To help tailor this technical advice to your current routine, tell me:
It is more of a reference book than a step-by-step method; beginners might find it overwhelming without a teacher's guidance on which exercises to prioritize. To help tailor this technical advice to your
Place the thumb behind the neck, roughly opposite the second finger. Avoid squeezing the neck; instead, use the weight of your arm to pull the strings into the fretboard. Track your metronome speeds inside your physical notebook
Track your metronome speeds inside your physical notebook or digital PDF annotations. Watching your clean tracking speed jump from 70 BPM to 95 BPM over a month provides undeniable proof of concept. Mauro Giuliani’s 120 Arpeggio Studies Practice using i-m
Apply varied rhythmic profiles, such as triplets, dotted rhythms, and syncopation, to build rhythmic independence. Mauro Giuliani’s 120 Arpeggio Studies
Practice using i-m (index and middle) and m-a (middle and ring) alternation. Always use a metronome to ensure your rhythmic subdivisions are perfectly even. 2. Arpeggios: Building Right-Hand Independence Arpeggios develop the "engine" of your playing. The Goal: Consistency in volume across all strings.
by Bradford Werner, here is the "story" of building a professional technique from the ground up. Phase 1: The Foundation (Open Strings & Alignment) The story begins with the right hand