TIPS FOR TODAY

You might be thinking, “There’s no way I can learn this in 10 minutes.”
Good — because you’re not supposed to.

The goal isn’t to perfect the challenge in ten minutes. It’s to introduce your fingers and your brain to something new so they’ll be a little smoother the next time you sit down with a similar skill.

Motor-learning research shows that short, imperfect reps create more progress than long, grinding sessions. Ten minutes keeps your brain sharp, your hands relaxed, and the habit alive. 

And here’s the quiet superpower of the 10-minute rule: it gets you started. Most people end up playing longer because once you’re in motion, the fun takes over.

So today, just touch the new idea a few times. Let that be enough.

Ten minutes builds momentum — and momentum builds players.

YOUR SAMPLE WEEK OF TONY'S ACOUSTIC CHALLENGE

5-Day "Stop Dabbling, Start Playing Guitar" Challenge

FREE WHEN YOU JOIN TODAY

30 DAY JUMPSTART

All new members start with our 30-day jumpstart to learn the basics. It comes free with your membership when you join today. 

3-Steps to Stop Dabbling and Start Playing

Try the Free 5-Day Challenge

Get a feel for the TAC method and see what 10 minutes a day can do.

Join TAC and Build Your Foundation

Start the 30-Day Jumpstart Challenge (included when you join) to lock in the basics and build a daily habit.

Keep Going with Daily Challenges

After the 30-Day Jumpstart, keep improving—one fun, daily guitar session at a time.

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  1. The two acoustics I play the most are a Yamaha NCX 700 classical guitar and a Yamaha CG172SF flamenco guitar (love the buzz). Not the greatest guitars of those types, but they play well and and sound decent.

  2. Thanks, Tony. I’m really enjoying the first 2 challenges. I am currently playing a 1969 Martin 00-18c. CLassical/nylon strings. This guitar was a recent gift from a dear friend. I’ll need a lot more work with TAC to earn the pleasure of playing this guitar!!

  3. BreedLove Pursuit Ex Concert, bought used at Bullfrog in hometown of Corvallis. OR. She’s a beauty! I’m a beginning beginner at 59 years old. My better half and daughter surprised me with it for Christmas, so I took a beginning guitar class at the local community College this sorring and am starting to get the hang of it 🙂

  4. Epiphone PR-4E starter kit and a squier Stratocaster. I brought them in to get set up and they didn’t change much, but I do think the strings should be lower. So far I love the instruments more than I like playing them.

  5. I am in-between acoustics currently due to a disaster when moving house. It was an Epiphone Dove though and I loved it. I am doing your course using a PRS SE ‘Paul’s Guitar’ in a rather fetching shade of blue. I bought it to grow in to, like my mother did my clothing when I was a kid. I used to be a better player than I am now. I have nerve damage and need to find my mojo again.

  6. I’m using (hopefully playing one day) a Martin 000-28. A forever guitar that I bought with some money my dad left me when he passed

  7. I play a weird German guitar with a symbol and not a name on the headstock. I got it when I told a luthier friend that I was looking for aguitar with higher action for playing blues slide on for a class at music camp. It’s an oddball guitar with a really wide, heavy neck but I’ve gotten used to it. The cool thing about it is that it was signed by Willy Nelson once upon a time in its past. I do have a Takamine finger-style guitar but it’s not a great strumming guitar, so I just play “Willy” for now until I get myself a really nice one.

  8. I have trying to play my Breedlove passport 250 for tenish years, playing Dylan, Dead, Prine, and more. So far this helping me add to my development.

  9. I am trying to play a Fender Sundance I just got it in tune, so far my fingers are slow but it is moving along, I sing which helps never been able to work with music instruments only machines.

  10. Hi! My guitar is a Fender CD60 SB that we had purchased a while back for our daughter to use in a music tech class when she was in high school. My brother is a luthier, and he was able to work on it so the strings lie closer to the fretboard now and it is much easier to play. He also adjusted bridge and made a new saddle, so the entire thing is much better in tune with itself now.

  11. I have a 40+ year old Fender F-210 I bought as an end of the summer-job gift to myself while I was in college. A dreadnouight with spruce top and mahogany sides, she has always punched way above her weight. Deeply resonant and a low action, she helped me learn the beginning of Stairway and Pinball Wizard (which I’ve forgotten).

  12. Hello Tony. Today I am play a Taylor Guitars 522ce 12-fret. I love a guitar with deep rich tones and this beauty is deeply rich and a pleasure to play with it’s short scale. Silent finish on the neck, glossy body, all solid mahogany with the softest Taylor Kona leather guitar strap. I go between this and my Taylor Guitars 324ce Builder’s Edition. Love hearing the tonal differences. There’s also a difference in the feel of each one’s neck. And learning to play with the different scales of necks helps too. Course the bevels in the 324ce make her a pleasure to hold with your strumming arm and against your chest. ‘Good’ ‘Good’ ‘Good’, ‘Good Vibrations’.