By Tom Hess
Have you ever noticed that playing something clean and fast is much harder when playing an actual song compared to when you practice that same lick or solo over and over again?
When trying to increase your guitar speed, the most important thing to remember is that you must be able to use your faster speed in songs (otherwise, what is the point of learning how to increase your speed in the first place?). Few things about guitar playing are more frustrating for people than having worked so hard to acquire good technique and speed on the guitar but then not being able to use it in real life playing situations, yet most players struggle with this to some extent.
During your practice sessions (even when practicing strictly to increase your speed) think about (and practice for) ‘real life’ guitar speed challenges. Here are three very common ‘real life’ playing situations that many players typically struggle with when applying their speed to ‘real music’:
There are both easy and more advanced (though also more effective) solutions to the problems listed above. Here are 7 of the easy solutions that you can use right away to increase your ‘useable’ guitar speeds. Because of the fact that most causes of the problems guitar players have are actually mental (not physical), some of the solutions may seem to have nothing to do with 'playing guitar', but in fact they are extremely effective in many cases.
When teaching my virtuoso level students, I often spend a great deal of time helping them to avoid this problem before it occurs. The place to start is to find exactly where your mental awareness is at various speeds. This is much easier to do with an experienced teacher, but you can try this on your own.
Play something at about 1/2 of your top lead guitar playing speed, notice how consciously ‘aware’ you are of all the issues mentioned above as you play. Of course when you test yourself, the results won’t be truly accurate because you are focusing on doing this little test and not playing in the way you normally do, that is why having a guitar teacher to test you and gauge your processing is much better to get real results from the testing. If you notice any issues with your mind’s ability to ‘analyze’ the details of your playing, then write down what the issue was AND the speed you played at (use a metronome for this).
If you aren’t sure if your mental analysis is accurate, record yourself and then listen back to your recording. When you listen back to the recording, do you now hear things that you didn’t hear before, when you were playing? If yes, you have identified a mental processing issue that needs to be fixed. If no, then increase the speed on the metronome gradually until you do find a mental processing problem.
Once you discover a mental processing problem, you need to slow down the speed on the metronome and spend some time practicing at speeds where you can fully hear (and think about) what is really going on in your guitar playing. The goal is to shorten the time it takes for your brain to analyze what is going on and then make the necessary adjustments in your physical guitar playing ‘in real time’ (at full speed). As you play, focus on the problem you have identified and try to make the adjustments needed to fix it while playing (without stopping).
The second possible cause to the rhythm/lead guitar switching problem is a mental one. There is not enough space in an article to go into great detail about exactly why this happens in guitar players’ minds, so let’s just get to one of the possible solutions. Simply dedicate some daily practice time (maybe 10-15 minutes) to switching back and forth between lead and rhythm. In a 10-minute period you can make this change back and forth at least 500 times.
To get started to solve this problem, spend some practice time going back and forth between playing ‘nothing’ and playing your first high speed guitar lick. It’s one thing to practice the same lick over and over again, but that doesn’t help you to ‘use’ the speed you have developed if you need to play that same fast lick when there is nothing played before it in an actual song.
To get more guidance on how to practice to build your guitar speed, download this free guitar practice ebook.
About the author: Tom Hess is a professional guitarist and teaches electric guitar lessons online.
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