by 3478 on Sat Sep 13, 2008 9:43 pm
You don't say how much prior musical experience you have had. Is your ear good enough, say, for you to sing a simple song in proper rhythm and well in tune? Or are you Mr. Tin Ear?IF you have average or better musical abilities, you ought to be able to play through a very simple song (say, one with 3 fairly ordinary chords, like Louis Louie or one of Neil Young's old ballads in a matter of maybe 3 months.Getting to be a virtuoso on the instrument, however, is going to take at least four years--and that's only if you practice several hours daily.Now, thirty a day is fine to start and you will develop some facility. Best plan would be to put the guitar where you can pick it up and play it many times a day. Limit each 'practice' to no more than 10 minutes, and if you can only do 30 seconds of strumming one chord, it's helpful. Many short sessions will speed up your initial development, and you'll have less risk of developing blisters or tendinitis or other stress injuries. Each week, stretch out the time of one or two sessions by a few minutes until you can do your full session comfortably. That's the right way to build stamina.I hope you have found a professional teacher who can correct all your errors immediately. If you don't get those errors fixed now (and you WILL make some, and beginners usually aren't able to self-correct) then long-term you'll slow yourself down and maybe incur repetitive motion injuries--you don't want carpal tunnel from plucking wrong, trust me.