ADVERTORIAL

Guitar Made Simple

How ONE Simple Fretboard Pattern helps you...

Play Better Guitar Solos!

...without struggling with boring theory, without endless hours of practice, and without frustration, using nothing more than a simple 10-minute warm-up routine.

A new and simple fretboard pattern is helping guitar players switch off their mind, and play great solos instinctively. And it is taking the world by storm.

Championed by veteran British guitar instructor, Tom Sears, this pattern is based on the pentatonic, but focuses on a very specific set of notes within the scale, and hobbyist guitar players across America are saying it's changed everything for them.

At last! A new and different way to get better at soloing fast.

Sears says, he first discovered this pattern by watching his heroes play on TV.

"As a life-long guitar player, I struggled for years. I'd try to replicate what my heroes were doing, and I failed miserably."

"I'd watch endless videos of guys like Eric Clapton, BB King and Jimi Hendrix and I'd try to work out where I was going wrong. And one day it suddenly hit me like a ton of bricks."

"I noticed that ALL of them were using this one, small, focused pattern about 95% of the time they were playing."

"I'd go through their solos, and again and again, I'd see this one pattern was the backbone of nearly everything they were playing."

"So, I gave it a try myself, and I was blown away by the results."

"I Saw A Massive Change In My Playing Within The First Week!"

Sears says, the key to success is by "programming" this pattern into your fingers, so they know where to go instinctively.

"The reason so many guitar players struggle to play great solos, is because they're thinking too much."

"If you're counting frets and thinking about where your fingers need to go next, you're fighting a losing battle. Like Jimi Hendrix once said, "Don't use your brain to play, let your feelings guide your fingers."

So how does one do that?

Sears says, he has the answer.

"Learning scales usually takes guitar players years of practice (when they follow the traditional route), but there's a new technique called "Micro-Learning" that makes it easy."

Pioneered in England by contestants of The World Memory Championship (where entrants compete to memorise huge lists of items that seem impossible to the unenlightened), the technique is a game-changer for learning and retaining new information for the long term.

This Simple Fretboard Pattern Can Be Mastered With A Simple 10-Minute Practice Routine

It all boils down to a simple 10 minute set of drills that you run through at the the start of every practice session.

Then you simply have fun playing whatever you want from there. All you need to do, is commit to the 10 minute routine first, every time you sit down to play.

This allows you to "burn" this pattern into your mind to such a degree that your fingers instinctively know where to go, you don't even need to think about it.

And that's what all the great guitar players are doing.

This is the very opposite of the traditional approach to learning to play great solos, which often involves endless hours of mindless grind.

"From the Micro-Learning perspective, the traditional path is like trying to reach the top of the Empire State Building by taking the stairs." says Sears.

"Instead, you can take the elevator, and reach the top much faster. And that's what this new learning approach is."

"It targets the one scale pattern all the pros use to play great solos, and uses a very specific set of drills, in a very specific order, to build up the required muscle memory in your hands in the fastest way humanly possible."

"Many of my students start seeing results in just 4 days of trying this, and all it takes is 10 minutes a day."

Tom Sears, himself a huge advocate of this approach having used it to transform his own guitar playing, has put together a short video that goes in depth on this process.

Before you pick up your instrument, or take another guitar lesson, watch this video and give this a try first.

The entire process takes just 10 minutes a day.

You can watch the video at the link below.

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