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Got my first lesson tonight. What should I expect?


Shire
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Afternoon all :)

Got my first lesson tonight although I've been playing for about 3 years (Guitar 6 years before that and Piano 6 years before that!) but what should I expect?

I can play quite competently, infact my band gig 3 or 4 times a month but my learning has plateaued and I can't seem to teach myself anything new. I get distracted easily from watching lessons online so I thought that 1 on 1 teaching was the way forward.

What would you experienced players suggest I learn? Most of my playing involves dancing around pentatonic scales which works quite well in my band but I think I need to learn more theory and different styles of music but I'm open to suggestions. Am I on the right path?

Cheers :)

Edited by Shire
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Yep, that'd be good Chris. Actually looking forward to it now whereas before I was expecting the worst, you know like being told your technique is rubbish etc!

Now, which bass do I take? My HW1 Precision with flats or my Musicman Sterling...

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[quote name='Shire' post='1281091' date='Jun 24 2011, 03:01 PM']....I was expecting the worst, you know like being told your technique is rubbish etc!....Now, which bass do I take? My HW1 Precision with flats or my Musicman Sterling...[/quote]
You might still be told that! I don't think "which bass to take to a lesson" is relevant at this stage.

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Give yourself to the lesson with humility. Don't make the mistake of thinking you know everything and of wanting to prove yourself the fastest gun in town - its alarmingly common. It is perfectly possible for you to have a very productiuve lesson with NO bass, never mind which one you want to take although a teacher may wish to watch you play in order to get a sense of what you are doing right and wrong. But talking is good. Listening is better.

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[quote name='Shire' post='1281036' date='Jun 24 2011, 02:30 PM']Afternoon all :)

Got my first lesson tonight although I've been playing for about 3 years (Guitar 6 years before that and Piano 6 years before that!) but what should I expect?

I can play quite competently, infact my band gig 3 or 4 times a month but my learning has plateaued and I can't seem to teach myself anything new. I get distracted easily from watching lessons online so I thought that 1 on 1 teaching was the way forward.

What would you experienced players suggest I learn? Most of my playing involves dancing around pentatonic scales which works quite well in my band but I think I need to learn more theory and different styles of music but I'm open to suggestions. Am I on the right path?

Cheers :)[/quote]

Been doing the same here since Christmas, Playing for almost 25 years with 18 almost exclusively on bass but needed a little kick up the backside. I have been doing some scales/technique and learnt to read to a basic level. I'm not going to use sight reading anytime soon but it gets me in the zone for learning and its nice to sit and learn a piece from dots. Theory books are often in notation too. I will be having some more lessons when the funds/time allow. With any kind of learning the lessons are more about finding out what to practice at home rather than coming away a better player from the lesson so as the others say don't worry about your sound or which bass to take etc.

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Now you have to tell us how you got on. I'm thinking of taking the plunge myself but the possibility of total humiliation is a bit daunting. The experience of someone in the same position would be great. (the lessons not the humiliation)

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[quote name='Phil Starr' post='1285638' date='Jun 28 2011, 08:01 PM']Now you have to tell us how you got on. I'm thinking of taking the plunge myself but the possibility of total humiliation is a bit daunting. The experience of someone in the same position would be great. (the lessons not the humiliation)[/quote]

Unless you go into the lesson with the wrong attitude you won't be humiliated (unless you choose a really bad teacher!)

Go for it!

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[quote name='Fat Rich' post='1286163' date='Jun 29 2011, 10:27 AM']Unless you go into the lesson with the wrong attitude you won't be humiliated (unless you choose a really bad teacher!)

Go for it![/quote]

Exactly. You shouldn't be humiliated at all,but you should get your arse kicked (in a good way) and learn new stuff that you can't do or don't know.

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Well I had my lesson on Sunday instead of Friday. Wasn't really a lesson, more of a chat and talk about what I wanted to get out of the lessons.

We spent 2.5 hours talking and playing over a beer. He showed me scales and some basic theory (which is what I want to learn) and we had a jam for a bit.

My homework is to practice the major and minor pentatonic scales over two octaves and see how I get on. Might sound simple to some but I don't know any theory and I'm keen to get better starting from the bottom!

The problem I have is that I find it relatively easy to follow lessons on YouTube etc but it's understanding the theory behind the songs/riffs so I can generate some better compositions of my own that I find more difficult. Overall, a good experience. I just need to find time to practice!

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