Can You Teach An Old Dog New Tricks
Hi Everyone,
I'm new to the forum and new to acoustic guitars. However, I am not new to this world. I'm over 55 and I am looking to learn the guitar. Any good resources for older persons who are learning? Thankfully, I do have a basic understanding of standard notation for music and tablature. I appreciate any support. Thanks in advance! |
Hi there! I'm relatively new myself, and also in my mid-50s. Although I have owned a guitar since the late 80s, I'd really spent almost no time learning to play - until last fall, that is. I started in with the free courses at JustinGuitar, and completed the Grade 2 program about 6 weeks ago. The bulk of what Justin offers is free, and, IMO, very high quality. It's a great place to start, if only because there is no cost to give it a try.
|
Thanks for the input. I've seen the Justin Guitar books and content. I'll give it a look.
|
Hi AV!
Welcome to the AGF and to the acoustic guitar world. I agree that Justin Guitar is a great place to start learning. I do have a fair number of tutorials on my YouTube channel listed below. They may be helpful to you once you get going. But my orientation is not towards those just starting out on the guitar. Justin Guitar is a good starting place. Best of luck to you. By the way, I am a little more than 20 years old than you. :) - Glenn |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
I learned by (a) opening song books with chord diagrams, (b) listening to records, and (c) getting my more guitar-proficient friends to show me thing. But really, any method will do. Most important are the three rules of learning guitar: 1. Woodshed.Drop in with questions anytime. Operators are always standing by! |
Quote:
|
I certainly hope you can teach an old dog new tricks. I'm 73 and I took up the banjo in January to fill a hole in our less than prime time country/bluegrass ensemble. So here's hoping. I think a lot of us got serious about our guitar playing at an older age and we had more free time on our hands.
|
I'm a hack so take this with a grain of salt. Use the internet and YouTube to learn how to play songs. Learn some music theory and the major and minor scales and you are there for the most part. As a person goes along many holes will be filled along the journey.
|
Quote:
So, my advice is to find a structured program. Justin Guitar has been mentioned and receives very positive reviews. Whatever you do, do not just jump around YouTube or TrueFire. You'll get lost in a hurry, and adults need the reinforcement of steady improvement. If you have to spend a little money, spent it. Guitar education is comparatively cheap. |
Quote:
|
I tell everyone to do this mainly because I learned so much from using it.
Download the free demo version of TablEdit and load some beginner tunes in it and it will teach you so much about tab and notation. It has a playback feature so you can actually hear and see the tab and standard notation as it should be played. It was an invaluable learning tool for me and I still use it for transcribing. There are literally hundreds of free tabs in every genre and style available for download in the TablEdit format. |
Well, I recommend Homespun videos (Happy Traum herd)
as well as Vestapol videos (Stefan Grossman herd). On the net, Daddystovepipe. |
Quote:
It's just that the majority of my clients are ... "mature" . It's never too late to learn stuff and have fun. |
Quote:
Most of the really good guitarists I know learned by the same method. I call it the 'song first' method. Studio ace Tim Pierce is a good example. His teacher was the legendary Steve Maase of Albuquerque, NM. The method involves taking a song you want to learn to the teacher. He shows you how to play it. At the same time he squeezes whatever background knowledge or theory you need to understand what you're doing. In other words, the song precedes the theory, not the other way around. This is a method that cannot be taught via commercial online courses because of copyright restrictions. Also, those courses can't be tailored to the needs, interests and background of the individual student. The only way you can get this kind of instruction is in person, either face-to-face or via Zoom. Even if you can only afford to see a teacher once a month, it's worth it. After you get all the basics, then you can go off on your own. In fact, good teachers encourage it. |
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 06:11 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, The Acoustic Guitar Forum