PRICELESS!!!!!!!!!I am with a session guitarist colleague not long ago, at Pasadena's Guitar Sinner, and we are looking at some cymbals and a few other items for his home studio. This young guy is trying one guitar after another - mostly the top shelf (expensive) Gibson's, then onto Jackson and down the line from there. We passed by on our way to the register as an associate asked him if he could help him and his response was "I don't know what I need."
My colleague (British born) chuckled and said quietly, "Bloody lessons..."![]()
The house band for my weekly jam is like that. Someone will ask them if they know a song. The bass and guitar player will huddle together for a couple of minutes. Next thing they are teaching us the song. In five minutes they figure out a song, show the rest of us, and we are playing it. I don’t have a hope of doing that.
I have this exercise that I have been doing for many years. I put on a radio station (or these days a Pandora station) of music I am probably not going to be too familiar with and challenge myself to "learn" the song before it ends. Obviously I can't get the nuances on one play-through but usually by the second verse I have the key changes worked out and by the bridge I can anticipate where the song is going. I find that doing this is very helpful for playing with other people and learning/creating with them. One of the main things I try to do is nail the first couple of chord changes in my head before I start playing, and I can usually get it right on the first try about 75% of the time.
I do that with the Stingray blues channel on cable but most blues songs are pretty easy once you figure out the key.I have this exercise that I have been doing for many years. I put on a radio station (or these days a Pandora station) of music I am probably not going to be too familiar with and challenge myself to "learn" the song before it ends. Obviously I can't get the nuances on one play-through but usually by the second verse I have the key changes worked out and by the bridge I can anticipate where the song is going. I find that doing this is very helpful for playing with other people and learning/creating with them. One of the main things I try to do is nail the first couple of chord changes in my head before I start playing, and I can usually get it right on the first try about 75% of the time.
When I was 8 in 1973, i learned from Mel Bay Book 1. I learned "Over the meadow" and "Down the lane". It was all the hits from the 1800s. I never learned what a chord was. Within 6 months, I had enough.
When I was 13, lesson 1, I learned a few chords that were used in several songs I actually new. I continued lessons for 6 years. During that time, I changed teachers because I got too good for the first one. She couldn't teach me more complicated stuff that I wanted to learn. She was smoking hot so I forgive her. My second teacher was a working musician. We worked on classic rock songs to jazz chord progressions. That and a bit of theory gave me the foundation I needed.