Man this guys voice is so smooth and calming i feel like im taking a yoga class and doing guitar on the side
@loontilАй бұрын
yoga's shit.
@KAITOzrАй бұрын
I like to think Paul Davids is the Bob Ross of my generation.
@klausonstringsАй бұрын
@@KAITOzrExactly! I thought: „I know this voice!“ And then: „Ah, sounds like Bob Ross.“ So calming! - Nice Video. Subscribed! 😊
@dexter_gd3478Ай бұрын
I fall asleep to his videos all the time.
@kayless32Ай бұрын
This is why I love his guitar course and stick to it. It is like the best teacher is talking to you. He really care to give you the best information. 😊
@mavtzak1853Ай бұрын
Obi Wan is back
@royalmarine1011Ай бұрын
And this time he will have his revenge.
@kp61hs10Ай бұрын
He’s Also playing musical chairs
@8KilgoreTrout4Ай бұрын
We still have Obi-Wan, the gray and Obi-Wan the white in the future!
@CephlapodninjaАй бұрын
@@royalmarine1011? Against who?
@cmdraftbrnАй бұрын
but vader died. r.i.p. james earl jones
@don911donny9Ай бұрын
Make sure that you enjoy the journey because you’ll never stop learning, I hear that often and it’s great advice.
@knarf_Ай бұрын
I would suggest the following: when I am fed up with a difficult piece I am learning, or an exercise, I stop for a while and play something completely different, but that I know well. A much easier piece from what I was working previously. This helps to relax, play with pleasure and forget for a little while the difficult exercise. After 5 or 10 minutes, revert back to the difficult exercise, and then, everything comes much better ! All the best, knarf from France 🎸🇨🇵
@Errk2GАй бұрын
Solid advice
@BotsWeekendCoversАй бұрын
Agreed I do too.
@carolredbourne3520Ай бұрын
Me to . A little change is good.
@JKFlakerАй бұрын
Same here
@petem4271Ай бұрын
Totally this. I have ‘go to’ pieces of music that I love. They don’t stretch me anymore but they act as nice rest pieces when I’m struggling with something else.
@PalidisiniАй бұрын
On the note of Press, but no stress. I notice usually new guitarist with a new guitar, will have their guitar not set up properly (e.g high action). Because of this, they do press hard and it became a habit. So for new guitarist getting new guitar, get someone to set up your guitar 😁 Great video btw
@fitgiddlin21Ай бұрын
Yes before I knew that you could set a guitar up I sold a beautiful Dean guitar because it was so painful to play because of such high action. Now that I know how to set up guitars and have set up both my martin and seagull, I dreadfully regret getting rid of the Dean. It sounded so beautiful it was just not playable for a beginner.
@thedonbishop55Ай бұрын
“Mindless wankery!” Always hilarious hearing British profanity in non-British accents. 😂 Thanks for the tips Paul. This video made me realised I don’t make too many rookie mistakes. ❤
@UmVtCgАй бұрын
Well, it is fun to say wank. And the Dutch already say "cunt" all the time. Kunt u mij die gitaar aangeven?
@MedalionDS9Ай бұрын
I get wanker as a term is more often associated with Britain, but I feel in the context of music, "mindless wankery" or similar use of the phrase is understood no matter where you are from that speaks english... it is a subtler and less crude way to say "musical masturbation"
@BurnleyNutsАй бұрын
@@MedalionDS9 I was in an online chat debate with some American guys and some Brits and it all got a bit heated over nothing but one American through a bit of a hissy fit and left the group in anger. This other American chirped up 'as you Brits might say - he was a bit of a wanker anyway'. However in this context that Paul uses wankery simply means rubbish. So being Dutch and fluently conversant with Britain and all things British I think he totally nails the KZbin phenomenon of so much stuff on here as - 'Mindlessly Rubbish'.
@saggygnawАй бұрын
I’m a guy from small town Michigan just popping in to scream BOLLOCKS!
@arqoo190717 күн бұрын
Actually, here in the UK, it's a much cruder way of saying mindless masturbation. Which is why hearing Paul say it is so funny, because the crude way is so much more accurate! 😂
@bread7809Ай бұрын
Man, that voice is just marvellous
@metricdeep8856Ай бұрын
Ya....He could have a marvelous career in voice overs/audio books/Documentaries. I'm honestly reminded of kid's Christmas movies.
@ChadWorthmanАй бұрын
Guitar Bob Ross
@ehmmmjay9907Ай бұрын
Oh great, I've been playing for 20+ years and not ONCE thought about my breathing! Now I won't stop thinking about it! Thanks a lot!
@1ouncebirdАй бұрын
😆😅🤣😂
@thenamelessavengerАй бұрын
Been playing for 25 years. Thanks for the touch up on habits. They can drift if you're not paying attention.
@jaywhy3178Ай бұрын
Or 3-5 years in you get complacent with what you know and can do... and 20 years down the road you wonder why you stopped picking up the guitar for years at a time. Realized recently I've lost decades of progress because I stopped learning. Avoided theory, avoided new and difficult challenges. I'm starting from the beginning again. There's so much info available now to learn theory and improve finger independence/economy of motion. Humbling, but when I stop myself playing the same riffs and chords I've been noodling for decades... it's fun again, and challenging.
@coronelsakura2841Ай бұрын
Not playing attention
@mkf62820 күн бұрын
been playing 555 years.. thanks for reminding me I play.
@markwulff6559 күн бұрын
Number 4 is the best advice I think. Being chill is critical. Being chill. You get your best
@NazvilАй бұрын
I picked up guitar when i was starting my freshman year in H.S (00') and even after all this time, this video was a great refresher!
@EvelynLogan-od7zcАй бұрын
Bobby
@thedonbishop55Ай бұрын
My best tip is consistency is better than a lot of sporadic hours. It’s better to practice 1-2 hours everyday as opposed to practicing 10 hours every 2-3 days. Trust me, you’ll see a big difference being consistent even if it’s for a short amount of time each day. You’ll organically increase your hours.
@TheLochsАй бұрын
Very true.
@Sotang10Ай бұрын
I play every day because I like that
@JPBrooksLive28 күн бұрын
This is the first piece of practice advice I give all of my students.
@jimamsdenАй бұрын
What a treasure you are Paul. I know its not likely, but you're someone I'd really like to meet someday.
@EvelynLogan-od7zcАй бұрын
Jim
@KurkkuGoАй бұрын
Few months ago I picked up the old guitar again after almost 20 years. Ive been using tabs to have fun with old favorite rock songs (its crazy how you still rememeber some riffs, so much fun) and between here and there some music theory and learning new stuff from (mostly) your videos. Thanks!
@GILLnBARRYАй бұрын
So many excellent tips Paul! I would like to add that, especially young and completely inexperienced guitar students, whether learning on an acoustic or electric guitar invest in at least a semi-decent guitar. When I first started out I, nor my parents who were completely ignorant of the instrument, had no idea of the huge difference in the playability of inexpensive or “pricey” guitars. Also, I didn’t have any friends who played. As a result, a guitar was a guitar! I wound up playing a $30 Harmony (60 years ago). The Nut and strings were so high off the fretboard that it would bring tears to my eyes to form a C chord! Fortunately I persisted, but I didn’t learn the difference of ease and comfort of a better quality guitar until years later when I finally met others who owned decent guitars. Some of these inexpensive guitars would have our most beloved “Pro’s” sound like amateurs if they tried playing them! In short, a poorly crafted guitar can quickly lead to discouragement and ultimately abandoning the instrument! (BTW - still playing today!)
@danielbinisti1913Ай бұрын
Man, that wxeecise at the end looks challenging... but it is beautiful indeed. Thx again for a great set of advices, Paul. Making my way thru your course, and it is brilliant, I made a lot of progress !
@EvelynLogan-od7zcАй бұрын
Daniel
@newardinesh1938Ай бұрын
Paul's video helps me a lot to improve my guitar skill!!❤️ Thank you Paul & love to see your video
@8Steady16 күн бұрын
great video as usual... the footage of the picking hand at the end is a lesson in itself of how to hold and use the pick.
@aipcr5Ай бұрын
Your first point on the thumb placement is a big one, especially for those of us who have begun to come out of the intermediate stage. I had been playing with incorrect thumb placement for YEARS, and didn't experience any pain or discomfort. I did, however, hit a plateau in terms of speed, accuracy, and fret availability because the thumb was essentially anchoring my whole hand to the neck. Relearning what I know and practice now was a huge pain, and having to dial the metronome WAY back to achieve something close to what I was able to accomplish with incorrect thumb placement was immensely frustrating, but after working hard at it, it's made a world of a difference. This whole relearning process took months, but I don't regret one second of it because I've come to learn that sometimes you have to go backward to go forward, and this is a perspective and mindset that has been widely applicable to many other aspects of my life. Great video!
@ilyanagalen932019 күн бұрын
It might be simply the way my hands are built, but Paul’s ‘’normal’’ thumb placement simply does not work for me. I can’t get my thumb to rest in that position, it feels completely wrong compared to parallel with the neck (especially for barre chords and power chords). I find my thumb naturally goes into the ‘thumb over neck’ position whenever I play a normal, non-barre chord.
@turnernye6742Ай бұрын
Was literally just thinking I probably have so many bad habits I don’t know about… Paul David bestows his wisdom once again, right when I need it ❤
@klisherАй бұрын
I got that guitar handbook 30 years ago. still got it. the chord diagrams at the back were vital pre internet.
@TimsGuitarWorldwithTimFeskornАй бұрын
Suggestion to Watchers: When Practicing The arpeggio exercise at the end of the video, I found it very helpful to loop on the cM7 arpeggio till I could play it without mistakes. Then I moved on to add Dm7 and so on........ ( I really kinda suck at practicing this kind of stuff but this one is very satisfying and musical.) Thanks again Paul. T😎
@F4M3ResistanceАй бұрын
Are you just alternate picking the whole thing? Thanks for the tip!
@cpol4391Ай бұрын
Paul i cannot express my gratitude for you. You share your knowledge with your students. You’re amazingly talented and yet humble as can be. You’re a class act
@35milesofleadАй бұрын
The Ultimate Guitar Handbook by Ralph Denyer is THE book every guitarist should own! I learned so much from that book.
@thedonbishop55Ай бұрын
Thanks for the recommendation.
@35milesofleadАй бұрын
@@thedonbishop55 It was Paul's suggestion, not mine. 😉 I was lucky enough to read it 20 years back.
@larryclark9051Ай бұрын
Absolutely. The book!
@thedonbishop55Ай бұрын
@@35milesoflead I just realised I already read this book all the way back in 2004. Good to know I had good taste even as a teenager back then. 😂
@35milesofleadАй бұрын
I hasten to add that the Ralph Shipman Complete Guitarist book was one I used, too!
@cpol4391Ай бұрын
Also I am a member of Learn Practice Play and Electric Elevation. It gets me put of my comfort zone allows for really fun modules that will improve technique and improvisation. Great work Paul
@ratwynd16 күн бұрын
I had the blessing of a wonderful mentor who taught me many of the things you discuss here. He took me from cowboy chords to playing and singing at open mics and understanding of music theory applied to the guitar. A great teacher will push you beyond your own expectations. Thanks Dave! I would only add that people should learn to play songs, not just riffs. Learn to sing with what you play and how to change a song key to fit your voice. That will take care of the breathing bit very well as you learn breath control to sing. Paul, your tips here are excellent and condense that knowledge nicely that took me several years to acquire.
@dylancroft242325 күн бұрын
I held my breathe while playing for so many years! It took me a really long time to learn to undo that behavior. Great video as always. Thanks.
@benayong4593Ай бұрын
I love the new zooming in and slowing down stuff. Very useful when it comes to getting a good sense of what's really happening on the fretboard and strings.
@omgabaddonАй бұрын
You dont know how much it helps me when you make explanations simple to understand.
@Docsjeff28 күн бұрын
Your Double stop video has helped me TREMENDOUSLY on my leads.Thank you so much for posting that video.
@josephgerbino4271Ай бұрын
Paul, you really do a great job of describing all the different aspects of how we can mess ourselves up and how we can be our own best friend when it comes to learning and playing. Excellent job my friend. 5 stars!
@TheLadsBandLiveАй бұрын
14:19 bookmarking this cool exercise
@KratoflАй бұрын
The first bar reminded me of stranger things xD
@TheLadsBandLiveАй бұрын
@@Kratofl I hear it
@bluzzjazzАй бұрын
No joke, that will take some serious practice to play it fluently. I sounded like I was falling down stairs the first time I tried it!
@UserNameWasCensoredАй бұрын
😀 Nailed #2... I said the answer immediately after PD asked the question. Not tooting my horn too much since the answer was so obvious.
@professordebАй бұрын
Nice. Love the arpeggio exercise. Hallelujah was by Leonard Cohen, though - but the most well known version is by Jeff Buckley.
@WhaleBluePRSАй бұрын
I've been teaching for close to 20 years and playing for about 40 years. One of my students sent me this video link and said the following: " … this should make you feel good … a great new video that reinforces everything you’ve taught me! " I'm not an educated guy, just a lot of desire to learn and grow coupled with tons of practice and playing experience for many years. I love how concise you presented this. Thank you for such a great job laying it all out!
@Mantorp8629 күн бұрын
The only mistake is watching too many KZbin videos instead of playing.
@reinierlamers10173 күн бұрын
Joking aside, I think watching KZbin walkthroughs of songs is a vastly better way of learning songs than cold hard tabs or apps that just tell you which notes to play. A good KZbin video will tell you what techniques are important to deliver the song well, explain music theory relevant to the song, and tell you which things you unlock by learning this song. I would say that learning songs from KZbin instead of UltimateGuitar is the missing actionable advice from the "no tabs" part of this video. And then right after I watched that part it cut into a Yousician ad. Oopsie.
@ThuderDuckАй бұрын
Incredible, I was just thinking how poor my technique was today. How nothing sounds as clean as it should. And this just popped up! Great stuff.
@louaguado995Ай бұрын
My first multi effects pedal was a Zoom 505 too. I bought it used from Music-Go-Round for $20 😁 Ever since then I've been hooked on multi effects pedals because of their versatility, I've used ones from Digitech, Vox, Line 6, Zoom, and Mooer. The newer ones have much better cabinet IR's than those old ones. 😁
@EvelynLogan-od7zcАй бұрын
Hello 👋
@nicolasvivanco9574Ай бұрын
After years of gripping a pick poorly AND tightly, whenever I strummed for a significant amount of time, I had intense pain in my index finger. I only recently started looking into changing my technique, so thanks a ton for giving great guidance on pick grip in this video. Cheers from Mexico.
@cliomckenzieАй бұрын
Great video! Every tip is solid gold, presented with PD’s usual low-key charm. I’m most of the way through your beginner course, and I love it. I have tried a few beginner courses (Justin, Fender Play, Rick Beato), and yours is my favorite. I feel like it might take me a while to get up to full speed on that exercise though! 😂
@EvelynLogan-od7zcАй бұрын
David
@RyanHinch-kw3xr23 күн бұрын
I love that you emphasize being relaxed and not tensing up. I probably had over 500 shows under my belt before I honed in on this issue and corrected it. My wife actually told me I look like I’m taking a dump when I play which is funny but it made me realize that I need to relax more. I looked more intensely concentrated than I really was, even playing parts that had become 100% muscle memory. It took me months to completely change my breathing, posture (sitting and standing) and focused on being more deliberate with my picking hand and relaxing my shoulders and even my face and my playing improved. I tell young guitarists all the time to be cognizant about these things and get into the habit of being relaxed early in their playing journey.
@bronwenhook608818 күн бұрын
And I hope you can now take a dump in a relaxed fashion ( because tense dumping is bad for you, long term!).
@SuperPol1981Ай бұрын
The Guitar Handbook! I’ve had it too since the 90s. Awesome book in the pre-internet days
@HermelJaworskiАй бұрын
That exercice at the end is so great for finger coordination!
@EvelynLogan-od7zcАй бұрын
Hermel
@not2busy18 күн бұрын
Thanks Paul for this and all of your videos. I'm guilty of being an on-and-off guitarist. I have been playing daily now for about a year and there is one thing that struck me recently. I was trying to solo along with a slow blues song when I found myself getting into the groove. By that I mean I started to move with the beat, rocking slightly forward and back and I felt I was a part of the song. Before that I would just sit still and play whatever notes I thought were appropriate but when I started to actually rock back and forth, I found myself playing with more confidence and it actually sounded much better, more natural. I noticed how, towards the end of this video, you were bobbing you head up and down, going with the beat of what you were playing. So maybe immersing oneself into the music might be another tip to add. For me, it was a eureka moment. But I shouldn't get carried away . . . I know my level.
@rustycolon9368Ай бұрын
Thank you for everything you do Paul.
@ashwineeraobrienАй бұрын
Paul I have missed you I'm back and watching every post
@ratedrrrАй бұрын
That's a beautiful sounding exercise that I will absolutely use, thanks for sharing!
@ilyeshmusicАй бұрын
Hetfield uses also middle finger for how he holds the pick ....so it really depends probably on music style and the sound you want to achieve. Great video.
@donaldmcmillan552910 күн бұрын
Many, many years ago I used to tell my wife that I could do better if I had better gear... then.. one day a friend of mine came over and picked up my Epiphone acoustic guitar and he wailed on it!! I mean he was really, really good!! My wife turned to me and said, "What was this about needing better gear?!" It definitely opened my eyes and I realized the part you were talking about regarding practice. Haven't had a Fender or Gibson in quite a while but have done a lot of shows with Squiers, Epiphones and Ibenez guitars. And I'm not even talking about the high end ones of those, just the ones I could afford. My first guitar had the action set pretty high but I didn't know better so I practiced to the point my thumb muscle on my left hand was twice as big as the one on my right hand just to press the strings... then I learned a lot about guitar action. Back then there was no internet, or computers, and defintiely no cell phones so you learned where ever you could, mostly books since there were no instructors anywhere near me at the time.
@Moggshad25 күн бұрын
go for the triads, open your view to the fretboard ! I love it and its fun
@KyleSherringtonАй бұрын
While it often appears that holding the pick with the thumb and the index finger is the "Norm" and to be preferred...I find that the thumb and the middle finger balances everything more nicely, and also releases the index finger to do other things.....Obviously there is no right or wrong way to hold a pick...There is just the way that works for you. I did notice Eddie Van Halen used the middle finger method frequently also...So I guess I'm not alone there Appreciate you and the easy going way you present things
@キラキラくりくり頭23 күн бұрын
Oh my god, the Zoom 505... What a hit of nostalgia! I had one around... 1999?
@seancarson648129 күн бұрын
I really like that exercise at the end of the video. Will have to try it. Thank you.
@chrisanderson9331Ай бұрын
Love this video. I’m in need of exercises and warm ups so this has been perfect thank you. Also love the tip about thumb and leaving space between the neck starting that one tonight
@chrislee341419 күн бұрын
#2: I have a cheap no name travel guitar, it's pretty much the neck with some rods that you attach/detach for travel, sounds like crap when I played. My cousin, who had been playing for at least 20 years by that time, got his hands on it, and I swear an angle was playing it, it sounded absolutely amazing.
@therofflmanАй бұрын
The best video that I've seen nowadays. Thank you so much for your vids, help me a lot with my guitar troubles. I'm feeling so marvellous and happy just to play with this tips. Love you ❤
@EddyfyingArtАй бұрын
Wow! I still have my 505 after all these years! I may have to bring it out to revisit that era again!😊
@peterblum613Ай бұрын
Great lesson. I’ve been teaching myself for less than a year. #1 for me in these tips is lackluster groove. I have never played to a metronome. I think I will start today. On the bright side, I have gotten relatively good at paying attention to all the hand and finger stuff. That’s because, unfortunately, I have gotten some tendonitis.
@fatimamazhar2566Ай бұрын
as a self taught guitarist i really appreciate this vid and will be doing the last exercise
@Wammus85Ай бұрын
I got the same book you showed at point 2 but then in dutch. Learned so much about theory and how a guitar actualy works.
@Docsjeff28 күн бұрын
I had one of those 505’s. I loved that thing.
@jrlikeshockeyandmetalАй бұрын
Your voice 😫. It’s so soothing and love your videos lol ❤
@Docsjeff4 күн бұрын
I had one of those 505’s. Great little pedal.
@petem4271Ай бұрын
A big ‘shout out’ for my beloved zoom 505 (3:05). I’ve upgraded since I bought it about 25 years ago but I unboxed it a few months ago and it still works and still sounds fantastic. Unbelievable value
@EdithBarney-v1eАй бұрын
Without this playing with fantasy no creative work has ever yet come to birth. The debt we owe to the play of the imagination is incalculable.
@YiasyaАй бұрын
As self taught guitarist started at 9 years old, and now 53, I can say I do not make the mistakes 1 to 9. But nr. 10 is a thing for the most self taught players I know. It's not learning anything new and sticking to old techniques and keep repeating it for years and years. I still play 99% of the time within the first 3 frets. Altough I can do almost anything you can imagine within that small range, I still think it's holding me back. I mean I have learned Travis picking from your video from a few years back. It took me literally 5 minutes to master it, but without that video I wouldn't be playing (and singing) songs like: Rollercoaster from Danny Vera, or Just breathe from Pearl Jam. So self taught is fine, but don't let it hold you back and try to learn some new techniques every now and then...Cheers Paul, thnx for the video's
@cg13-Ай бұрын
Just exactly what I needed right now, it's almost scary. Thanks a lot for this one Paul
@CustomTele52RI27 күн бұрын
Ooh now THAT's interesting - at 16:00 your D and G poles are raised way up, B is recessed, top E about flush and the fat strings slightly raised. Seems to more than follow the neck curvature. Looks unusual, sounds great! 🤔
@timbarth785028 күн бұрын
I am close to intermediate and improving my guitars now. This improved my play style pretty mich because my cheap beginner guitars were so hard to play. So to me it is like work until you hit a wall then get better gear and repeat.
@maryseoddoux7414Ай бұрын
Thanks from France. I appreciate your work,,even if i can't really understand phrases.
@IC3RTIF1EDIАй бұрын
As always, I enjoy and respect your videos. Thank you.
@mosheepАй бұрын
I wish this was available and what I watched and learned when I picked up the guitar 15 years ago. I'm full of bad habits that I'm really finding so hard to get rid off. Still, thank you for this. I will keep these in mind on my next practice
@adriaanmuller4493Ай бұрын
Hi Paul👋🏼 Please consider making an acoustic string comparison video, just like the one you did with electric guitar strings. I think it would be super interesting and helpful to many guitar players!
@andreasnordin9023Ай бұрын
Still the King. Paul The rippa. But the voice is his biggest asset. Soothing. Paul, still here, you are the chosen one. No joke, few, if any, can teach like you.
@djculousАй бұрын
I just bought a cheap electric guitar today. I've been playing for years on a cheap acoustic and no progress .. now i realize i really sucks at playing lol .. hope this tips help my progress thanks man!
@LawrenceGovan-i2uАй бұрын
This content always provides great takeaways.
@timbornoneАй бұрын
Fantastic exercise. I was looking for something just like that. I do practice my ass off!
@EvelynLogan-od7zcАй бұрын
Tim
@bron-sconcess.10Ай бұрын
😏 So good to have a great guy on the frets passing on wisdoms! • Paul you have a touch of human genius about you; translates as faithful-fun-key-fun for a learner and oh yes, that touch of class, too! You're not giving up on us! ❤
@Shroomer47Ай бұрын
Great tips and super fun exercise at the end. It’s whipping my left hand back into shape. When I don’t play frequently, my 4th finger tends to become pretty…. Lazy 😂 I’m going to do this a few times a day for a while.
@DamnedEyez14 күн бұрын
#10 - I've done similar things, but not put it together quite like that or made it a daily exercise. Nice. I'd basically do the 7 chord arpeggio up teh neck with the root note on the E string, or up the neck on odds and down on evens. Helpful to get an idea for the patterns/notes.
@javierbelenguer148426 күн бұрын
Oh my god that candy apple strat is the most gorgeous guitar i’ve ever seen
@mrp41024 күн бұрын
I’m glad you mentioned tabs. I absolutely hate tabs, and I just can’t work with them. My brain does not compute with tabs. I’d much rather do it the way you suggested - listen to the song that you like, find the chords and then match it up in your brain as far as the correct pitch and Tonality. Thanks for this video. This was really helpful.
@TheNuclearFamilyBandYouTubeАй бұрын
Ive got that Ralph Denyer Guitar Handbook - Its great! But out of print. Someone should make sure it gets published again.... I learned so much from it
@philljustphill1656Ай бұрын
The important thing about how hard you press is how far the strings are from the frets. Take your guitar to get properly set up. If the strings are too far, you'll need to press harder, maybe even too hard.
@scottmerkner1761Ай бұрын
@PaulDavids 1:40 when switching to barre chords with the thumb fretting the low “E” do you still have some space between your hand and the back of the neck? That seems like you wouldn’t have enough torque to fret the notes, but maybe my technique is wrong. Also, I’m loving the Electric Elevation course! It’s so great to learn from.
@EvelynLogan-od7zcАй бұрын
Scott
@OtisleevonridgeАй бұрын
Great lesson thank you Paul! Always informative!👍🏻
@achimwitcoustic9585Ай бұрын
I was smiling all the vid, cause, yes Paul , every single advice is on point. Saying that after playing the guitar over 20y intensively...more or less. But yes. I agree on all of that. Thanks for reminding some things still. Great vid
@LuckyPole92Ай бұрын
great video david!!!
@EvelynLogan-od7zcАй бұрын
Michael
@jmlk9426Ай бұрын
Having a practice routine is really important imo. Many music teachers are not talking about that with their students. What is the structure you're following while practicing, where to put exercises like your last example, do I need to practice scales...
@frankgoodman-buzzholland16 күн бұрын
The five guys. Guthrie Trapp. Tom Bukovac. Tim Pierce. Rick Beato. And Paul Davids. So incredibly grateful for these amazing Communicators!
@LazyPlectrum68Ай бұрын
Always a pleasure to watch. Great inspirational content.
@JeffreyDoppАй бұрын
Amen on the tabs!! Great advice here Paul thanks!!
@Docsjeff4 күн бұрын
Even the badasses still PRACTICE.One of my best friends plays for Top artists and he practices EVERY EVENING!
@dynamicascension981Ай бұрын
“Just like Rhythm, the philosophy at which we play a note makes all the difference”. WOW!
@contrariangrinАй бұрын
Need a full video slowing down that last practice technique
@ScinterScoldem-pq9ewАй бұрын
Dude, you really got me with that stop tabs thing! I was half daydreaming telling others before you said you were joking 😂 Shi man Im still feeling relief! Ha
@ricos1497Ай бұрын
I teach my kids to use alcohol as a way to relax when learning the guitar. My six year old has been a revelation since she started to adopt lager to relieve the stress.
@brandongooch3197Ай бұрын
What’s that offspring song? You’re gonna go far, kid?
@mroctober3657Ай бұрын
Shots of Jëager to get them to that next level.
@walterwestermeier212918 күн бұрын
The problema is after a free drinks You forget that You are forget that You are practising 😂
@loricampbell602318 күн бұрын
Am I the only one who thinks giving KIDS ALCOHOL is bad? I mean depends on the age. Are they 21 or higher
@loricampbell602318 күн бұрын
@@walterwestermeier2129you might be on it as well. You forget how to spell.
@kevincrouch3956Ай бұрын
If it wasn't for bad habits I'd have no habits at all!
@riffmcnasty8713Ай бұрын
This reminds me of how some people say theory is critical, but I remember Jimmy Hendrix in an interview where he knows nothing, he specifically states “I just play when I’m sad” and a few other reasons and this was when he was being considered the BEST of the BEST so that should really speak volumes to anyone who feels comfortable playing how they want too. Just fine tune your craft and critique yourself until YOU are happy and that’s success 🎉
@ShieldedRenderАй бұрын
Hey! Would you mind showing us all of your current guitars and how/why you use each one? Specially the acoustic ones. Thank you!