You can learn fundamentals that can help you develop the speed you want, and concentrating on each of these will pay-off in the long run. First of all, you want to work on your right-hand technique, your left-hand technique and recognize that practising to build up speed doesn't happen over night. Its not possible to increase speed and fluency by developing just one aspect of your playing. Also, playing fast without accuracy just sounds plain awlful. Left hand proficiency takes time to build up. You need to develop excellent finger and thumb placement, and good finger dexterity and accuracy. The two basic thumb positions used by guitar players are over the top of the fretboard, and resting behind the fretboard. Behind the neck will give you greater reach on the fretboard and better control and consistency. If you practice guitar scales and exercises fast in this beginning thumb position, you will increase your speed in time.
Placing your fingers on the neck in the right positions when you play is vital for speed. Your four fingers should be resting just above the first 4 frets until needed. Keeping your fingers there will help optimize speed when playing scales and exercises, but finger motion is a bit more tricky. Guitarists can either press the finger down when used, and leave it there until it is needed (finger anchoring), or lift each finger as the next one comes down (finger movement), for speed, finger movement is most effective. Finger accuracy involves consistently fretting a note right behind the fret, this improves dexterity. Remember to use the flat part of the finger tips and not the side of the finger. The more discipline you have, the quicker you will become.
Having just one technique down is not enough. Everything you do, from how you hold the pick, to the alternating pattern you use will all have an impact on your speed. Picking can be alternating, sweeping or circular, and should probably be acquired in that order as they increase in complexity as well as speed. One technique is not better than another, it depends on the situation.
How you hold the pick is a matter of taste, but for speed the pick needs to be almost perpendicular to the strings and only using the very tip of the pick to strike the string, in order to decrease resistance. The motion that you use is as important, and you want the motion to come entirely from the wrist for speed, although some people use wrist and elbow effectively. Always avoid using finger and thumb muscles.
To build speed you just have to practise. Set aside a regular daily or weekly time to work on exercises, scales, arpeggios etc, to build speed using these techniques. It's no use having people round; they'll get bored as this practise is very repetitive. Work with a metronome " it's essential to learn to play really fast. Start slowly and increase the speed gradually. Never speed up before you are perfectly accurate at one speed.
With these simple techniques, you can play guitar really fast in no time at all.
About the Author:








0 comments:
Post a Comment