I don't know if this is the right place to post this, but I just found this website, and I have something to say. So here goes. I started playing guitar in 2003. I was 13 years old. I listened to punk rock mostly. I was starting to get into metal at the time. I discovered Waking the Fallen that same year. I Won't See You Tonight Part 2 has one of my favorite, if not my absolute favorite, guitar solos of all time. I remember going on ultimate-guitar and a couple other tab sites that I don't even think exist anymore to try and learn what I could. There were a lot of article, but not really any videos to go with them, so it was mostly me just reading it and hoping I was doing it the right way. YouTube was in it's early days. Not a ton of helpful videos. A few, though. Paul Gilbert had a DVD that I found a copy of online and downloaded. I lived in a rural area. Not a lot options for lessons; didn't really have the money for them anyway, so I ended up teaching myself for the most part. Oh, boy. Let me tell you, the bad habits that I still have almost twenty years later. Well, I'm not even sure I can fix em at this point (lol).
I wish this site existed when I started out. The amount of information on this site, all for free by the way, has almost no competition. Maybe JustinGuitar.com. I don't really think I have a point with all of this. More just speaking my mind. Good luck to everyone. And to anyone reading this that maybe thinks they're not good enough, or they wish they were as good as so-and-so, remember: it's not a competition. Just do your best, and practice things the right way. You'll be amazed. I had an art teacher in high school. He lived by two phrases. K.I.S.S. (keep it simple, stupid) and practice makes PERMANENT!! Not perfect. If you practice wrong, you'll learn bad habits, and trust me, once they're cemented into your play style, they are hard habits to break. Keep on jammin!
I wish this site existed when I started out. The amount of information on this site, all for free by the way, has almost no competition. Maybe JustinGuitar.com. I don't really think I have a point with all of this. More just speaking my mind. Good luck to everyone. And to anyone reading this that maybe thinks they're not good enough, or they wish they were as good as so-and-so, remember: it's not a competition. Just do your best, and practice things the right way. You'll be amazed. I had an art teacher in high school. He lived by two phrases. K.I.S.S. (keep it simple, stupid) and practice makes PERMANENT!! Not perfect. If you practice wrong, you'll learn bad habits, and trust me, once they're cemented into your play style, they are hard habits to break. Keep on jammin!