Try this guitar challenge

STEP 1: Watch the video to learn the bite-sized piece of music
STEP 2: Click the "PLAY" tab below the video to play along with Tony until you can do it on your own.


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  1. My big goal was always to learn to play and sing at the same time. I got two songs down during Hurricane Isabel in 2003 (first one was “Time” by Tom Waits). At my peak, I could do probably 60 songs. None of them great, but I could accompany myself. Never could pick well, apart from a tiny bit of fingerpicking (Townes’s “Lungs” was my big one), pretty much a straight strummer. Left handed, play right handed, so my smart hand should be fretting but it’s clumsy on individual notes. I’ve been out for a year or two with arthritis issues and I’m working on getting back to playing.

  2. Learned basic chords at 18, LOVED playing, life happened, I’ve picked it up here and there but never progressed. I’m 48, kids are out and I can finally carve out time for me.

  3. I learned to play: “ house of the rising sun” 60 years ago and then my future wife moved in next door and I got a little side tracked. I recently started getting some free time so I started playing again and of course I’ve pretty much forgotten all I knew back then. So starting all over again in my 80’s.
    However, I saw a. Shirt the other day that says it all: Yes I’m old and I play the guitar. I’m not good at it but I enjoy it.” That pretty much says it all! Ron

  4. So I don’t read tab or music. I do the counting, but even that is going to take some doing. It’s hard to dance and chew gum at the same time. Still enjoyed the lesson and had fun. 61 years old.

  5. Thanks you, Tony. My challenge is to regain the consistency in practice I once had (between 1972 and 1980). Your style of teaching is very helpful in taking things at a pace and in a way that doesn’t stress my finger tips. ;). I will keep at it and regain and exceed the abilities that I had worked on through my high school and college years, but lost when my work life was prioritized. I am now retired at 69. Glad I kept my guitars. It is nice to relearn with a system that I trust.

  6. I’m 59. I started playing about three years ago. I watched a series of fingerpicking for beginners and had lot of fun with that. I’m several chapters in on Guitar All In One For Dummies and that has given me a good handle on most of the basic chords I see used on most of the music I enjoy listening to and playing. I’m really shy about playing in front of anyone and I need to tamp down my obsession with perfection. As noted I was confused and clumsy with the playing tonight, after I looked at the tabs, I was able to “get it” and follow along, a little. That was my little win; I see the pattern and I could do it. Note even close to perfect. I wish I had more time because it was fun and I was starting to make it work. Yay! Tomorrow, I plan on starting in the morning and I hope to come back for another round or two with the next lesson. It’s still intimidating, and I feel like I’m not as advanced as I should be. However, like I said, I’m encouraged because I’m learning the language so to speak. I’m craving more.

  7. Day 1 and my win was that I showed up. I used to have an electric guitar for my power chords. I was going to be the next great rocker 20 years ago. You probably have never heard of me.

  8. Dabbled badly as a kid, came back 40 years later during covid. Guitar kept me going, but aside from learning a few chords, and strumming to tutorials, I didn’t get far. I could mostly play through a few 3 or 4 chord songs, but poorly, and never all the way through.

    This is the first time I’ve seen alternate picking in a way that made sense, and after 3 or 4 runs through, I was able to pick down on the beats, even after the hammer where my natural inclination is to come up on the next string, rather than down on the first. 🙂

  9. Hey. I’ve been practicing for over a year and I was taking lessons until three months ago. My practice is mostly C major and B major scales with some chord work. I wanted to try your Five Day to boost my practice. Already so helpful. Thank you.

  10. I’m 65 I tried learning guitar a few years ago by watching lessons on YT, 6 months in I got fed up with trying to find things to practise so I gave up. I come across the Acoustic Challenge on FB so I’m giving it another shot.

  11. Hi Tony, I studied guitar at Chicago’s Old Town School of Folk Music for about 8 years, where I learned a variety of styles from pop to blues to celtic to jazz to Brazilian jazz. I stopped playing about fifteen years ago, with a few failed attempts over the last five years to regain what I learned. My hands have forgotten! Much of what I was playing was fingerstyle. I never really got a good feel for playing with a pick, had trouble picking the right string without missing or doubling. Today’s small win in this first lesson was holding my guitar vertically and playing the exercise without looking. Still missing but getting more comfortable. Enjoying the challenge again!

  12. This is super awesome! I’ve been playing guitar since I was 8 (25 now), but no formal technical training and have only ever played basic chords. Excited to start building my skills!

  13. I know how play my cords some bar cords the picking i can get. Just have to do it 3 or4 times trying to picking and do riffs I’m senior so not to
    Fast Roy

  14. 61 years old and recently retired. I’m determined. Have ‘dabbled’ for 10 years or so but never had real time to devote until now. So far I like your approach.

  15. I’m 73 and decided I want to learn to play. My problem is, I leveled off my left middle finger on a jointer in high school ( a looong time ago). Being flat, it has a tendency to deaden the neighboring string – especially on the lower E/A. Trying to bend my wrist more to compensate. But it only goes so far. Any suggestions would be appreciated.

  16. I’m self taught and played in the worship band at church but mostly chords and rhthym. Haven’t played since July 21 after breaking my arm! I have always wanted to get into picking and playing licks to develop my playing.
    Really enjoyed session 1!

  17. Started playing at 16 – have played off and on for 50+ years – mostly folky campfire songs. Ready to learn new things

  18. I started guitar in high school, I should say I struggled guitar in high school. I’m left hand the majority of the time due to a childhood injury. I have trouble keeping my head and fingers on the same page most of the time! I will probably re-watch the videos a lot before moving on. I’ll keep you posted, and I’m glad to be here!

  19. Hi Tony, I’ve watched you quite a bit on youtube and am excited for the challenge! I’m approaching 60 and never played instruments growing up but always enjoyed music. A couple years ago I started noodling with a ukulele cause it was easy to play anywhere. The whole time learning it I felt like I was learning half a guitar so I decided to try the other half…ha Anyway, I don’t plan on playing anywhere but home but I’m looking forward to being able to learn how to make music anyway.

  20. I’m 78. Got a guitar around age 61 and messed around with various lessons for about 9 years. Life interrupted and now I’m trying one last time.

  21. Like you, I started playing in my late teens. But I have never learned licks or scales, never tried soloing, as I was satisfied, early on, with chords and a few strumming/picking patterns … to accompany singing. I’ve gotten a bit better at what I do, but it’s so limited, so “beginner.” For what I do, I’m OK, but lesson one is new territory for me. I’m looking forward to it!

  22. I’m an advanced self taught player who’s been playing on and off for 40 years. Being more of a strummer and a singer, I haven’t always focussed on the fundamentals. Just last week I learned Friend of the Devil again, and I was surprised to see it show up as the song we are exercising! It’s never to late to get back to the fundamentals and I look forward to working through the exercises.

  23. HI Tony, Several years ago I did the TAC program and I enjoyed it. But I never wrote the song we were supposed to at the end and you kind of lost me there. And from there I didn’t really know where to go. Then my life faced many challenges and changes, the last, facing down cancer and finding out last week I’m now cancer free.
    This seems to be perhaps what was missing back then. I like the way you break this into small bites. I think it could work for me. I’m anxious to get a new start..So I’m doing this week long challenge as a first step towards that start.

  24. Have learned enough to play first position while I sing. Can play along with a group if not to advanced. Want to leave first position and learn some new things. Start some new habits.

  25. Lifetime beginner has to sum me up totally. I always loved trying to play music, my mother played piano and I had ago at that, must’ve been around 8, just not for me. Teens years, girls and football (played with the feet) and stuff stopped all the music ideas. Got my first own home and decided I loved the guitar and wanted to start so headed home to mother to beg endlessly for a guitar, not a lot of bargain brands around then so it wasn’t cheap, I’ve still got that 1993 Strat. So got some learning, got some skills and bits of songs but then moved me around the country and that dried up. Sometime after that I got more settled, another 10 years passed and I got going again. Got a teacher and making some good progress, another job move and repeat. I’m now more settled than ever and playing more and more and ready to stop dabbling.

  26. Total newbie (after maybe playing a little 50+years ago!) Trying not to get discouraged with my short fat fingers!

  27. I’ve been playing for about a year and a half. I’ve always been drawn to guitar ever since I was a kid, but since my parents weren’t wealthy, I never felt like a guitar was something I could ask for. Years later, in my 40’s, we inherited my father in law’s guitar after he passed away. I started learning on it and have really been enjoying it.

  28. I got a guitar as Christmas gift 20 years ago
    (I was 50) I took lessons and after awhile was playing covers and originals at local open mics. A dream come true I lived it. A lot of life happened. Was so happy to get divorced. Got sick, got better, closed my buisness sold my house moved. Started over at 67. Had to give up alcohol cause of meds. Started playing again did some open mics. Was tough starting new not knowing anyone. Have to own I missed the wine to calm the stage nerves. Stopped. It’s been at least 2 years. I want music back. That’s why Im here.

  29. Started in grade 4/5 learning to play the cello – bonus because I got to skip a class just to play music. Changed schools and different music program so nothing until High School…Buddy of mine (will come back to him later) said lets get a band together, we need a bass player…so yea there I was learning songs – but not music. This was good for about a 1 1/2 years then joined another band then went to university and that ended that. Took up guitar in the 90’s and mostly learned more songs..got my younger son interested (but that is a story for another day). Was in the military so postings took me here and there and brought along a cheap acoustic guitar and again – played songs without the background of why a song works…By 2014 I had a bunch of guitars including my original bass but again – trying to learn music not just songs. Decided to learn how to play jazz bass and took lessons from 2015 to 2021 and here I learned music, how the bass fit into the mix and how songs worked and why. Remember my buddy from high school – we got back together and he had a band with his brothers and needed a bass player…So I joined that band and had a lot of fun as the bass player. Life got in the way for one of the brothers so we stopped playing. Joined a few other bands, but the small group dynamics and the bs drove be away from music completely- sold everything except one bass but have not played for a year not even interested – in fact resented it. Until now…I will always be a bass player but I want to play guitar on—comfortably to play around the “camp fire” without any drama. I have rented a nice cheap guitar (I know way more about guitars than I should – insert younger son story one day) I also always wanted to compose/create music, so that is also a motivator…

  30. Another lifelong beginner here. I bought a guitar when I was 14 so I could play Simon and Garfunkel, the Beatles etc. with my friends. I played till the end of high school and stopped… for 50 years 😀 Well, I did pick up a guitar here and there, and I can still play songs like Time in a Bottle type songs, but I’ve been very inconsistent. Finally, I’m old enough (retired), and I like to get back into playing more regularly.

  31. I’ve been messing around with the guitar since I was 15. I’m now 58. I lost interest for a while when I got to working age. I found music again by learning the bagpipes. I got back into playing after getting divorced. This lesson was great, I was never great with the up and down picking. Looking forward to tomorrows lessons. Thank you very much

  32. Hi Tony,
    Life long beginner. For yrs just play the same ol riffs consisting of half a dozen or so rythem parts to various songs. However about 9 mos ago I started watching youtube guitar teachers. I did learn the rythem parts to Blackfoots “Highway Song” which I love! Can play the rythem parts to Stairway to Heaven as well. From there just basic boogie woogie, some Lynyrd Skynrd SImple Man, and others….

  33. I’ve been playing off and on since hight school. Life would get busy and I would put it down. I can play basic cords and so some stumming paters. At 62 I picked it back up again. I would like to be a real guitarest. I would like to use the guitar in my minstry as a chaplain. My insperation was a chaplain who was sitting with a hospice patiant just playing a buitful melody up and down the fret board.

  34. Hey Tony,
    I have to call myself a lifelong strummer! I’m 68 now. Started learning some chords when in my 20s. Over the years life would get in the way so I mostly played when I had opportunities here and there. I now do pretty well as a rhythm player. My desire has always been to solo songs start to finish. Since I retired 2 years ago I’ve dedicated to really learning how to play. I have bits and pieces but am struggling to put it all together. Bits and pieces from videos has not been very fruitful.
    Day 1 is the start of learning and practicing with purpose. Today has been great! Anxious about tomorrow!

  35. I tried when I was younger when I was given a guitar but did not stick with it or get past the basic stage. Stored the guitar for well over 10 years and decided now is the time. A complete newbie right now. I’m 53. I’d like to be able to play some tunes with my 88 year old father.

  36. Hey Tony,
    Life long beginner here. I have been a basic chord strummer forever, never moved on from basic rhythm. I don’t grasp the music theory stuff. I do play at church and with a group of guys on occasion.

  37. Hi Tony. I’m in the lifelong beginner category. I go hot and cold. I always got frustrated because it seemed like everyone else was getting better faster so I’d quit then pick it up again only to repeat the same cycle. Looking forward to a new journey. Thanks.

  38. Thanks. I’m another life long beginner. Started at school 45 years ago. Still playing same guitar my Mum and Dad got me for Christmas at 15. Had a big break and restarted a couple of years ago.

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