TAC Family Forums

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  • Moose408

    Member
    November 17, 2023 at 11:18 pm

    Pretty sure everyone has been there. For me I just go back to the basics of learning the chord shapes. My goal with every chord is to be able to have my hand on my knee and then raise it up to the fretboard and have all of the fingers go down at the same time into the chord shape. The idea is to have it be muscle memory with no conscious thought.

    The steps I do

    – place my fingers into the proper chord shape and then press down and release and repeat for one minute.

    – I then practice placing a single finger down first, then the other fingers. I do that 10 times, the. I switch and use my 2nd finger first, then do my 3rd finger first. I then will try to put 2 fingers down at a time then add the others. Then finally all 3 fingers. So for a 3 finger chord I do the following patterns, 123, 213, 312, 132, 231, 321, etc.

    – I then put my hand on my knee and bring it up to the fretboard and in slow motion try to place all fingers down at once. I will do that for a minute. Then I will try doing it at full speed.

    I do this everyday for any chords I am having problems with. It took me 14 days to get the D chord and 26 days to get the C chord. I still have to go back and practice them on a regular basis.

    For a song I do a slow motion change for each chord progression. Then add strumming, once per beat, then adding the actual strumming. If I make mistakes I slow it down, as I get comfortable I speed it back up until I start making mistakes and then slow it back down.

    It takes time and I’m not where I want to be. Whenever I’m struggling it always comes back to trying to do too many things at once, so I go back to the basics and try to commit the movements to muscle memory, or a simplify it, or a slow it down.