I'm an intermediate guitar player. I've been playing for a few years, mostly teaching myself with a few months of lessons in the middle. I'm not a great player, or even particularly good; but I can read tab, read music, strum chords, and play some songs. I'm not fast, but that's OK, my internal blues is slow. I know enough theory to get into trouble.
Now, someone has asked me to help him learn to play.
I'm happy to help, and I've been clear about my limitations, so he doesn't think he's getting some virtuoso instructor.
But I was wondering where to start and how fast to go. I thought I could start with the open position chords. But I think that maybe, I should really start at the major scale, because everything really comes from that.
I thought maybe:
First Lesson
- Getting to know your guitar
- Holding, fretting, picking, strumming
- The major scale
Second Lesson
- Review first lesson
- Chords
- Major Chords
- Three Little Birds
Does that seem like too much? Too little? If I could have been playing a song after my second attempt at playing, I'd have been thrilled. What would you have wanted to learn in your first lesson or two?
EDIT: With the help of the answers below, I've decided that I should have my student be able to play a song at the end of the first lesson. So I think I'll reverse the order of the lessons - to get to the good stuff early, and then come back and talk about the major scale and how everything derives from it. So the revised lesson plan looks more like this:
First Lesson
- Getting to know your guitar
- Holding, fretting, picking, strumming
- Open chords: A, D, and E
- Three Little Birds (or another easy A, D, E tune)
Second Lesson
- Review first lesson
- The Major Scale
- Chord construction
- Minors and 7ths of A, D, and E
Does this look like the first two guitar lessons you wish you'd gotten?