Looks great, and a great colour too
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Looks great, and a great colour too
Thanks for the positive comments guys.
I'll be starting the next project soon which will be a 50th birthday present for my father in law and will be one of the hollow body kits. I'm going to keep that one under wraps for now though don't want to give away too much at the moment.
Good idea to get others to start the teaching process as once she gains some skills and confidence that is when she may look towards having a jam with mum or dad, or both.
Parents teaching their kids anything is difficult at the best of times and it can easily take all the fun out of something that should be enjoyable.
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Very nice indeed.
I agree Waz, I reckon you've just got to keep it low pressure. I'm not much of a guitarist either, but I know enough to get them started.
I began by just teaching them a few simple melodies/bass lines from songs that they already know. Being able to play something you recognise is a good motivator. Then I don't harp on about practice, but rather when they are bored or being forced to have non-screen time I just suggest picking up the guitar for a bit. My middle daughter now knows how to read tabs and has been teaching herself what she wants to learn - which at the moment is the harry potter theme music and Rip Tide.
It's got to be fun and relate-able. When I had been playing for a couple of years as a kid I decided to try lessons again. I really wanted to learn blues and rock, but my father told the teacher I wanted to learn classical. So I spent a miserable year and half with that teacher slogging away at stuff I had zero interest in. Very nearly turned me off completely.
Yeah, that is the key, finding something they are interested in as that is a good enough motivator in itself. Force feeding knowledge never works.
As they become adolescents it gets harder as they start to challenge what they think they know vs what their parents might know. Driving lessons being a classic example where early on it is best to get professional lessons before too many bad habits have been learned and therefore harder to change later. Same csn be said for learning anything, oncluding a musical instrument.
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I'm having a little trouble with intonation and string buzz at the moment but more so the string buzz.The bridge saddles are quite high and I don't have much adjustment left in them also i have loosened the truss rod to the point where there is almost no tension on the neck and still have a very slight upward bow in the neck.
If anyone could give me some pointers on how I can correct this is be grateful.
Cheers
Russ