Hi, everyone. I wanted to start us off with a comment to get the ball rolling. I would LOVE it if you could leave a short comment introducing yourself to the other members. I’m Dan Thorpe, from Birmingham, UK (not Alabama!). I love fingerpicking – Paul Simon, James Taylor, Tommy Emmanuel and about a gazillion others! My favourite thing about playing guitar is having some quiet time to play for myself (music is a great outlet for everything in life) and to jam with my 4 year old boy, Archie! I used to be terrible at guitar but after years… Read more »
Hey everyone, I would love to know what lessons you would like to learn. More on fingerpicking, Travis picking, chord changes, theory, jamming???… you name it, leave your ideas below!! This is the place to do so.
Hi Dan, I am an intermediate player, but am fascinated about finger style, and very anxious to get started. But i must admit i do struggle a bit with the dreaded Barr Chords, but am improving a bit. I am a Viet Nam vet, who suffers from PTSD, I am very private, so if you don’t hear much from me please understand. Thanks
Steve
Hi Steve, thanks for getting in touch. It`s great to have you here. Barre chords are tough but do make sure you take your time and use good technique with them.
No problem at all regarding being private and I hope you are doing well regarding the PTSD. Just know that the comments section and the mini-forum is there for you when needed. All the best.
Cool, for sure, let us know some more details. What sort of slaps and slides? The crazy stuff or solid on beats 2 and 4 type thing? What sort of guitarists have inspired this? (I ask, so I know I’m on the right path). 🙂
No particular artist comes to mind but I would say on beats 2 and 4 nothing crazy (yet). Slapping all the strings I find okay, it’s the thumb slap I have trouble with on the low E A strings.
I have come across slaps in the odd piece of music, done right sounds amazing. Just something I would like to add to my repertoire.
Ah, okay cool, thanks for letting me know. The slaps on beats 2 and 4 are very cool. The grooves these can add are great. Will get something ready on this. 🙂
If you would like to submit a video, you can add it to your comment by including a video LINK (for example, a YouTube, Vimeo, or Dropbox link). (Email Dan for help if you get stuck uploading a video)
YouTube and Vimeo links are the preferred video format. Make sure that your links are set to unlisted (not private!) and then only we will see it.
Hopefully, you have all noticed the new comments section at the bottom of each page in the DTAA! I would love for you to comment, ask questions and say “hi”!
Looking forward to future videos about spicing up these chord progressions as you mention in the video. These are all very common progressions so learning them well and being able to do some variations on them would go a long way!
well, I sat and just did them, one and two star tests. Couple questions I had to think about in Star 2 right at the end, verbage mostly. several jotted scribbles in my journal to support a couple questons, help me visualize, but did ok, pretty much a cold sitting. I can find notes on the fretboard, not instantly, more like a kindergardener first learned io read still voicing the words lol. (No shortcut tricks, just note names/interval count fm root. Slower, but less to unlearn. I think.) These tests give me a good idea where I am right now… Read more »
Very pleasing to hear you did well, enjoyed it, and it gave you some feedback on where you are at right now. That’s great. Well done again, and keep up the good practice! 🙂
I vote for more jamming ideas, Dan. It’s easy to be blown away by proper guitar players and not be able to realize that they’re often doing relatively simple things…but doing them *extremely* well. It’s very helpful when you bring some of the creative elements down to beginner/intermediate level. Makes the whole guitar thing start to make more sense.
Can’t believe I’m the first to comment, 2x today. It’s just wrong. Not to mention spooky. (Is There Anybody Out There??? 👀)
It’s a good point you mention. Doing simple to a high level is nearly always impressive to anyone listening. Glad you like the way I teach. It’s never easy learning this stuff so to hear your words is always nice. Keep up the great practice. 🙂
Hi, Dan. I’ve gotta vote for #4. But several others are not far behind…
These are all going to be fun and motivating. Looking forward to developing all the coordination needed for these, then finding out what you’ve got for the next batch!
Pleased to hear it, Stan. It’s a beautiful song. I was looking at the Gustav Holst museum online earlier located where he was born. I’m looking to go visit that soon as it’s not too far from me. Anyway, super pleased to hear it. Have a wonderful holiday season. 🙂
Ah, cool, thanks, it’s not the easiest (far from it) but there are a lot of harmonic flavours in this version that help bring out the power in the song. 🙂
I have the Christmas Crackers course. Good King Wenceslas is my favorite in that one.
I like the ending you did on Bleak Midwinter.
Enjoyed your latest email about The Planets.
Glad you like it. It’s a great song for sure and a lot of fun to play. Thanks, glad you are enjoying In The Bleak Midwinter too! I do love adding intros and outros but the songs itself is wonderful. 🙂
Congratulations to Teresa Halvorson-Fox (Gold), Rich Augugliaro (Silver), and Denise Gillard (Bronze) for winning the Leaderboard for November 2024! Best comment prize goes to new member Mike McHugh for asking a great, thoughtful question HERE.
Cheers, David. Pleased it was helpful. Definitely worth revisiting in a month or in a few months to get regular reminders of these key lessons. Keep it up. 🙂
Partial Chords are very helpful. I basically taught myself using partial chords – very like the no chord fingerstyle songs. I only ever used the stings I needed and used whichever finger was convenient in the song. It meant I didn’t learn chords but could play some nice songs anyway.
Yeah, I love them, pleased you do too. Yeah, it’s a more practical way to play for sure – especially when playing melodies in an elegant fingerstyle manner. 🙂
Hello my name is Brian Carnegie from Geelong AUSTRALIA and I am 72 years old.
I have been trying to teach myself guitar for a couple of years now after I bought a Takamine acoustic guitar when I was locked down at home during our States cruel
Covid lockdown…the longest in the world.
I am excited about joining Dan’s lessons and I hope that I will be able to learn and improve and get more enjoyment from my guitar.
Hi Brian, welcome aboard. I’m sorry to hear that about the lockdowns where you were. It’s good the guitar was there for you and a great thing to come out of it for you I hope. Very pleased you’re here and I hope you enjoy the lessons. Do let us know how you get on or if you have any questions. 🙂
I love this with all the embellishments, though I’m taking it slow. My hope is to get this piece good enough to upload a video to the Facebook page before the end of the year.
When you are learning something new, like a new chord change or fingerpicking pattern, should you learn it without looking straight off or do you look at your hands until you gan get it looking, and then try to do it without looking once you have it down? I’m finding it better to look first off and play it slow. Then get it up to speed. Then play it slow without looking, and then try to increase speed without looking.
Hi Mike yeah, the approach you mention is exactly how I recommend doing it. At first, you’ll need to look and keep it slow, but then you definitely want to avoid the looking and focus more on feeling and hearing it. Good stuff. 🙂
Hi Dan just watched the video about the 5 star and printed the wall chart I’m now hoping I will get my goals, The 5 star is very good and its way to achieve progress
Hi David, good stuff. Glad to hear it. You will be getting the welcome package very soon too featuring a nicely printed version of this (along with some other cool stuff!) Hope you enjoy it and let’s get you achieving all five stars! 🙂
I’m really struggling with example 3. My pinky on my left hand keeps sliding over onto the fret, leaving me with a dead note, and my right hand doesn’t seem to want to cooperate either. It’s taking me a lot longer to get this one down than it did the first two, but I’m trying to keep it slow and use the 10x method to get the progressions down. It’s a beautiful finger pattern, and I know I’ll be glad when I get it.
If you need to, isolate each hand. i.e. work on the picking pattern to get the right hand sorted, and work through the fretting hand movements in silence before putting them together. You can also even use a capo to help reduce the stretch and make it a little easier to play if you like. Keep at it you will nail it I am 100% sure. 🙂
Hi Dan As I’ve just joined the course this lesson was great and very informative right through it also helped my pinky to get it working very happy with it and will be looking again at it later on thanks
Listen to it a lot, hum the tune a lot, and slow down the recording (either this one or the original song on YouTube). Those are usually the best tips for really hearing the rhythm. Let us know how you get on. 🙂
So I tried the classical position in my practice yesterday. I went through a couple of riffs that I am working on and found that I had a harder time in that position than when I did it the way that I’m used to, i.e. with the guitar on my right knee. One riff I had real trouble with in the classical position but nailed several times in a row in the other. I don’t know if this is due to my just being used to having the guitar on my right knee or what. Should I keep trying the… Read more »
It is quite normal. A lot of it is due to muscle memory. Your hands are in a slightly different position in the classical position than the casual position. You do not have to play in the classical position, and for some the change in position (especially if you’ve played for a long time) can be very hard and possibly not worth it. I’d still say though, don’t dismiss it – you may want to try playing the easiest thing you can play in the classical position and see how that works for you – over time, you may see… Read more »
Yes, Dan. That’s good advice. I won’t totally abandon the classical position, but like you say I’ll stick with the old way for more challenging stiff and try the classical here and there for easier pieces. We’ll see how it goes.
Hi my Name is John Bartlett,
I’m a retired Fire Chief after 48 years. I love music, I have tired to learn how to play the guitar off and on for most of those years. I am now retired, I’ve decided to give it my full attention.
I want to be able to take the guitar down and actually play when someone ask me if I can play.
I hope your your class will get me to that point! I hope you are that guy Dan.
Thanks,
John
Hi John, welcome aboard. That must have been a great career! Now, it’s time for you to love playing the guitar. I am certain, if you stick with the lessons, you will love them and see some big progress. Do let us know if at any point you get stuck as I am happy to help (sometimes it’s just being pointed in the right direction for a certain lesson). Keep us posted and enjoy. Cheers! 🙂
Hello everyone my name is David Smith from Wales 84 years old with my aim is play the guitar to my family and friends I just joined Dan’s Accadamy course to help me achieve that
Hi David, thanks for the comment and welcome aboard. Delighted you are here. Let’s get you achieving your goals. Do keep us posted with how you get on. 🙂
What I really like about this lesson is that you teach us how to practice, not just what to practice. It’s something that, sadly, many teachers don’t cover. I consider the information quite valuable.
Hi Mike, thanks, yeah, sadly there’s so much surface level stuff out there that assumes students can do the basics but as we all know, that is not always the case. Very pleased the lesson was helpful and keep up the great practice. 🙂
Just revisited this and it was so delightful . There is a lot of good information in this little interactive story and it bears repeating. I hope you will do more of this type of thing just cuz it is a fun way of learning.
Thanks, this was such a joy to create, and although it was a bit “out there”, I’m pleased you enjoyed it and found it useful. Got to flex my story telling muscle so was a blast. Would love to do this again – even thought about turning it into a print book one day and expanding the story. 🙂
Hi, All. My name is Mike McHugh. I live in San Antonio, Texas. I’m 67 years old and have been playing guitar for about 10-15 years. I’m basically a solo acoustic musician; i.e., I play guitar and sing as a solo act. The reason I joined the academy is that, while I have basic chords (including barre chords) and strumming down, I have struggled to advance beyond this as far as technique. I have learned some fingerpicking and some basic licks and riffs but I struggle with consistency in these two areas. I still make too many mistakes playing songs… Read more »
Hi Mike, welcome aboard. We hope you love it here. Sounds like you are in the ideal place – the lessons in the In Focus course and 5-star award will help you fill in the blanks and improve the weaker areas – and each month, the new monthly lessons will give you some exciting things to play. Great selection of bands and artists you mention. Enjoy and let us know how you get on. 🙂
Correction: there is an “n” in the name of these strings. Curt Mangen. Darn word substitution! I mention these strings here as it might help someone else. Electric guitar strings come in very light gauges and I didn’t know acoustic strings could be this light.
I have used 10 gauge Elixirs.
Hoping this very light gauge strings will be my ticket to barre chords.
Hi Dan. Barre chords have always been my biggest struggle. Very difficult with small and now weak arthritic hands. I have your barre chords course. I actually found 9 gauge acoustic strings by Curt Magen. I’m going to try to get someone to help me put them on. The tone on these nine gauge may not be great but no one is going to give me an award for playing with 12’s or even 11’s. I’m just going to do what works for me. My concentration is still poor but I can play the four chords as barre chords as… Read more »
Hi Roxanne, good stuff. Don’t worry about the lesser tone on lighter strings. I don’t really buy into that when people talk about it. My reasoning is this – if lighter strings help you play noticeably better, you’ll more than make up the 5% or so difference in tone, and likely play with far more enjoyment, which in turn helps you play with more passion, and therefore better tone. Well done making the progress you mention! 🙂
I have gotten to the point where I automatically start doing the 10x method on anything I don’t get right away. I haven’t been slowing it down nearly as much as you did here but will start slowing more on harder bits. Also, this has a completely different sound slowed way down – it is a little sadder and more melancholy.
Really glad to hear it. Positive practice habits for sure! Feel free to slow it down only as much as you need to to nail it 10x in a row (it’s usually slower than we naturally want to go though). Yeah, I do love how a tempo change can add more emotion and/or bring out that emotion. 🙂
I enjoyed this course immensely. These are songs that I can play forever, and I’m so glad to be building a repertoire of songs I can sit down and play. Thank you.
I enjoyed this very much. America the Beautiful is my favorite patriotic song, and I’m glad I can play it solo-style on my guitar. Thanks for such a simple but beautiful arrangement.
Ideally try and get the level 1 part to a semi comfortable level at least. If you don’t it’s not the end of the world, as the main idea is that the first time you go through the course, you just get the basics sorted – then you can go through the course again after 21 days. That’s what I recommend but of course, feel free to focus longer on each lesson if you really prefer to though. 🙂
This is the end…..but this is not the end, if that makes any sense🤔. The end of 21 days of learning and fun, but with many options ahead. The timing is great for me as I’ve got a few days off work and will use these to go back to day 0, which actually seems like a long time ago. I’ll work through the course again, pulling out and highlighting the parts that need more work. You have helped with this by pulling the main patterns from the course together in one pdf 👍. I’m super excited about the bonuses… Read more »
Thanks for the comment, Dave. Really pleased you enjoyed the course and are excited for everything that lies ahead. Your comments throughout have been great, not only for me to read but for others who take and have already taken the course these past few weeks. Very pleased you enjoyed it all and keep up the great practice. Thank you too! 🙂
I decided I wanted to try some new things so I have been playing the videos on the strumming songs and riffs pages. It will let me play a few videos or the same video a few times and then it tells me I have to log in again to see a video. Exact message is “Sign in to confirm you’re not a bot, This helps protect our community. I am logged in when it tells me that but if I log out and back in, it does fix it. I think the message is actually coming from YouTube. Seems to only happen… Read more »
Never knew these blank sheets were offered on this site. Trying to learn one of the riffs. Went and got some blank tab sheets I had downloaded elsewhere. I have always found that writing things down helps me remember and learn them better. Happy to know that these are available!
Yeah, one of the things I should mention more for users. I will add more links to these in the DTAA members. Thanks for that. Glad you found them helpful. 🙂
Pleased to hear it. That’s okay and at least you know. Keep doing as much concentrating/focusing as you can but start with very small busts (i.e. under a minute), then take a moment or two to reset. Listening goes a long way too so keep it up. 🙂
The final day, maybe, but so much learning to go back to and drill, get right, consolidate and build on. It’s been a great three weeks which promises much more to come. And what a way to finish – riffs and pumps. I enjoyed all three, not just on their own, but looking at how similar things could be applied to different chord sequences. But there is work to do to get them “locked in”. I have a few days off next week so I’ll be going back to day 1 and reviewing the whole course before even thinking of… Read more »
Thanks, Dave. Glad you enjoyed this lesson. It’s lots of fun and the more you use them and experiment with your own ideas, the more fun you will have. Sounds like you’ve enjoyed it all so far and pleased to hear it and enjoyed your comments and positive approach to learning throughout – long may it continue. It goes such a long way on the journey! 🙂
Great tips Dan super duper 😀
Cheers, Angie. Glad to hear you like the lesson. Keep coming back to it too. 🙂
Hi, everyone. I wanted to start us off with a comment to get the ball rolling. I would LOVE it if you could leave a short comment introducing yourself to the other members. I’m Dan Thorpe, from Birmingham, UK (not Alabama!). I love fingerpicking – Paul Simon, James Taylor, Tommy Emmanuel and about a gazillion others! My favourite thing about playing guitar is having some quiet time to play for myself (music is a great outlet for everything in life) and to jam with my 4 year old boy, Archie! I used to be terrible at guitar but after years… Read more »
Hey everyone, I would love to know what lessons you would like to learn. More on fingerpicking, Travis picking, chord changes, theory, jamming???… you name it, leave your ideas below!! This is the place to do so.
Hi Dan, I am an intermediate player, but am fascinated about finger style, and very anxious to get started. But i must admit i do struggle a bit with the dreaded Barr Chords, but am improving a bit. I am a Viet Nam vet, who suffers from PTSD, I am very private, so if you don’t hear much from me please understand. Thanks
Steve
Hi Steve, thanks for getting in touch. It`s great to have you here. Barre chords are tough but do make sure you take your time and use good technique with them.
No problem at all regarding being private and I hope you are doing well regarding the PTSD. Just know that the comments section and the mini-forum is there for you when needed. All the best.
I would love to see some lessons on guitar slaps and slides please. That is if you possibly find time in your busy schedule.
Cool, for sure, let us know some more details. What sort of slaps and slides? The crazy stuff or solid on beats 2 and 4 type thing? What sort of guitarists have inspired this? (I ask, so I know I’m on the right path). 🙂
No particular artist comes to mind but I would say on beats 2 and 4 nothing crazy (yet). Slapping all the strings I find okay, it’s the thumb slap I have trouble with on the low E A strings.
I have come across slaps in the odd piece of music, done right sounds amazing. Just something I would like to add to my repertoire.
Ah, okay cool, thanks for letting me know. The slaps on beats 2 and 4 are very cool. The grooves these can add are great. Will get something ready on this. 🙂
If you would like to submit a video, you can add it to your comment by including a video LINK (for example, a YouTube, Vimeo, or Dropbox link). (Email Dan for help if you get stuck uploading a video)
YouTube and Vimeo links are the preferred video format. Make sure that your links are set to unlisted (not private!) and then only we will see it.
Post your video below…
Hopefully, you have all noticed the new comments section at the bottom of each page in the DTAA! I would love for you to comment, ask questions and say “hi”!
Looking forward to future videos about spicing up these chord progressions as you mention in the video. These are all very common progressions so learning them well and being able to do some variations on them would go a long way!
Mike
well, I sat and just did them, one and two star tests. Couple questions I had to think about in Star 2 right at the end, verbage mostly. several jotted scribbles in my journal to support a couple questons, help me visualize, but did ok, pretty much a cold sitting. I can find notes on the fretboard, not instantly, more like a kindergardener first learned io read still voicing the words lol. (No shortcut tricks, just note names/interval count fm root. Slower, but less to unlearn. I think.) These tests give me a good idea where I am right now… Read more »
Very pleasing to hear you did well, enjoyed it, and it gave you some feedback on where you are at right now. That’s great. Well done again, and keep up the good practice! 🙂
Hi Dan This lesson was good I was using too much pressure fretting the chords it has helped me and my hand Thanks
Pleased to hear it, David. So many folk use too much pressure. Glad this helped on what is such an important topic. 🙂
Hi Dan That was a great lesson it has helped my shoulder as I had large amount of tension developed Thanks Dan
Brilliant. Pleased to hear this lesson helped on what is such an important topic. Well done making the changes needed so far. Keep it up. 🙂
One of my favorite James Taylor Christmas songs. Thanks Dan.
Cheers, J.P. What a song and what a musician! 🙂
I vote for more jamming ideas, Dan. It’s easy to be blown away by proper guitar players and not be able to realize that they’re often doing relatively simple things…but doing them *extremely* well. It’s very helpful when you bring some of the creative elements down to beginner/intermediate level. Makes the whole guitar thing start to make more sense.
Can’t believe I’m the first to comment, 2x today. It’s just wrong. Not to mention spooky. (Is There Anybody Out There??? 👀)
It’s a good point you mention. Doing simple to a high level is nearly always impressive to anyone listening. Glad you like the way I teach. It’s never easy learning this stuff so to hear your words is always nice. Keep up the great practice. 🙂
Hi, Dan. I’ve gotta vote for #4. But several others are not far behind…
These are all going to be fun and motivating. Looking forward to developing all the coordination needed for these, then finding out what you’ve got for the next batch!
Cheers, Dawna. Glad you like them and thanks for voting. The next batch will be heaps of fun too (and with some more variety)! Enjoy. 🙂
Dan, My absolute favorite Christmas song. Thanks so much for this lesson–it will make the holidays bright for me!
Pleased to hear it, Stan. It’s a beautiful song. I was looking at the Gustav Holst museum online earlier located where he was born. I’m looking to go visit that soon as it’s not too far from me. Anyway, super pleased to hear it. Have a wonderful holiday season. 🙂
20 out of 20. mice.
Really well done, Allan! 🙂
20 out of 20, cool!
Superb. Big well done, Allan. 🙂
What a wonderful song Dan!!! So glad you put this lesson together… Looks like a challenge.. but one worth taking! Cheers
Cheers, Logan. Glad you like it. Love this tune too and I hope you love playing it. 🙂
I love this version of Silent Night you have done. Peaceful. Meditative. Comforting.
Ah, cool, thanks, it’s not the easiest (far from it) but there are a lot of harmonic flavours in this version that help bring out the power in the song. 🙂
I have the Christmas Crackers course. Good King Wenceslas is my favorite in that one.
I like the ending you did on Bleak Midwinter.
Enjoyed your latest email about The Planets.
Glad you like it. It’s a great song for sure and a lot of fun to play. Thanks, glad you are enjoying In The Bleak Midwinter too! I do love adding intros and outros but the songs itself is wonderful. 🙂
Congratulations to Teresa Halvorson-Fox (Gold), Rich Augugliaro (Silver), and Denise Gillard (Bronze) for winning the Leaderboard for November 2024! Best comment prize goes to new member Mike McHugh for asking a great, thoughtful question HERE.
Hi Dan A really good video with things I didn’t realise that occurred with your hands position thanks Dan
Cheers, David. Pleased it was helpful. Definitely worth revisiting in a month or in a few months to get regular reminders of these key lessons. Keep it up. 🙂
Partial Chords are very helpful. I basically taught myself using partial chords – very like the no chord fingerstyle songs. I only ever used the stings I needed and used whichever finger was convenient in the song. It meant I didn’t learn chords but could play some nice songs anyway.
Yeah, I love them, pleased you do too. Yeah, it’s a more practical way to play for sure – especially when playing melodies in an elegant fingerstyle manner. 🙂
Hello my name is Brian Carnegie from Geelong AUSTRALIA and I am 72 years old.
I have been trying to teach myself guitar for a couple of years now after I bought a Takamine acoustic guitar when I was locked down at home during our States cruel
Covid lockdown…the longest in the world.
I am excited about joining Dan’s lessons and I hope that I will be able to learn and improve and get more enjoyment from my guitar.
Thanks
Brian
Hi Brian, welcome aboard. I’m sorry to hear that about the lockdowns where you were. It’s good the guitar was there for you and a great thing to come out of it for you I hope. Very pleased you’re here and I hope you enjoy the lessons. Do let us know how you get on or if you have any questions. 🙂
I love this with all the embellishments, though I’m taking it slow. My hope is to get this piece good enough to upload a video to the Facebook page before the end of the year.
Brill. Super pleased you are enjoying it. I am confident you will nail it and looking forward to seeing the video. 🙂
Hi Dan started getting into the classical position will take time but but I’m going to keep at good advice Dan Thanks
Good stuff, David. Pleased you are seeing the benefit of it! Great stuff and well done. Keep at it. 🙂
I got 16 out of 20 quite happy with that you learn with it and that main thing
Well done. Yeah, that is the main thing, pleased you’re having fun and keep it up 🙂
Got 19 out of 20, not too bad for a first try. Missed one of the trivia questions and one about Dan’s teaching technique.
Well done. Great score and not to worry about not nailing them all this time. Really well done! 🙂
When you are learning something new, like a new chord change or fingerpicking pattern, should you learn it without looking straight off or do you look at your hands until you gan get it looking, and then try to do it without looking once you have it down? I’m finding it better to look first off and play it slow. Then get it up to speed. Then play it slow without looking, and then try to increase speed without looking.
Is that a good approach?
Hi Mike yeah, the approach you mention is exactly how I recommend doing it. At first, you’ll need to look and keep it slow, but then you definitely want to avoid the looking and focus more on feeling and hearing it. Good stuff. 🙂
Great classic riff! Looks easier than it is though.
Yeah, lots of fun. That’s true but a good one to have when you nail it. 🙂
HI Dan, I’m looking for the song Sound of Silence, I’ve been looking but I can’t find it.
Thanks
Hi Phillip, it’s on the “stunning songs” section of the website in the fingerpicking part. See HERE. Enjoy! 🙂
Hi Dan just watched the video about the 5 star and printed the wall chart I’m now hoping I will get my goals, The 5 star is very good and its way to achieve progress
Hi David, good stuff. Glad to hear it. You will be getting the welcome package very soon too featuring a nicely printed version of this (along with some other cool stuff!) Hope you enjoy it and let’s get you achieving all five stars! 🙂
Hi Dan what great video it was, the advice and content was very good thank you
Hi David, my pleasure, cheers, that’s great to know. Keep up the great practice. 🙂
I’m really struggling with example 3. My pinky on my left hand keeps sliding over onto the fret, leaving me with a dead note, and my right hand doesn’t seem to want to cooperate either. It’s taking me a lot longer to get this one down than it did the first two, but I’m trying to keep it slow and use the 10x method to get the progressions down. It’s a beautiful finger pattern, and I know I’ll be glad when I get it.
If you need to, isolate each hand. i.e. work on the picking pattern to get the right hand sorted, and work through the fretting hand movements in silence before putting them together. You can also even use a capo to help reduce the stretch and make it a little easier to play if you like. Keep at it you will nail it I am 100% sure. 🙂
Hi Dan As I’ve just joined the course this lesson was great and very informative right through it also helped my pinky to get it working very happy with it and will be looking again at it later on thanks
Cheers, David. Pleased to hear it. Well done applying the lesson already and keep up the great practice 🙂
I’m trying to get the Mr Tambourine man riff. I have all the notes but I am not getting the rhythm right yet. Any suggestions?
Listen to it a lot, hum the tune a lot, and slow down the recording (either this one or the original song on YouTube). Those are usually the best tips for really hearing the rhythm. Let us know how you get on. 🙂
So I tried the classical position in my practice yesterday. I went through a couple of riffs that I am working on and found that I had a harder time in that position than when I did it the way that I’m used to, i.e. with the guitar on my right knee. One riff I had real trouble with in the classical position but nailed several times in a row in the other. I don’t know if this is due to my just being used to having the guitar on my right knee or what. Should I keep trying the… Read more »
It is quite normal. A lot of it is due to muscle memory. Your hands are in a slightly different position in the classical position than the casual position. You do not have to play in the classical position, and for some the change in position (especially if you’ve played for a long time) can be very hard and possibly not worth it. I’d still say though, don’t dismiss it – you may want to try playing the easiest thing you can play in the classical position and see how that works for you – over time, you may see… Read more »
Yes, Dan. That’s good advice. I won’t totally abandon the classical position, but like you say I’ll stick with the old way for more challenging stiff and try the classical here and there for easier pieces. We’ll see how it goes.
Good stuff, Mike. That’s a good process that will serve you well. 🙂
Hi my Name is John Bartlett,
I’m a retired Fire Chief after 48 years. I love music, I have tired to learn how to play the guitar off and on for most of those years. I am now retired, I’ve decided to give it my full attention.
I want to be able to take the guitar down and actually play when someone ask me if I can play.
I hope your your class will get me to that point! I hope you are that guy Dan.
Thanks,
John
Hi John, welcome aboard. That must have been a great career! Now, it’s time for you to love playing the guitar. I am certain, if you stick with the lessons, you will love them and see some big progress. Do let us know if at any point you get stuck as I am happy to help (sometimes it’s just being pointed in the right direction for a certain lesson). Keep us posted and enjoy. Cheers! 🙂
Hello everyone my name is David Smith from Wales 84 years old with my aim is play the guitar to my family and friends I just joined Dan’s Accadamy course to help me achieve that
Hi David, thanks for the comment and welcome aboard. Delighted you are here. Let’s get you achieving your goals. Do keep us posted with how you get on. 🙂
Hi Dan,
What I really like about this lesson is that you teach us how to practice, not just what to practice. It’s something that, sadly, many teachers don’t cover. I consider the information quite valuable.
Mike
Hi Mike, thanks, yeah, sadly there’s so much surface level stuff out there that assumes students can do the basics but as we all know, that is not always the case. Very pleased the lesson was helpful and keep up the great practice. 🙂
This is really good stuff Dan. Great to get the fingers moving and to work on timing and rhythm.
Cheers, Rich, glad you like the lesson. It’s good fun this! Keep enjoying yourself. 🙂
20 out of 20, but I have been playing for a while and already knew this stuff. Looking forward to the higher levels!
Well done, that’s superb. A great start. Hope you enjoy the rest of the quizzes (no rush doing them – and I’ll be creating the rest of them soon). 🙂
Just revisited this and it was so delightful . There is a lot of good information in this little interactive story and it bears repeating. I hope you will do more of this type of thing just cuz it is a fun way of learning.
Thanks, this was such a joy to create, and although it was a bit “out there”, I’m pleased you enjoyed it and found it useful. Got to flex my story telling muscle so was a blast. Would love to do this again – even thought about turning it into a print book one day and expanding the story. 🙂
Hi, All. My name is Mike McHugh. I live in San Antonio, Texas. I’m 67 years old and have been playing guitar for about 10-15 years. I’m basically a solo acoustic musician; i.e., I play guitar and sing as a solo act. The reason I joined the academy is that, while I have basic chords (including barre chords) and strumming down, I have struggled to advance beyond this as far as technique. I have learned some fingerpicking and some basic licks and riffs but I struggle with consistency in these two areas. I still make too many mistakes playing songs… Read more »
Hi Mike, welcome aboard. We hope you love it here. Sounds like you are in the ideal place – the lessons in the In Focus course and 5-star award will help you fill in the blanks and improve the weaker areas – and each month, the new monthly lessons will give you some exciting things to play. Great selection of bands and artists you mention. Enjoy and let us know how you get on. 🙂
Correction: there is an “n” in the name of these strings. Curt Mangen. Darn word substitution! I mention these strings here as it might help someone else. Electric guitar strings come in very light gauges and I didn’t know acoustic strings could be this light.
I have used 10 gauge Elixirs.
Hoping this very light gauge strings will be my ticket to barre chords.
Hi Dan. Barre chords have always been my biggest struggle. Very difficult with small and now weak arthritic hands. I have your barre chords course. I actually found 9 gauge acoustic strings by Curt Magen. I’m going to try to get someone to help me put them on. The tone on these nine gauge may not be great but no one is going to give me an award for playing with 12’s or even 11’s. I’m just going to do what works for me. My concentration is still poor but I can play the four chords as barre chords as… Read more »
Hi Roxanne, good stuff. Don’t worry about the lesser tone on lighter strings. I don’t really buy into that when people talk about it. My reasoning is this – if lighter strings help you play noticeably better, you’ll more than make up the 5% or so difference in tone, and likely play with far more enjoyment, which in turn helps you play with more passion, and therefore better tone. Well done making the progress you mention! 🙂
I have gotten to the point where I automatically start doing the 10x method on anything I don’t get right away. I haven’t been slowing it down nearly as much as you did here but will start slowing more on harder bits. Also, this has a completely different sound slowed way down – it is a little sadder and more melancholy.
Really glad to hear it. Positive practice habits for sure! Feel free to slow it down only as much as you need to to nail it 10x in a row (it’s usually slower than we naturally want to go though). Yeah, I do love how a tempo change can add more emotion and/or bring out that emotion. 🙂
I seem to remember that there audios that I purchased to go with this course, but I can’t find them. Could you please tell me where they are?
They’re all available here – https://rockstarpublishing.co.uk/F101/ 🙂
I enjoyed this course immensely. These are songs that I can play forever, and I’m so glad to be building a repertoire of songs I can sit down and play. Thank you.
My pleasure, I’ll actually be doing an update for this course soon – I have no doubt you will love what’s coming too. 🙂
I enjoyed this very much. America the Beautiful is my favorite patriotic song, and I’m glad I can play it solo-style on my guitar. Thanks for such a simple but beautiful arrangement.
That’s great to know. Very pleased you enjoyed this – loved creating this arrangement and happy you are enjoying playing it. 🙂
Should I be getting close to perfect on each lesson before proceeding to the next one?
Ideally try and get the level 1 part to a semi comfortable level at least. If you don’t it’s not the end of the world, as the main idea is that the first time you go through the course, you just get the basics sorted – then you can go through the course again after 21 days. That’s what I recommend but of course, feel free to focus longer on each lesson if you really prefer to though. 🙂
Methodical! 🙂
120 out of 120. Fun quiz.
Great stuff, well done! 🙂
This is the end…..but this is not the end, if that makes any sense🤔. The end of 21 days of learning and fun, but with many options ahead. The timing is great for me as I’ve got a few days off work and will use these to go back to day 0, which actually seems like a long time ago. I’ll work through the course again, pulling out and highlighting the parts that need more work. You have helped with this by pulling the main patterns from the course together in one pdf 👍. I’m super excited about the bonuses… Read more »
Thanks for the comment, Dave. Really pleased you enjoyed the course and are excited for everything that lies ahead. Your comments throughout have been great, not only for me to read but for others who take and have already taken the course these past few weeks. Very pleased you enjoyed it all and keep up the great practice. Thank you too! 🙂
I decided I wanted to try some new things so I have been playing the videos on the strumming songs and riffs pages. It will let me play a few videos or the same video a few times and then it tells me I have to log in again to see a video. Exact message is “Sign in to confirm you’re not a bot, This helps protect our community. I am logged in when it tells me that but if I log out and back in, it does fix it. I think the message is actually coming from YouTube. Seems to only happen… Read more »
It was YouTube so I went to YouTube and was able to fix it.
Okay, cool, thanks for the heads up and letting us know about that – will be handy if other members come across this issue. Glad it’s sorted. 🙂
Never knew these blank sheets were offered on this site. Trying to learn one of the riffs. Went and got some blank tab sheets I had downloaded elsewhere. I have always found that writing things down helps me remember and learn them better. Happy to know that these are available!
Yeah, one of the things I should mention more for users. I will add more links to these in the DTAA members. Thanks for that. Glad you found them helpful. 🙂
This really sounds beautiful! I’ll listen over and over. My concentration, focus is poor, but I’ll start out by listening to you over and over.
Pleased to hear it. That’s okay and at least you know. Keep doing as much concentrating/focusing as you can but start with very small busts (i.e. under a minute), then take a moment or two to reset. Listening goes a long way too so keep it up. 🙂
The final day, maybe, but so much learning to go back to and drill, get right, consolidate and build on. It’s been a great three weeks which promises much more to come. And what a way to finish – riffs and pumps. I enjoyed all three, not just on their own, but looking at how similar things could be applied to different chord sequences. But there is work to do to get them “locked in”. I have a few days off next week so I’ll be going back to day 1 and reviewing the whole course before even thinking of… Read more »
Thanks, Dave. Glad you enjoyed this lesson. It’s lots of fun and the more you use them and experiment with your own ideas, the more fun you will have. Sounds like you’ve enjoyed it all so far and pleased to hear it and enjoyed your comments and positive approach to learning throughout – long may it continue. It goes such a long way on the journey! 🙂