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Hi Artie I have to agree with all the other comments I want to add a few. Sorry, I tend to write a lot.
Many people don’t think that you’ll learn much in 10 minutes and that’s not true. You’ll actually advance faster than you will if you continue to work something over and over and over. I find that even now when I’m learning or practicing something. If I sit there and try to play it multiple, multiple times I find them getting worse and worse and worse, and I get more frustrated as time goes by. The fun has just been sucked out of me. It’s better to stop long before you get to that point.
So for <font face=”inherit”>lessons, going through the lesson tutorial, you should mark it complete after you e gone through it the first time. You can continue to work on it, but the goal is to introduce you to a functional aspect of playing guitar through tools such </font>as scales, improv, and learning pieces of a song to show you how those skills transition into being used in a song. So during a lesson, give it your best go . When the video ends, mark the lesson complete. Continue practicing, if you like. I wouldn’t do more than an extra 10 minutes or so. <font face=”inherit”> Give it a good go, but don’t get hung up on it. you to give a good go, but don’t get hung up on it. Definitely move on the next day and forget about the day before. As mentioned already, you will get another go around on that lesson in a few months to see your improvement, but a particular skill can be used in multiple lessons. </font>
<font face=”inherit”>What is really interesting to observe is that the minimum 10 minutes a day done day after day allows your finger dexterity to improve, your ability to fret and transition faster through building what is called muscle memory, your guitar knowledge and vocabulary will expand, you’ll venture out to try the skills in songs and improve further. It will seem less arduous as you continue to learn. </font>
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