This is the outline of a course that I’ve wanted to put together for several years. I haven’t had time to produce the videos for this yet, so it may be slightly difficult to work your way through this material without those videos to assist you. I’m only putting this online now because I’m still working on fine-tuning the outline and content. I’ll be filming and editing the videos in the first two weeks of December 2026, so if you’re interested in this course, check back then. I guess some of the information might still be useful to some people before the videos are online though. After all, I learned to play without videos or a teacher.
If you find this page to be useful, please send a link to friends! Remember, everything that I'll be teaching you here is completely free.
In this course, I'll have some assistance from a good friend of mine, Nick Chase. Nick and I have played guitar together in a couple of bands.
Ac/dc: Family Jewels
This course is not about DJ’ing or music production, even though most people know me for those skills. However, I feel that music producers should know how to play an instrument. Guitar and piano are probably the two most useful and conventional instruments. Incidentally, I’ll be doing a piano series someday too. In fact, I'll probably also be doing a bass guitar and a drums series too.
There are lots of other guitar courses out there, but this is designed specifically for my YouTube channel subscribers. I’m going to take a slightly different approach than with some of the other courses that are out there (well, I think I will – I haven’t really looked at any of those courses, so I might be wrong).
For those of you who are not excited about learning music theory, don’t worry! I’ll teach almost all of this course without teaching you any substantial theory, for the beginner section anyway. Do I know a lot of music theory? Yes, because I’m a classical pianist. However, even though I can play guitar fairly comfortably (I used to play in a band), I don’t even know the notes on the guitar except for the two E strings (which are luckily, the same). So if I can do what I can without knowing note names, I think I can teach you how to get hands-on as quickly as possible. You will, however, need to know a fair amount of theory (which I’ll teach) once we start into the Intermediate Guitar series.
Mto 19.1: Hesselink, Radiohead's “pyramid Song”
Here’s what you need to put into this: Twenty minutes of practice per day for a month. You will have sore fingers, there’s absolutely no way around it. When I stop playing for several months, I also lose the callouses from the tips of my fingers, so when I start playing again, I go through the same pain that everyone else does.
When I say to do twenty minutes per day for a month, I mean that as a bare minimum to start building up some decent callouses. If you’re serious about trying to learn that quickly, you can, but I’d recommend trying to spend as much as forty minutes per day practicing, or whatever you can handle until you’ve built up callouses on your fingers.
As a beginner player, you are not going to be able to control your fingers. I had the same problem when I learned to play. I also had the same problem when I learned to play piano, and learned to type. Face it, we all have this problem when we’re learning. All I can say is that it gets easier. Much easier.
Rm Pro Tremolo Question
There are just under two dozen lessons in this series. You can do the first seven lessons all in one sitting, because you don’t start learning to play chords until the seventh lesson. After that, you can possibly do one lesson per day, but for many of you, I don’t think your fingers and memory will be able to handle that pace. Practice every day, and do your best. I’ve structured these lessons so it’s easy to come back to individual lessons several times, until you feel comfortable to move on. I’d spread these lessons out over the course of about a month, and repeat some lessons. If you end up working at the course every day, you can get away with taking two days per chord, and you’ll still be through the whole series in a month.
As I just mentioned, the first six videos don’t involve playing the guitar, so you can do them all in one sitting if you want. I just separated them because you might want to come back to refer to a couple of these later, such as the lesson about tuning a guitar.
YouTube doesn’t have annotations on mobile phones, so any notes that I want to add after the videos have been produced will also be put in the text descriptions under videos. I will also put a clickable index in each text description. That’s basically this page. You should bookmark this page!
Tedeschi Trucks Band's I Am The Moon
Once I get to the point of starting to teach you some chords, I’ll also teach you at least two songs to accompany each new chord, to give you more practice material. For copyright reasons, I’m not going to include those songs in the same videos that I use to teach the chords, in case any of the sample songs get blacked out in certain countries for copyright reasons. So to find the practice songs, you’ll have to look for the links in the text descriptions accompanying the videos (or look for the links on this page).
I’ll discuss the differences between electric and acoustic guitars. I’ll discuss pickups, and plugging the guitar into an amplifier, if your guitar is capable of that.
In this video, I’ll talk about how you should strum your guitar. I’ll also teach you two or three very basic patterns.
Ac Dc: Family Jewels
You’ll want to know about differences between strumming up or down, how to emphasize notes, how to varying the timing of your strumming, and so on. But I’ll keep it simple.
There are different ways to turn your guitar. I’ll show you three common methods: with the help of a piano, by using a guitar tuner or a tuning app, or from listening to recorded music.

I’ll also talk about how to tune from relative strings (once you have your bottom E string tuned), versus a method where you tune each string individually (this is common when tuning to a piano or a tuner).
Gitarre: Lagerfeueranhang 5
I’ll talk very briefly about alternate tunings, and also about the difference in tuning between an open string and a string which is being pressed down, but I won’t go into depth about these things. Just a very quick mention so you’re aware that there are things to learn about these topics.
It may be easier for you to string your guitar if you have a string winder tool. These are plastic and only cost a few dollars.
There are different types of strings, and I don’t just mean electric versus acoustic. I’ll teach you about some other differences, such as wound versus unwound strings, the thickness of strings, and how different compositions (metal) affect your playing.
Key To The Highway
I said that I wasn’t going to teach you much theory, but this will be the one video that you may hate. Don’t worry, I’ll try to keep this from getting complicated.

In music, the notes of a guitar match the letters of the alphabet, from A up to G. After that, they repeat. If you pick any specific note, there is often more than one place on the guitar that can produced that specific note (although never in two spots on the same string).
Two notes that have the same name are either the exact same pitch (frequency), or they are separated by an octave. An octave means a doubling of the pitch frequency, but the two notes will sound good together.
Magic By The Cars
Some chords have different “emotional feeling” to them. I’ll explain the emotional difference between major versus minor keys, although I won’t delve into intervals in any depth.
Major chords are the default chord. Major chords usually don’t have anything after them. If the word “Major” does happen to get written out (usually for clarity), it is capitalized.
If a chord is minor, the fact that it’s minor must always be specified to ensure that people don’t assume a chord is major. If a minor chord has the full word, “minor, ” it is all lower case. Sometimes a symbol is used instead. The symbol is a lowercase letter “m.” As an example, an E minor chord could be written out as “E minor” or “Em.”

Emo Lovers Unite For Yellowcard In San Diego
Although a “triad” means a group of three notes, if you repeat a note, it doesn’t count as an “extra” note. Interestingly, even though all the chords that I’m going to teach you in this series may have as many as six strings playing at once, they’re all considered to be triads. None of them have more than three “letters”
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