Building a presence on social media as a guitarist can feel overwhelming — should you post technique videos, behind-the-scenes content, gear talk, or something else…
Read MoreCreative Intervallic Improvisation (Livestream)
Most players who want to sound more intervallic end up doing the same thing: grabbing random big jumps and hoping it sounds cool. It rarely…
Read MoreTom Quayle – Advanced Rhythm and Timefeel For Improvisation (Livestream)
You can have all the technique in the world, but if your internal sense of time isn’t solid, playing with other musicians will always feel…
Read MoreJoe Stump – Exploring Harmonic and Hungarian Minor (Livestream)
Harmonic minor and Hungarian minor occupy a special place in rock and metal guitar — they carry an instantly recognisable darkness and drama that natural…
Read MoreNon-Dominant Dominant Scales (Article)
Think back to the very first time you improvised over a blues. You probably reached for the minor pentatonic — even though every chord underneath…
Read MoreLegato Chromaticisms
Legato playing becomes significantly more expressive — and considerably more interesting — the moment you start incorporating chromatic notes: pitches that sit outside the scale…
Read MoreProfessional Practice and Reverse Engineering (Article)
Most guitarists practise a lot — but not many practise smart. There are two habits that quietly kill progress: unfocused, aimless noodling, and a lack…
Read MoreBeginner SWYBRYD Picking Exercises
SWYBRYD picking — the blend of sweeping and hybrid picking — opens up a whole new vocabulary of speed, fluidity, and note choice. If Marshall…
Read MoreFretboard Secrets: The 2 Point Intervallic System (Livestream)
Most fretboard systems ask you to memorise five, seven, or even more separate shapes — one for each scale degree — before you feel fluent….
Read MoreSuperimposition 101: Dominant Chordtone-Sevenths Substitution Cycle
One of the most powerful tools in jazz, blues, and fusion improvisation is superimposition — playing ideas from one harmonic context over a different chord….
Read More








