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Hello friends,

Welcome back to Swiftlessons for another guitar warm-up session! Today I'll be showing you three powerful exercises for developing your speed, accuracy, alternate picking, timing and finger-dexterity all at once! Begin each exercise at a slow tempo, gradually increasing BPM's as you gain proficiency. Let's get started!

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Three Beginner Guitar Exercises for Speed & Dexterity

Gain access to TABS, exclusive tutorials and other awesome supporter perks at http://www.patreon.com/swiftlessons PDF Study Guide at: https://www.patreon.com/posts/20067168 Hello friends, Welcome back to Swiftlessons for another guitar warm-up session! Today I'll be showing you three powerful exercises for developing your speed, accuracy, alternate picking, timing and finger-dexterity all at once! Begin each exercise at a slow tempo, gradually increasing BPM's as you gain proficiency. Let's get started! ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Links: Facebook: http://facebook.com/swiftguitarlessons Instagram: https://instagram.com/swiftguitarlessons Twitter: https://twitter.com/swiftlessons Request a song at: http://Swiftguitar.com/request

Comments

swiftlessons

Hey friends, I'm going to make this lesson open to the public. If you have the time, I'd greatly appreciate it if you would share on social media. Thanks so much!

Anonymous

This may be a stupid question but~ why is Bflat not called A sharp, and the same with Eflat not being called D sharp? Or, for that matter, why is Csharp not called Dflat? Is it just something that has stuck or is there reason to it?

swiftlessons

Hey that’s a good question. The answer is that they are called by both names, depending on the musical situation. There’s a thing called “common musical alphabet” which is what I’m using here, but in actual performance, you would say “sharp” when ascending and “flat” when descending.

Anonymous

Ahah! There is method to the madness! Thanks for the reply. It's kind of bizarre to think of me posting a question from a chilly Sydney winter's day and you short sleeved in Philadelphia sending back an instant response...!

swiftlessons

We certainly do live in remarkable times Stephen. Being able to share these lessons and communicate with people all over the world is an amazing gift!

Anonymous

Hi Rob

Anonymous

I like that you asked to add a different rythmn. I'd been doing that out of boredom. So, I'll pay attention as to doing the syncopation correctly.

trizinc

Nice music lessons!

Anonymous

Cool lesson

Anonymous

Hi Rob, thank you for this exercise, very useful for me as a beginner. One question about the third exercise: Would you do it only on the e string or on every string, like the ones before?