The end of 2009 I got laid off from my job. I had managed to make it through almost that whole recession that we had back then and remain gainfully employed, but that one big client decided not to renew their contract. I don't think their decision had anything to do with the recession. Truth is, from what I followed, they decided that they could do what my company had been doing for them on their own. They spent a year trying to do so, but couldn't get the right people in the right places, made a complete mess of things, and re-hired my by-that-time-previous company about 18 months later. In fact, I figured they weren't going to get the right people in the right places because they called myself and a couple of other folks on my team and tried to hire us...for half of what we had been making. We all took our chances to find something better paying.
Neeways, I was fortunate to work my last day in the middle of December 2009 and start a new job the middle of January 2010. So I decided to spend the month working on my guitar playing. I hadn't really been playing a whole lot at the time just because of life, but knew that I wanted to try to pick up some skill and, since I had the time, actually work at it. I wanted to learn some blues, so I started looking around online for some lessons. Not in person lessons, but a book or dvd (remember those?) or something along those lines that I could do the self-paced thing with. Luckily, I stumbled across Griff Hamlin's 4 Note Solo. Now, I have no idea what the search criteria was that I entered, but it popped up, and I watched it. The concept looked super simple to follow. I had already taught myself a couple of the minor pentatonic boxes, but had never figured out what to do with them. Their practical application eluded me. Watching his video, I also thought that Griff's style of teaching was right up my alley. So I signed up for his email list, began reading the emails that he was sending, and saw him advertise his Blues Guitar Unleashed course. During my off month, I worked on the 4 note solo he had, and as soon as my new job started, I ordered his course. That's easily been one of the better musical decisions I've made. Griff's style of teaching ended up meshing with my learning style pretty well. Even with a new job, I managed to discipline myself to sit down and practice every day for a few minutes. Focusing on what was on the dvd and in the book meant that my playing actually started to move forward in ways that it hadn't since I was a kid sitting in my room for hours a day. Griff has continued to put out new course material. He has listened to those who have bought his courses, and works to fill those areas where we're saying we'd like to learn more. He is still primarily teaching around the blues and the blues form, but has branched out with other courses (theory, CAGED, modes, etc). His most recent course from just a few months ago is a course on How to Play like BB King. I've grown to appreciate Griff over the last 10 years, and, even though I've never had an in-person lesson from him (yet), I consider him my guitar teacher. I've appreciated that I have never seen him be one of those hyped up teachers that says "so this thing and you'll be Eddie Van Halen!" He has always been honest about the need for practice and lots of hard work if you're planning on getting better. I've gotten to talk with him over the years via email and a couple of workshops, and he is always encouraging even when you know that what you just played sucked monkey butt. My unbiased opinion is that Griff is a top notch teacher. My biased opinion is that he makes all other guitar teachers look like amateurs. If you've been looking for someone to jump start your guitar playing, especially if that playing revolves around the blues, my belief is that you do yourself a dis-service if you don't give Griff's courses a chance. Not only is he a great teacher, but his courses are well made (nothing amateur-hour about them), and he offers a money back guarantee. If you get into it and realize it's not for you, he gives you 90 days to let him know and he'll refund your money. As well, he has a forum where a lot of his students hang out. On that forum, you can ask questions about the courses and post audio or video of you working a lesson. The folks on there are just as encouraging as they can be. They may give an idea or two to make a lesson work better for you or to let you know that you need to keep working a technique because you don't quite have it down, but they'll still make you feel good about yourself and your playing. I believe they truly understand that music isn't a competition and that everyone's musical journey is going to be different. They're just a great bunch of gals and guys. Later on, I hope to do another post about the BGU course specifically and what it teaches and how it goes about it. Until then, trust and believe that it's a quality course that can move your playing forward if you work it.
0 Comments
Your comment will be posted after it is approved.
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorSnarf is a wannabe musician who currently resides in the great state of Texas. His wife is his favorite. He believes chocolate milk made from milk that is anything less than whole milk is basically water and deserves to be dumped down the sink so nobody has to suffer through it. He hates having to shop for clothes. But he has a thing for really cool bags, and, consequently, has more gig bags than guitars and a closet full of messenger bags and backpacks. He still misses his dog who was taken by cancer years ago. Check out his Reverb shop and see if he has any gear he's trying to get rid of. Archives
September 2023
Categories
All
|