todd's approach is more appropriate to instigate passion for the instrument, and maybe in the future he will want and like to practise longer, what do you think? +1 anyway for the excellent practice tips!

    – coconochao
    7 hours ago






  • 1





    That is your opinion and you are entitled to it. But be clear any and every musician I've met would agree that "playing" is NOT practicing, and that to forego regimented practice will necessarily lead to stunted development. If practicing is tiresome you are in the wrong business. Besides, you are probably judging equal time per topic and that isn't the case.

    – ggcg
    6 hours ago



















10














Long practice times do not always mean more productivity. Ask yourself, what are the things you do that do allow more time before boredom sets in. Maybe you can't find many/any. In that case, your 20 mins or so is long enough. Instead of elongating that time, do two or three sessions spread out. When boredom beckons, put down the guitar, as after that point there's only time wasted.



You could even take it a degree further, and do less than 20 mins, but more often. Just having a play now and again won't feel like practice, but is beneficial in that you approach with a different mindset, but any playing has to be a good thing. Maybe you don't do things that well on your own, and prefer others round. Find those others who also play, and get together in a band - maybe with a target of playing a few numbers at a party in a few months time.






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    3














    A few tips:




    • Try building up your practice time slowly and gradually.

    • Try having multiple shorter practice sessions instead of one long one.

    • Plan your practice sessions carefully, deciding what you want to cover in a given time so you don't ever feel like you're just trying to pass time. It might help to have a routine that you follow each day made up of technical exercises, repertoire that you have already mastered as well as new pieces.


    And just a note, it's not all about how much time you spend practicing. It may be better to spend 20 minutes each day in effective, well-planned practice than a few hours being bored and practicing aimlessly just because you feel you have to. That kind of practice may actually harm your progress by stripping the enjoyment out of the process.






    share|improve this answer































      3














      I'll tell about my own experience and maybe there'll be something you can use for yourself there. When I first started studying guitar, my teacher told me not to try and practice for more than about 20 minutes at a time. I went along with that idea for a while but then I started feeling I wasn't making progress fast enough so I tried longer sessions of an hour at a time, but after about 25 minutes I'd find my abilities to concentrate would disappear and my mind would wander. Then I tried short sessions multiple times a day and that seemed to get me past the mind wandering problem, but my fingers would get too sore because I hadn't yet built up my endurance and callouses. To give my fingers a chance to catch up I needed to back off my aggressive approach but I couldn't so I started studying music theory, which involved my reading and trying to understand harmony and melody and that gave my fingers a break, while I was continuing the learning and development I was hungry for. When my fingers felt better, I resumed my practice sessions a couple of times each day for 30 minutes and I would also study the theory when I didn't have a guitar in my hand. I just needed to learn to balance between manual exercises and book study. Eventually I got in a band and that's when I really began to develop musically, playing in a band has been the best learning tool I've had in my life. It has inspired me to continue the book study so that I have knowledge of what other players already understand, and when music is being played well, I find the reward substantial and inspiring.






      share|improve this answer































        1














        I was having a similar problem. My solution was to increase the amount of sessions and not the time each session lasts. So i could stay full focus the whole session and increase the amount of time i actually played.






        share|improve this answer































          1














          I think it's more about doing the correct exercises in the correct way rather than practicing for hours and hours. I also think you should be having fun, otherwise you'll get tired of it.



          Make yourself a schedule: which exercises, for how long each, in which order. Do that every day. After that, feel free to learn songs that you like and stuff like that, which is what keeps it interesting.






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            1














            You can go to juliard off only 3 hours of practice a day. If the quality of the practice is high, it is a matter of quality over quantity. I know Berkley is famous for having students that practice 8 hours a day but after hour 4 there is going to be a real drop in the quality of your practice. Rather do something else at that stage.






            share|improve this answer































              1














              Join a band. Try to find people that are at approximately the same level of proficiency as yourself. Challenge yourselves to learn songs together -- it'll keep it interesting for you, and you'll learn rhythm in a way that you never could by yourself.



              Source: personal experience. You can only do scales and chords in your bedroom for so long. Music should be delightful and surprising.






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                0














                Play Rocksmith, it's highly motivating. You can still do your regular exercises, of course.






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                  10 Answers
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                  10 Answers
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                  Don’t practice. Don’t force yourself to practice. Play. Have fun with it. Start learning to play your favorite songs. Every time you pick up your guitar, do some kind of warm up exercise for five minutes max, then start playing your favorite song, however well you can. Eventually you’ll be playing it very well. Work on other favorite songs. Join a band. You don’t need to be good to be in a band, you just need to find people who want to play with you regardless of how “good” you are, for fun.



                  Amplification:



                  To this day, I keep music fun. I have to cut myself off from playing piano, guitar, clarinet, and violin or else I won’t go to my day job or sleep or run errands, etc. One of my biggest challenges when teaching is resisting the urge to just play. The instrument is in my hands and all that’s stopping me from writing a song or playing some zeppelin is customer service.



                  Some have commented about learning “technique”. I’ve found that in order to play the music I love, I have to develop the techniques used by the original artists/composers. If I run into trouble with something specific, I do research and I may “practice” something like tapping or sweep picking, but it’s really playing for me. Starting really slow with sweep picking (for example) is boring for about 30 seconds but once I start to get in the groove it’s just like playing. And i don’t let the materials I’ve researched dictate what I do. Maybe I found a sweep picking tutorial that starts with a major 7th chord. Ok, a couple minutes of that, but then I’m going to make my own fun by doing a minor 7th or fully dimished 7th sweep. Whatever I like to hear coming out of the instrument.



                  The only reason I play is to be able to play and write the music I want to play, so playing anything else seems like a waste of time. And I’m doing it for fun, so doing anything not fun is almost always a waste of time. And this attitude has never held me back. I’ve played professionally (ok maybe semi-pro; paid at least) in musical theatre pit orchestras, I’ve taught many styles for over ten years, I’ve been in several gigging bands, and I’ve written and composed a lot of music. If you don’t like “studying” or “practicing” but you love guitar, then just do what you love with the guitar. Reading a book doesn’t have to be studying if you’re enjoying the read and you just take away whatever excites you the most from it.






                  share|improve this answer





















                  • 3





                    'Don't practice'. Do you say that to your students?!

                    – Tim
                    9 hours ago






                  • 1





                    I agree with @mowwwalker, No musician or music teacher I have ever met would equate playing with practice. technique needs to be applied to something to make it worth while but just playing songs you like does not lead to god skills.

                    – ggcg
                    4 hours ago






                  • 1





                    @ggcg I think this applies to beginners and amateur musicians in general. I never spent much time practicing, but I can play a few instruments in a sufficient level to play lots of songs I like, have bands, mess around with friends, etc... I think motivation is much more a key factor in the beginning than technique.

                    – coconochao
                    4 hours ago






                  • 1





                    I meant to say good skills not god skills, probably a Freudian slip, ;-)

                    – ggcg
                    4 hours ago






                  • 1





                    Todd thanks for your answer. Saved me a great deal of time composing a similar answer. Very few aspiring musicians will devote the time needed to learn to play an instrument unless they enjoy it. When I teach, my primary goal in the beginning is to ignite the passion and fan the flame by teaching the student simple arrangements of songs they want to play so they can feel the joy of making music. That will inspire them to want to learn more songs which will eventually require them to learn more chords and different playing techniques. I learned to play guitar by learning to play songs. +1

                    – Rockin Cowboy
                    1 hour ago
















                  25














                  Don’t practice. Don’t force yourself to practice. Play. Have fun with it. Start learning to play your favorite songs. Every time you pick up your guitar, do some kind of warm up exercise for five minutes max, then start playing your favorite song, however well you can. Eventually you’ll be playing it very well. Work on other favorite songs. Join a band. You don’t need to be good to be in a band, you just need to find people who want to play with you regardless of how “good” you are, for fun.



                  Amplification:



                  To this day, I keep music fun. I have to cut myself off from playing piano, guitar, clarinet, and violin or else I won’t go to my day job or sleep or run errands, etc. One of my biggest challenges when teaching is resisting the urge to just play. The instrument is in my hands and all that’s stopping me from writing a song or playing some zeppelin is customer service.



                  Some have commented about learning “technique”. I’ve found that in order to play the music I love, I have to develop the techniques used by the original artists/composers. If I run into trouble with something specific, I do research and I may “practice” something like tapping or sweep picking, but it’s really playing for me. Starting really slow with sweep picking (for example) is boring for about 30 seconds but once I start to get in the groove it’s just like playing. And i don’t let the materials I’ve researched dictate what I do. Maybe I found a sweep picking tutorial that starts with a major 7th chord. Ok, a couple minutes of that, but then I’m going to make my own fun by doing a minor 7th or fully dimished 7th sweep. Whatever I like to hear coming out of the instrument.



                  The only reason I play is to be able to play and write the music I want to play, so playing anything else seems like a waste of time. And I’m doing it for fun, so doing anything not fun is almost always a waste of time. And this attitude has never held me back. I’ve played professionally (ok maybe semi-pro; paid at least) in musical theatre pit orchestras, I’ve taught many styles for over ten years, I’ve been in several gigging bands, and I’ve written and composed a lot of music. If you don’t like “studying” or “practicing” but you love guitar, then just do what you love with the guitar. Reading a book doesn’t have to be studying if you’re enjoying the read and you just take away whatever excites you the most from it.






                  share|improve this answer





















                  • 3





                    'Don't practice'. Do you say that to your students?!

                    – Tim
                    9 hours ago






                  • 1





                    I agree with @mowwwalker, No musician or music teacher I have ever met would equate playing with practice. technique needs to be applied to something to make it worth while but just playing songs you like does not lead to god skills.

                    – ggcg
                    4 hours ago






                  • 1





                    @ggcg I think this applies to beginners and amateur musicians in general. I never spent much time practicing, but I can play a few instruments in a sufficient level to play lots of songs I like, have bands, mess around with friends, etc... I think motivation is much more a key factor in the beginning than technique.

                    – coconochao
                    4 hours ago






                  • 1





                    I meant to say good skills not god skills, probably a Freudian slip, ;-)

                    – ggcg
                    4 hours ago






                  • 1





                    Todd thanks for your answer. Saved me a great deal of time composing a similar answer. Very few aspiring musicians will devote the time needed to learn to play an instrument unless they enjoy it. When I teach, my primary goal in the beginning is to ignite the passion and fan the flame by teaching the student simple arrangements of songs they want to play so they can feel the joy of making music. That will inspire them to want to learn more songs which will eventually require them to learn more chords and different playing techniques. I learned to play guitar by learning to play songs. +1

                    – Rockin Cowboy
                    1 hour ago














                  25












                  25








                  25







                  Don’t practice. Don’t force yourself to practice. Play. Have fun with it. Start learning to play your favorite songs. Every time you pick up your guitar, do some kind of warm up exercise for five minutes max, then start playing your favorite song, however well you can. Eventually you’ll be playing it very well. Work on other favorite songs. Join a band. You don’t need to be good to be in a band, you just need to find people who want to play with you regardless of how “good” you are, for fun.



                  Amplification:



                  To this day, I keep music fun. I have to cut myself off from playing piano, guitar, clarinet, and violin or else I won’t go to my day job or sleep or run errands, etc. One of my biggest challenges when teaching is resisting the urge to just play. The instrument is in my hands and all that’s stopping me from writing a song or playing some zeppelin is customer service.



                  Some have commented about learning “technique”. I’ve found that in order to play the music I love, I have to develop the techniques used by the original artists/composers. If I run into trouble with something specific, I do research and I may “practice” something like tapping or sweep picking, but it’s really playing for me. Starting really slow with sweep picking (for example) is boring for about 30 seconds but once I start to get in the groove it’s just like playing. And i don’t let the materials I’ve researched dictate what I do. Maybe I found a sweep picking tutorial that starts with a major 7th chord. Ok, a couple minutes of that, but then I’m going to make my own fun by doing a minor 7th or fully dimished 7th sweep. Whatever I like to hear coming out of the instrument.



                  The only reason I play is to be able to play and write the music I want to play, so playing anything else seems like a waste of time. And I’m doing it for fun, so doing anything not fun is almost always a waste of time. And this attitude has never held me back. I’ve played professionally (ok maybe semi-pro; paid at least) in musical theatre pit orchestras, I’ve taught many styles for over ten years, I’ve been in several gigging bands, and I’ve written and composed a lot of music. If you don’t like “studying” or “practicing” but you love guitar, then just do what you love with the guitar. Reading a book doesn’t have to be studying if you’re enjoying the read and you just take away whatever excites you the most from it.






                  share|improve this answer















                  Don’t practice. Don’t force yourself to practice. Play. Have fun with it. Start learning to play your favorite songs. Every time you pick up your guitar, do some kind of warm up exercise for five minutes max, then start playing your favorite song, however well you can. Eventually you’ll be playing it very well. Work on other favorite songs. Join a band. You don’t need to be good to be in a band, you just need to find people who want to play with you regardless of how “good” you are, for fun.



                  Amplification:



                  To this day, I keep music fun. I have to cut myself off from playing piano, guitar, clarinet, and violin or else I won’t go to my day job or sleep or run errands, etc. One of my biggest challenges when teaching is resisting the urge to just play. The instrument is in my hands and all that’s stopping me from writing a song or playing some zeppelin is customer service.



                  Some have commented about learning “technique”. I’ve found that in order to play the music I love, I have to develop the techniques used by the original artists/composers. If I run into trouble with something specific, I do research and I may “practice” something like tapping or sweep picking, but it’s really playing for me. Starting really slow with sweep picking (for example) is boring for about 30 seconds but once I start to get in the groove it’s just like playing. And i don’t let the materials I’ve researched dictate what I do. Maybe I found a sweep picking tutorial that starts with a major 7th chord. Ok, a couple minutes of that, but then I’m going to make my own fun by doing a minor 7th or fully dimished 7th sweep. Whatever I like to hear coming out of the instrument.



                  The only reason I play is to be able to play and write the music I want to play, so playing anything else seems like a waste of time. And I’m doing it for fun, so doing anything not fun is almost always a waste of time. And this attitude has never held me back. I’ve played professionally (ok maybe semi-pro; paid at least) in musical theatre pit orchestras, I’ve taught many styles for over ten years, I’ve been in several gigging bands, and I’ve written and composed a lot of music. If you don’t like “studying” or “practicing” but you love guitar, then just do what you love with the guitar. Reading a book doesn’t have to be studying if you’re enjoying the read and you just take away whatever excites you the most from it.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited 2 hours ago

























                  answered 9 hours ago









                  Todd WilcoxTodd Wilcox

                  34.1k260114




                  34.1k260114








                  • 3





                    'Don't practice'. Do you say that to your students?!

                    – Tim
                    9 hours ago






                  • 1





                    I agree with @mowwwalker, No musician or music teacher I have ever met would equate playing with practice. technique needs to be applied to something to make it worth while but just playing songs you like does not lead to god skills.

                    – ggcg
                    4 hours ago






                  • 1





                    @ggcg I think this applies to beginners and amateur musicians in general. I never spent much time practicing, but I can play a few instruments in a sufficient level to play lots of songs I like, have bands, mess around with friends, etc... I think motivation is much more a key factor in the beginning than technique.

                    – coconochao
                    4 hours ago






                  • 1





                    I meant to say good skills not god skills, probably a Freudian slip, ;-)

                    – ggcg
                    4 hours ago






                  • 1





                    Todd thanks for your answer. Saved me a great deal of time composing a similar answer. Very few aspiring musicians will devote the time needed to learn to play an instrument unless they enjoy it. When I teach, my primary goal in the beginning is to ignite the passion and fan the flame by teaching the student simple arrangements of songs they want to play so they can feel the joy of making music. That will inspire them to want to learn more songs which will eventually require them to learn more chords and different playing techniques. I learned to play guitar by learning to play songs. +1

                    – Rockin Cowboy
                    1 hour ago














                  • 3





                    'Don't practice'. Do you say that to your students?!

                    – Tim
                    9 hours ago






                  • 1





                    I agree with @mowwwalker, No musician or music teacher I have ever met would equate playing with practice. technique needs to be applied to something to make it worth while but just playing songs you like does not lead to god skills.

                    – ggcg
                    4 hours ago






                  • 1





                    @ggcg I think this applies to beginners and amateur musicians in general. I never spent much time practicing, but I can play a few instruments in a sufficient level to play lots of songs I like, have bands, mess around with friends, etc... I think motivation is much more a key factor in the beginning than technique.

                    – coconochao
                    4 hours ago






                  • 1





                    I meant to say good skills not god skills, probably a Freudian slip, ;-)

                    – ggcg
                    4 hours ago






                  • 1





                    Todd thanks for your answer. Saved me a great deal of time composing a similar answer. Very few aspiring musicians will devote the time needed to learn to play an instrument unless they enjoy it. When I teach, my primary goal in the beginning is to ignite the passion and fan the flame by teaching the student simple arrangements of songs they want to play so they can feel the joy of making music. That will inspire them to want to learn more songs which will eventually require them to learn more chords and different playing techniques. I learned to play guitar by learning to play songs. +1

                    – Rockin Cowboy
                    1 hour ago








                  3




                  3





                  'Don't practice'. Do you say that to your students?!

                  – Tim
                  9 hours ago





                  'Don't practice'. Do you say that to your students?!

                  – Tim
                  9 hours ago




                  1




                  1





                  I agree with @mowwwalker, No musician or music teacher I have ever met would equate playing with practice. technique needs to be applied to something to make it worth while but just playing songs you like does not lead to god skills.

                  – ggcg
                  4 hours ago





                  I agree with @mowwwalker, No musician or music teacher I have ever met would equate playing with practice. technique needs to be applied to something to make it worth while but just playing songs you like does not lead to god skills.

                  – ggcg
                  4 hours ago




                  1




                  1





                  @ggcg I think this applies to beginners and amateur musicians in general. I never spent much time practicing, but I can play a few instruments in a sufficient level to play lots of songs I like, have bands, mess around with friends, etc... I think motivation is much more a key factor in the beginning than technique.

                  – coconochao
                  4 hours ago





                  @ggcg I think this applies to beginners and amateur musicians in general. I never spent much time practicing, but I can play a few instruments in a sufficient level to play lots of songs I like, have bands, mess around with friends, etc... I think motivation is much more a key factor in the beginning than technique.

                  – coconochao
                  4 hours ago




                  1




                  1





                  I meant to say good skills not god skills, probably a Freudian slip, ;-)

                  – ggcg
                  4 hours ago





                  I meant to say good skills not god skills, probably a Freudian slip, ;-)

                  – ggcg
                  4 hours ago




                  1




                  1





                  Todd thanks for your answer. Saved me a great deal of time composing a similar answer. Very few aspiring musicians will devote the time needed to learn to play an instrument unless they enjoy it. When I teach, my primary goal in the beginning is to ignite the passion and fan the flame by teaching the student simple arrangements of songs they want to play so they can feel the joy of making music. That will inspire them to want to learn more songs which will eventually require them to learn more chords and different playing techniques. I learned to play guitar by learning to play songs. +1

                  – Rockin Cowboy
                  1 hour ago





                  Todd thanks for your answer. Saved me a great deal of time composing a similar answer. Very few aspiring musicians will devote the time needed to learn to play an instrument unless they enjoy it. When I teach, my primary goal in the beginning is to ignite the passion and fan the flame by teaching the student simple arrangements of songs they want to play so they can feel the joy of making music. That will inspire them to want to learn more songs which will eventually require them to learn more chords and different playing techniques. I learned to play guitar by learning to play songs. +1

                  – Rockin Cowboy
                  1 hour ago











                  11














                  You may not know enough yet to practice longer. If this is the case be patient.

                  So first of all 20 min is a respectable about of time for a beginner. The key to steady improvement is that you do this every single day (with some exception for vacations etc). Like going to the gym, you body (and mind) needs the constant reinforcement. So don't just practice a few times a week.



                  Even a pro would "get bored" or tired, back aches, etc after too long. They key to longer sessions is breaking it up into shorter sessions with breaks in between. You have two options here, (1) you could go for three consecutive 20min sessions with 5min breaks, or (2) do 20min in the morning then another 20min in the evening, etc.



                  Regardless of being bored you should take breaks. Now, as for getting bored rather than tired and sore, one thing that will help is making a practice schedule so you don't spend too much time on one thing. This will help prevent boredom and give your practice session some purpose.



                  Since you are a beginner, as I stated, you may not have enough to practice. I've been at it for 40 years. My regular sessions are about 4 hours (I wish it was more but just can't afford the time). I have learn enough that I need to drill several basic techniques every day and I do have enough to not get bored. I make a schedule every Sunday for what to practice the following week. The list of exercises and pieces (including just improving and composing) are fixed for the week but change every week. I pick a variety of things to do to cover everything. Some exercises I get out of books, other I make up. An example might be:



                  Basic Tech:




                  1. Scales: Harmonic minor family, standard form, 3 note per string form, alternate + consecutive picking on all.


                  2. Arpeggios: 3 string patterns, alternate + sweep picking.


                  3. Cyclic patterns: One or two played over the scale of the week.


                  4. Chords: A few pages from either Mel Bay Rhythm Guitar System, Chord Chemistry, or Another classic text.



                  Actual Music Work:




                  1. Charlie Parker Heads: Donna Lee, Dexterity, etc.


                  2. Paganini and/or Wieniawski violin pieces


                  3. Improv over number 5.



                  This is just electric, there is another list for classical. I try to cover each basic technique to avoid getting stale on rhythm guitar for example, I get to spend too much time shredding.






                  share|improve this answer



















                  • 1





                    This seemed too tiresome to me, and may bore the OP even further. I think Todd's approach is more appropriate to instigate passion for the instrument, and maybe in the future he will want and like to practise longer, what do you think? +1 anyway for the excellent practice tips!

                    – coconochao
                    7 hours ago






                  • 1





                    That is your opinion and you are entitled to it. But be clear any and every musician I've met would agree that "playing" is NOT practicing, and that to forego regimented practice will necessarily lead to stunted development. If practicing is tiresome you are in the wrong business. Besides, you are probably judging equal time per topic and that isn't the case.

                    – ggcg
                    6 hours ago
















                  11














                  You may not know enough yet to practice longer. If this is the case be patient.

                  So first of all 20 min is a respectable about of time for a beginner. The key to steady improvement is that you do this every single day (with some exception for vacations etc). Like going to the gym, you body (and mind) needs the constant reinforcement. So don't just practice a few times a week.



                  Even a pro would "get bored" or tired, back aches, etc after too long. They key to longer sessions is breaking it up into shorter sessions with breaks in between. You have two options here, (1) you could go for three consecutive 20min sessions with 5min breaks, or (2) do 20min in the morning then another 20min in the evening, etc.



                  Regardless of being bored you should take breaks. Now, as for getting bored rather than tired and sore, one thing that will help is making a practice schedule so you don't spend too much time on one thing. This will help prevent boredom and give your practice session some purpose.



                  Since you are a beginner, as I stated, you may not have enough to practice. I've been at it for 40 years. My regular sessions are about 4 hours (I wish it was more but just can't afford the time). I have learn enough that I need to drill several basic techniques every day and I do have enough to not get bored. I make a schedule every Sunday for what to practice the following week. The list of exercises and pieces (including just improving and composing) are fixed for the week but change every week. I pick a variety of things to do to cover everything. Some exercises I get out of books, other I make up. An example might be:



                  Basic Tech:




                  1. Scales: Harmonic minor family, standard form, 3 note per string form, alternate + consecutive picking on all.


                  2. Arpeggios: 3 string patterns, alternate + sweep picking.


                  3. Cyclic patterns: One or two played over the scale of the week.


                  4. Chords: A few pages from either Mel Bay Rhythm Guitar System, Chord Chemistry, or Another classic text.



                  Actual Music Work:




                  1. Charlie Parker Heads: Donna Lee, Dexterity, etc.


                  2. Paganini and/or Wieniawski violin pieces


                  3. Improv over number 5.



                  This is just electric, there is another list for classical. I try to cover each basic technique to avoid getting stale on rhythm guitar for example, I get to spend too much time shredding.






                  share|improve this answer



















                  • 1





                    This seemed too tiresome to me, and may bore the OP even further. I think Todd's approach is more appropriate to instigate passion for the instrument, and maybe in the future he will want and like to practise longer, what do you think? +1 anyway for the excellent practice tips!

                    – coconochao
                    7 hours ago






                  • 1





                    That is your opinion and you are entitled to it. But be clear any and every musician I've met would agree that "playing" is NOT practicing, and that to forego regimented practice will necessarily lead to stunted development. If practicing is tiresome you are in the wrong business. Besides, you are probably judging equal time per topic and that isn't the case.

                    – ggcg
                    6 hours ago














                  11












                  11








                  11







                  You may not know enough yet to practice longer. If this is the case be patient.

                  So first of all 20 min is a respectable about of time for a beginner. The key to steady improvement is that you do this every single day (with some exception for vacations etc). Like going to the gym, you body (and mind) needs the constant reinforcement. So don't just practice a few times a week.



                  Even a pro would "get bored" or tired, back aches, etc after too long. They key to longer sessions is breaking it up into shorter sessions with breaks in between. You have two options here, (1) you could go for three consecutive 20min sessions with 5min breaks, or (2) do 20min in the morning then another 20min in the evening, etc.



                  Regardless of being bored you should take breaks. Now, as for getting bored rather than tired and sore, one thing that will help is making a practice schedule so you don't spend too much time on one thing. This will help prevent boredom and give your practice session some purpose.



                  Since you are a beginner, as I stated, you may not have enough to practice. I've been at it for 40 years. My regular sessions are about 4 hours (I wish it was more but just can't afford the time). I have learn enough that I need to drill several basic techniques every day and I do have enough to not get bored. I make a schedule every Sunday for what to practice the following week. The list of exercises and pieces (including just improving and composing) are fixed for the week but change every week. I pick a variety of things to do to cover everything. Some exercises I get out of books, other I make up. An example might be:



                  Basic Tech:




                  1. Scales: Harmonic minor family, standard form, 3 note per string form, alternate + consecutive picking on all.


                  2. Arpeggios: 3 string patterns, alternate + sweep picking.


                  3. Cyclic patterns: One or two played over the scale of the week.


                  4. Chords: A few pages from either Mel Bay Rhythm Guitar System, Chord Chemistry, or Another classic text.



                  Actual Music Work:




                  1. Charlie Parker Heads: Donna Lee, Dexterity, etc.


                  2. Paganini and/or Wieniawski violin pieces


                  3. Improv over number 5.



                  This is just electric, there is another list for classical. I try to cover each basic technique to avoid getting stale on rhythm guitar for example, I get to spend too much time shredding.






                  share|improve this answer













                  You may not know enough yet to practice longer. If this is the case be patient.

                  So first of all 20 min is a respectable about of time for a beginner. The key to steady improvement is that you do this every single day (with some exception for vacations etc). Like going to the gym, you body (and mind) needs the constant reinforcement. So don't just practice a few times a week.



                  Even a pro would "get bored" or tired, back aches, etc after too long. They key to longer sessions is breaking it up into shorter sessions with breaks in between. You have two options here, (1) you could go for three consecutive 20min sessions with 5min breaks, or (2) do 20min in the morning then another 20min in the evening, etc.



                  Regardless of being bored you should take breaks. Now, as for getting bored rather than tired and sore, one thing that will help is making a practice schedule so you don't spend too much time on one thing. This will help prevent boredom and give your practice session some purpose.



                  Since you are a beginner, as I stated, you may not have enough to practice. I've been at it for 40 years. My regular sessions are about 4 hours (I wish it was more but just can't afford the time). I have learn enough that I need to drill several basic techniques every day and I do have enough to not get bored. I make a schedule every Sunday for what to practice the following week. The list of exercises and pieces (including just improving and composing) are fixed for the week but change every week. I pick a variety of things to do to cover everything. Some exercises I get out of books, other I make up. An example might be:



                  Basic Tech:




                  1. Scales: Harmonic minor family, standard form, 3 note per string form, alternate + consecutive picking on all.


                  2. Arpeggios: 3 string patterns, alternate + sweep picking.


                  3. Cyclic patterns: One or two played over the scale of the week.


                  4. Chords: A few pages from either Mel Bay Rhythm Guitar System, Chord Chemistry, or Another classic text.



                  Actual Music Work:




                  1. Charlie Parker Heads: Donna Lee, Dexterity, etc.


                  2. Paganini and/or Wieniawski violin pieces


                  3. Improv over number 5.



                  This is just electric, there is another list for classical. I try to cover each basic technique to avoid getting stale on rhythm guitar for example, I get to spend too much time shredding.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 9 hours ago









                  ggcgggcg

                  4,863323




                  4,863323








                  • 1





                    This seemed too tiresome to me, and may bore the OP even further. I think Todd's approach is more appropriate to instigate passion for the instrument, and maybe in the future he will want and like to practise longer, what do you think? +1 anyway for the excellent practice tips!

                    – coconochao
                    7 hours ago






                  • 1





                    That is your opinion and you are entitled to it. But be clear any and every musician I've met would agree that "playing" is NOT practicing, and that to forego regimented practice will necessarily lead to stunted development. If practicing is tiresome you are in the wrong business. Besides, you are probably judging equal time per topic and that isn't the case.

                    – ggcg
                    6 hours ago














                  • 1





                    This seemed too tiresome to me, and may bore the OP even further. I think Todd's approach is more appropriate to instigate passion for the instrument, and maybe in the future he will want and like to practise longer, what do you think? +1 anyway for the excellent practice tips!

                    – coconochao
                    7 hours ago






                  • 1





                    That is your opinion and you are entitled to it. But be clear any and every musician I've met would agree that "playing" is NOT practicing, and that to forego regimented practice will necessarily lead to stunted development. If practicing is tiresome you are in the wrong business. Besides, you are probably judging equal time per topic and that isn't the case.

                    – ggcg
                    6 hours ago








                  1




                  1





                  This seemed too tiresome to me, and may bore the OP even further. I think Todd's approach is more appropriate to instigate passion for the instrument, and maybe in the future he will want and like to practise longer, what do you think? +1 anyway for the excellent practice tips!

                  – coconochao
                  7 hours ago





                  This seemed too tiresome to me, and may bore the OP even further. I think Todd's approach is more appropriate to instigate passion for the instrument, and maybe in the future he will want and like to practise longer, what do you think? +1 anyway for the excellent practice tips!

                  – coconochao
                  7 hours ago




                  1




                  1





                  That is your opinion and you are entitled to it. But be clear any and every musician I've met would agree that "playing" is NOT practicing, and that to forego regimented practice will necessarily lead to stunted development. If practicing is tiresome you are in the wrong business. Besides, you are probably judging equal time per topic and that isn't the case.

                  – ggcg
                  6 hours ago





                  That is your opinion and you are entitled to it. But be clear any and every musician I've met would agree that "playing" is NOT practicing, and that to forego regimented practice will necessarily lead to stunted development. If practicing is tiresome you are in the wrong business. Besides, you are probably judging equal time per topic and that isn't the case.

                  – ggcg
                  6 hours ago











                  10














                  Long practice times do not always mean more productivity. Ask yourself, what are the things you do that do allow more time before boredom sets in. Maybe you can't find many/any. In that case, your 20 mins or so is long enough. Instead of elongating that time, do two or three sessions spread out. When boredom beckons, put down the guitar, as after that point there's only time wasted.



                  You could even take it a degree further, and do less than 20 mins, but more often. Just having a play now and again won't feel like practice, but is beneficial in that you approach with a different mindset, but any playing has to be a good thing. Maybe you don't do things that well on your own, and prefer others round. Find those others who also play, and get together in a band - maybe with a target of playing a few numbers at a party in a few months time.






                  share|improve this answer




























                    10














                    Long practice times do not always mean more productivity. Ask yourself, what are the things you do that do allow more time before boredom sets in. Maybe you can't find many/any. In that case, your 20 mins or so is long enough. Instead of elongating that time, do two or three sessions spread out. When boredom beckons, put down the guitar, as after that point there's only time wasted.



                    You could even take it a degree further, and do less than 20 mins, but more often. Just having a play now and again won't feel like practice, but is beneficial in that you approach with a different mindset, but any playing has to be a good thing. Maybe you don't do things that well on your own, and prefer others round. Find those others who also play, and get together in a band - maybe with a target of playing a few numbers at a party in a few months time.






                    share|improve this answer


























                      10












                      10








                      10







                      Long practice times do not always mean more productivity. Ask yourself, what are the things you do that do allow more time before boredom sets in. Maybe you can't find many/any. In that case, your 20 mins or so is long enough. Instead of elongating that time, do two or three sessions spread out. When boredom beckons, put down the guitar, as after that point there's only time wasted.



                      You could even take it a degree further, and do less than 20 mins, but more often. Just having a play now and again won't feel like practice, but is beneficial in that you approach with a different mindset, but any playing has to be a good thing. Maybe you don't do things that well on your own, and prefer others round. Find those others who also play, and get together in a band - maybe with a target of playing a few numbers at a party in a few months time.






                      share|improve this answer













                      Long practice times do not always mean more productivity. Ask yourself, what are the things you do that do allow more time before boredom sets in. Maybe you can't find many/any. In that case, your 20 mins or so is long enough. Instead of elongating that time, do two or three sessions spread out. When boredom beckons, put down the guitar, as after that point there's only time wasted.



                      You could even take it a degree further, and do less than 20 mins, but more often. Just having a play now and again won't feel like practice, but is beneficial in that you approach with a different mindset, but any playing has to be a good thing. Maybe you don't do things that well on your own, and prefer others round. Find those others who also play, and get together in a band - maybe with a target of playing a few numbers at a party in a few months time.







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered 8 hours ago









                      TimTim

                      97.6k10100249




                      97.6k10100249























                          3














                          A few tips:




                          • Try building up your practice time slowly and gradually.

                          • Try having multiple shorter practice sessions instead of one long one.

                          • Plan your practice sessions carefully, deciding what you want to cover in a given time so you don't ever feel like you're just trying to pass time. It might help to have a routine that you follow each day made up of technical exercises, repertoire that you have already mastered as well as new pieces.


                          And just a note, it's not all about how much time you spend practicing. It may be better to spend 20 minutes each day in effective, well-planned practice than a few hours being bored and practicing aimlessly just because you feel you have to. That kind of practice may actually harm your progress by stripping the enjoyment out of the process.






                          share|improve this answer




























                            3














                            A few tips:




                            • Try building up your practice time slowly and gradually.

                            • Try having multiple shorter practice sessions instead of one long one.

                            • Plan your practice sessions carefully, deciding what you want to cover in a given time so you don't ever feel like you're just trying to pass time. It might help to have a routine that you follow each day made up of technical exercises, repertoire that you have already mastered as well as new pieces.


                            And just a note, it's not all about how much time you spend practicing. It may be better to spend 20 minutes each day in effective, well-planned practice than a few hours being bored and practicing aimlessly just because you feel you have to. That kind of practice may actually harm your progress by stripping the enjoyment out of the process.






                            share|improve this answer


























                              3












                              3








                              3







                              A few tips:




                              • Try building up your practice time slowly and gradually.

                              • Try having multiple shorter practice sessions instead of one long one.

                              • Plan your practice sessions carefully, deciding what you want to cover in a given time so you don't ever feel like you're just trying to pass time. It might help to have a routine that you follow each day made up of technical exercises, repertoire that you have already mastered as well as new pieces.


                              And just a note, it's not all about how much time you spend practicing. It may be better to spend 20 minutes each day in effective, well-planned practice than a few hours being bored and practicing aimlessly just because you feel you have to. That kind of practice may actually harm your progress by stripping the enjoyment out of the process.






                              share|improve this answer













                              A few tips:




                              • Try building up your practice time slowly and gradually.

                              • Try having multiple shorter practice sessions instead of one long one.

                              • Plan your practice sessions carefully, deciding what you want to cover in a given time so you don't ever feel like you're just trying to pass time. It might help to have a routine that you follow each day made up of technical exercises, repertoire that you have already mastered as well as new pieces.


                              And just a note, it's not all about how much time you spend practicing. It may be better to spend 20 minutes each day in effective, well-planned practice than a few hours being bored and practicing aimlessly just because you feel you have to. That kind of practice may actually harm your progress by stripping the enjoyment out of the process.







                              share|improve this answer












                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer










                              answered 9 hours ago









                              Shannon DuncanShannon Duncan

                              459314




                              459314























                                  3














                                  I'll tell about my own experience and maybe there'll be something you can use for yourself there. When I first started studying guitar, my teacher told me not to try and practice for more than about 20 minutes at a time. I went along with that idea for a while but then I started feeling I wasn't making progress fast enough so I tried longer sessions of an hour at a time, but after about 25 minutes I'd find my abilities to concentrate would disappear and my mind would wander. Then I tried short sessions multiple times a day and that seemed to get me past the mind wandering problem, but my fingers would get too sore because I hadn't yet built up my endurance and callouses. To give my fingers a chance to catch up I needed to back off my aggressive approach but I couldn't so I started studying music theory, which involved my reading and trying to understand harmony and melody and that gave my fingers a break, while I was continuing the learning and development I was hungry for. When my fingers felt better, I resumed my practice sessions a couple of times each day for 30 minutes and I would also study the theory when I didn't have a guitar in my hand. I just needed to learn to balance between manual exercises and book study. Eventually I got in a band and that's when I really began to develop musically, playing in a band has been the best learning tool I've had in my life. It has inspired me to continue the book study so that I have knowledge of what other players already understand, and when music is being played well, I find the reward substantial and inspiring.






                                  share|improve this answer




























                                    3














                                    I'll tell about my own experience and maybe there'll be something you can use for yourself there. When I first started studying guitar, my teacher told me not to try and practice for more than about 20 minutes at a time. I went along with that idea for a while but then I started feeling I wasn't making progress fast enough so I tried longer sessions of an hour at a time, but after about 25 minutes I'd find my abilities to concentrate would disappear and my mind would wander. Then I tried short sessions multiple times a day and that seemed to get me past the mind wandering problem, but my fingers would get too sore because I hadn't yet built up my endurance and callouses. To give my fingers a chance to catch up I needed to back off my aggressive approach but I couldn't so I started studying music theory, which involved my reading and trying to understand harmony and melody and that gave my fingers a break, while I was continuing the learning and development I was hungry for. When my fingers felt better, I resumed my practice sessions a couple of times each day for 30 minutes and I would also study the theory when I didn't have a guitar in my hand. I just needed to learn to balance between manual exercises and book study. Eventually I got in a band and that's when I really began to develop musically, playing in a band has been the best learning tool I've had in my life. It has inspired me to continue the book study so that I have knowledge of what other players already understand, and when music is being played well, I find the reward substantial and inspiring.






                                    share|improve this answer


























                                      3












                                      3








                                      3







                                      I'll tell about my own experience and maybe there'll be something you can use for yourself there. When I first started studying guitar, my teacher told me not to try and practice for more than about 20 minutes at a time. I went along with that idea for a while but then I started feeling I wasn't making progress fast enough so I tried longer sessions of an hour at a time, but after about 25 minutes I'd find my abilities to concentrate would disappear and my mind would wander. Then I tried short sessions multiple times a day and that seemed to get me past the mind wandering problem, but my fingers would get too sore because I hadn't yet built up my endurance and callouses. To give my fingers a chance to catch up I needed to back off my aggressive approach but I couldn't so I started studying music theory, which involved my reading and trying to understand harmony and melody and that gave my fingers a break, while I was continuing the learning and development I was hungry for. When my fingers felt better, I resumed my practice sessions a couple of times each day for 30 minutes and I would also study the theory when I didn't have a guitar in my hand. I just needed to learn to balance between manual exercises and book study. Eventually I got in a band and that's when I really began to develop musically, playing in a band has been the best learning tool I've had in my life. It has inspired me to continue the book study so that I have knowledge of what other players already understand, and when music is being played well, I find the reward substantial and inspiring.






                                      share|improve this answer













                                      I'll tell about my own experience and maybe there'll be something you can use for yourself there. When I first started studying guitar, my teacher told me not to try and practice for more than about 20 minutes at a time. I went along with that idea for a while but then I started feeling I wasn't making progress fast enough so I tried longer sessions of an hour at a time, but after about 25 minutes I'd find my abilities to concentrate would disappear and my mind would wander. Then I tried short sessions multiple times a day and that seemed to get me past the mind wandering problem, but my fingers would get too sore because I hadn't yet built up my endurance and callouses. To give my fingers a chance to catch up I needed to back off my aggressive approach but I couldn't so I started studying music theory, which involved my reading and trying to understand harmony and melody and that gave my fingers a break, while I was continuing the learning and development I was hungry for. When my fingers felt better, I resumed my practice sessions a couple of times each day for 30 minutes and I would also study the theory when I didn't have a guitar in my hand. I just needed to learn to balance between manual exercises and book study. Eventually I got in a band and that's when I really began to develop musically, playing in a band has been the best learning tool I've had in my life. It has inspired me to continue the book study so that I have knowledge of what other players already understand, and when music is being played well, I find the reward substantial and inspiring.







                                      share|improve this answer












                                      share|improve this answer



                                      share|improve this answer










                                      answered 8 hours ago









                                      skinny peacockskinny peacock

                                      2,0582322




                                      2,0582322























                                          1














                                          I was having a similar problem. My solution was to increase the amount of sessions and not the time each session lasts. So i could stay full focus the whole session and increase the amount of time i actually played.






                                          share|improve this answer




























                                            1














                                            I was having a similar problem. My solution was to increase the amount of sessions and not the time each session lasts. So i could stay full focus the whole session and increase the amount of time i actually played.






                                            share|improve this answer


























                                              1












                                              1








                                              1







                                              I was having a similar problem. My solution was to increase the amount of sessions and not the time each session lasts. So i could stay full focus the whole session and increase the amount of time i actually played.






                                              share|improve this answer













                                              I was having a similar problem. My solution was to increase the amount of sessions and not the time each session lasts. So i could stay full focus the whole session and increase the amount of time i actually played.







                                              share|improve this answer












                                              share|improve this answer



                                              share|improve this answer










                                              answered 9 hours ago









                                              OlliOlli

                                              635




                                              635























                                                  1














                                                  I think it's more about doing the correct exercises in the correct way rather than practicing for hours and hours. I also think you should be having fun, otherwise you'll get tired of it.



                                                  Make yourself a schedule: which exercises, for how long each, in which order. Do that every day. After that, feel free to learn songs that you like and stuff like that, which is what keeps it interesting.






                                                  share|improve this answer








                                                  New contributor




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                                                    1














                                                    I think it's more about doing the correct exercises in the correct way rather than practicing for hours and hours. I also think you should be having fun, otherwise you'll get tired of it.



                                                    Make yourself a schedule: which exercises, for how long each, in which order. Do that every day. After that, feel free to learn songs that you like and stuff like that, which is what keeps it interesting.






                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                    New contributor




                                                    Ypsilon is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                                                      1












                                                      1








                                                      1







                                                      I think it's more about doing the correct exercises in the correct way rather than practicing for hours and hours. I also think you should be having fun, otherwise you'll get tired of it.



                                                      Make yourself a schedule: which exercises, for how long each, in which order. Do that every day. After that, feel free to learn songs that you like and stuff like that, which is what keeps it interesting.






                                                      share|improve this answer








                                                      New contributor




                                                      Ypsilon is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                      Check out our Code of Conduct.










                                                      I think it's more about doing the correct exercises in the correct way rather than practicing for hours and hours. I also think you should be having fun, otherwise you'll get tired of it.



                                                      Make yourself a schedule: which exercises, for how long each, in which order. Do that every day. After that, feel free to learn songs that you like and stuff like that, which is what keeps it interesting.







                                                      share|improve this answer








                                                      New contributor




                                                      Ypsilon is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                      Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                                      share|improve this answer



                                                      share|improve this answer






                                                      New contributor




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                                                      answered 7 hours ago









                                                      YpsilonYpsilon

                                                      111




                                                      111




                                                      New contributor




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                                                          1














                                                          You can go to juliard off only 3 hours of practice a day. If the quality of the practice is high, it is a matter of quality over quantity. I know Berkley is famous for having students that practice 8 hours a day but after hour 4 there is going to be a real drop in the quality of your practice. Rather do something else at that stage.






                                                          share|improve this answer




























                                                            1














                                                            You can go to juliard off only 3 hours of practice a day. If the quality of the practice is high, it is a matter of quality over quantity. I know Berkley is famous for having students that practice 8 hours a day but after hour 4 there is going to be a real drop in the quality of your practice. Rather do something else at that stage.






                                                            share|improve this answer


























                                                              1












                                                              1








                                                              1







                                                              You can go to juliard off only 3 hours of practice a day. If the quality of the practice is high, it is a matter of quality over quantity. I know Berkley is famous for having students that practice 8 hours a day but after hour 4 there is going to be a real drop in the quality of your practice. Rather do something else at that stage.






                                                              share|improve this answer













                                                              You can go to juliard off only 3 hours of practice a day. If the quality of the practice is high, it is a matter of quality over quantity. I know Berkley is famous for having students that practice 8 hours a day but after hour 4 there is going to be a real drop in the quality of your practice. Rather do something else at that stage.







                                                              share|improve this answer












                                                              share|improve this answer



                                                              share|improve this answer










                                                              answered 6 hours ago









                                                              Neil MeyerNeil Meyer

                                                              8,96722649




                                                              8,96722649























                                                                  1














                                                                  Join a band. Try to find people that are at approximately the same level of proficiency as yourself. Challenge yourselves to learn songs together -- it'll keep it interesting for you, and you'll learn rhythm in a way that you never could by yourself.



                                                                  Source: personal experience. You can only do scales and chords in your bedroom for so long. Music should be delightful and surprising.






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                                                                  New contributor




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                                                                    1














                                                                    Join a band. Try to find people that are at approximately the same level of proficiency as yourself. Challenge yourselves to learn songs together -- it'll keep it interesting for you, and you'll learn rhythm in a way that you never could by yourself.



                                                                    Source: personal experience. You can only do scales and chords in your bedroom for so long. Music should be delightful and surprising.






                                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                                    New contributor




                                                                    Robert Hanlon is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                                                                      1












                                                                      1








                                                                      1







                                                                      Join a band. Try to find people that are at approximately the same level of proficiency as yourself. Challenge yourselves to learn songs together -- it'll keep it interesting for you, and you'll learn rhythm in a way that you never could by yourself.



                                                                      Source: personal experience. You can only do scales and chords in your bedroom for so long. Music should be delightful and surprising.






                                                                      share|improve this answer








                                                                      New contributor




                                                                      Robert Hanlon is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                                                                      Join a band. Try to find people that are at approximately the same level of proficiency as yourself. Challenge yourselves to learn songs together -- it'll keep it interesting for you, and you'll learn rhythm in a way that you never could by yourself.



                                                                      Source: personal experience. You can only do scales and chords in your bedroom for so long. Music should be delightful and surprising.







                                                                      share|improve this answer








                                                                      New contributor




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                                                                      answered 4 hours ago









                                                                      Robert HanlonRobert Hanlon

                                                                      111




                                                                      111




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                                                                          0














                                                                          Play Rocksmith, it's highly motivating. You can still do your regular exercises, of course.






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                                                                            Play Rocksmith, it's highly motivating. You can still do your regular exercises, of course.






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                                                                              0








                                                                              0







                                                                              Play Rocksmith, it's highly motivating. You can still do your regular exercises, of course.






                                                                              share|improve this answer








                                                                              New contributor




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                                                                              Play Rocksmith, it's highly motivating. You can still do your regular exercises, of course.







                                                                              share|improve this answer








                                                                              New contributor




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                                                                              answered 5 hours ago









                                                                              M. SternM. Stern

                                                                              1012




                                                                              1012




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