How
Practicing Scales On Guitar Improves Your Technique: When you work on scales with the
goal of improving your guitar technique, it is important to focus on very
specific elements that make such an improvement in your technique possible:
economy of motion, tension control, 2 hand coordination and articulation of the
pick. Notice the important difference between practicing scales while
concentrating on specific elements of your guitar technique vs. Monotonous
repetition of finger motions that most guitarists go through. It is this difference
that allows the mind to tell your hands what to do in order to learn to play
guitar at a higher level.
How
Practicing Scales On Guitar Makes You Better At Improvising: When it comes to improvising,
playing scales on guitar is obviously only one of many elements that needs to
be practiced, however in order to improvise freely and creatively, you MUST go
through the process of becoming accurate at playing the scales needed for your
musical style. One practice method to achieve this goal requires you to work on
mastering each shape of a particular scale individually by improvising ONLY in
that scale shape over a backing track (while switching to a different shape of
the same scale every few minutes). There are many more possible ways of using
scales to grow as an improviser, but the idea is to illustrate how your
attention is being directed on a very precise goal (when practicing scales to
improve as a soloist) versus working on scales to improve other aspects of your
guitar playing.
How
Practicing Scales On Guitar Helps You Learn The Guitar Neck Better: When you work on learning the guitar
neck with scales, you need to pay more attention to how the scale shapes form
visual patterns that occur all over the fretboard. In this case, less attention
is needed to be paid to what your hands are doing and all efforts must be
directed on memorizing how every scale pattern will look in your mind before
your hands touch the guitar. When you focus in this way, it will be impossible
for your fingers to mindlessly go through the motions of practicing and your
fretboard visualization skills will have no choice but to improve.
How
Practicing Scales On Guitar Will Make You A More Creative Musician: One effective way to become a more
creative guitar player when practicing scales is to work on coming up with new
sequences and phrases from scale shapes that you are practicing. Instead of
merely playing the notes of the scale up and down in a boring way, this will
require your mind to think in innovative ways that you don't normally do when
doing regular guitar practicing. This is yet another way of how scales can be
used to grow a certain element of your musical skills by directing your
attention to a very specific mini goal. So far in this article I have given you
examples of how you can use a single guitar exercise to grow in a variety of
elements of your musicianship. By choosing where to focus your attention in a
guitar practice session, you can achieve a variety of objectives. Its important
to mention that these general approaches can be used with ANY exercise that you
practice on guitar (and aren't limited to only scales) in order to refine any
musical skill that you think of. The more you do this, the more you will
realize that your guitar playing progress isn't affected by "the
exercises" you practice on guitar, but rather by HOW you practice whatever
it is you are working on. In order to get the most out of this approach to
practicing guitar, divide your attention to working on a unique "daily
goal" during each day of practicing. This will enable you to cover
everything without trying to cram too many things into each guitar practice
session. For instance, set a specific goal for an item such as scales for
Monday's practice session, then work on scales with a different focus on
Tuesday and continue in this way through the week. One last point I want to
make about this general approach to practicing guitar is that having a lot of
exercises is NOT a bad thing in and of itself. In fact, multiple exercises are
often necessary for more productive practicing, but it is still critical for
you to learn how to get maximum value from only a single practice item. After
you begin to practice guitar with this mindset, your rate of progress will
skyrocket and you will amaze yourself by how much faster you will move towards
your guitar playing goals.
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