Are you thinking
about learning how to play the guitar? Let me tell you what happened to Brian.
He?s a really hot lead guitar player in a local rock band. They are really
making an impact in the night scene around town, and there is serious talk of a
big city tour and an album soon. The guys are going so well I?d say the chances
are high some great things will happen for them over the next year. But it
wasn?t always so positive for Brian. He did a degree. It was an Arts degree. Now
an Arts degree is not generally a great choice from a career point of view.
Worse, Brian?s grades were a close scrape through at best. From an employer?s
point of view, maybe some A grades in an Arts degree would suggest there was
something up top to offset the lack of directly relevant job training. But there
was no such consolation prize for Brian. He could not find a job. The thing was,
he had spent most of his three years at university following what was going on
in the music world. His studies took second place, after listening to tracks and
chatting or reading about music most of the day, and being out around the clubs
most of the night.
Now you would
think that Brian should pursue his passion
for music, and make a career out of it. You
are quite right, of course, and that?s what
all his friends and family said too. But
there was a catch. Brian knew quite a lot
about the music scene, but he had nothing to
contribute on the stage. He had never
learned to play. Not even basic piano
lessons at school. And he was certainly no
singer. He couldn?t even read music, so
teaching it was out of the question. There
was a job going teaching English in Korea.
It was a contract for a year. Somebody gave
Brian an old guitar and some ?how to learn
to play the guitar? book to take with him,
and he plucked away in his spare time while
he was away. When he came back he knew
enough to join in with some band mates in
jamming sessions. He wasn?t very good, but
the guys were happy to have him along
because they liked hearing what he had to
say about artists and their music. He is
like a music encyclopaedia, you see.
Sometimes from his knowledge he could
suggest fresh ideas for new songs they were
working on. But he simply was not a real
guitar player. He had to face up to the
harsh truth. He was no more than a likeable
hanger-on around the bands. Nobody took him
seriously. I?m not sure how it happened, but
he then found a guitar-training course on
the internet, and started to really focus on
using it to learn how to play the guitar.
To be fair, he
had made a start while in Korea, but had
achieved little. It seemed like just a few
weeks after he started with this new course
that the results started to come. Somehow he
was able to take all that music he had been
listening to and play it himself, nearly as
well as the real thing. It was as if a
connection had been made and everything came
together. The secret seemed to be the
jamming tracks in the course, music he could
play along with as well as following the
main written and video lessons. The
multimedia and interactive participation
approach turned out to be far better for
Brian than just learning from a book. Nearly
as good as personal tuition, in fact. At
last he was becoming a real musician, a real
guitar player. Next thing he moved on from
the jamming sessions with the band to a few
filling-in gigs on the stage, then a
permanent place in a band. It was the
internet guitar-playing course that made the
difference for Brian, and transformed his
life. Now he really can live out his passion
for music and make a living through playing
his guitar. And the rest, as they say, is
history. Or maybe we should wait a few
years, and history could well have more to
say about Brian.