Interactive Guitar Clinics Product Review by Jack Loganbill

Over the years I have spent big bucks to learn how to play the guitar. I have taken guitar lessons at $20/half-hour, purchased a mountain of instruction books/methods, and more recently, I have purchased several computer-based instruction CDs.

The mountain of instruction books has not been a great help. No matter how good the instruction, unless I can see and hear it I have trouble learning it. There have been exceptions, such as the Newell Kimball course I am currently working through, but for the most part the books just have not been much help.

Guitar lessons taught by a capable teacher are essential for most of us to get started and, later, to get motivated to improve. Nothing beats a live teacher to catch your mistakes and problems.

However, taking private guitar lessons can be intimidating. I have had teachers who blazed through a run and then expected me to reproduce it. This has been a problem because I have difficulty following someone's fingers when I view them as a mirror image (face to face).

Another problem with guitar lessons is that a lot of great instruction and nuances are soon forgotten. And with the high cost of lessons, who wants to "waste" time reviewing and repeating?

I have found CD/computer-based guitar instruction to be the best fit for my personality and learning style. Not only can I view and hear the instruction, but I can replay it for eternity. All instruction and nuances are captured--nothing is lost. Plus, there is no intimidation factor, trepidation, or other phobias/emotional hang ups involved. The computer can't tell if it took me a dozen tries to learn a passage.

Lately I have started and completed several instructional CDs from RiffInteractive and GuitarConsultant. Both companies offer excellent instructional products. RiffInteractive provides a larger catalog of products than GuitarConsultant, but I prefer the look and feel of the GuitarConsultant products. Allow me to explain why....

I recently completed both GuitarConsultant's "Essential Rock Guitar Techniques" and "Powerful Modal Theory and Soloing" Interactive Guitar Clinics.

The "Essential Rock Guitar Techniques" course is beneficial for beginning to intermediate students who want to learn rock guitar techniques such as hammer-ons, pull-offs, string bending, string scraps, natural/pinch harmonics, tapping, picking techniques--in short, virtually all of the techniques a rock guitarist should/must know and would learn if they were jamming a lot with experienced players. Each technique is described with one or more screens of text and demonstrated with a large video window and clearly recorded sound. The student must read the actual instruction--it is not voiced. The screen format is very clean, easy to read, simple to navigate. All music notation and tab is displayed as very clear, easy to read graphics.

The "Powerful Modal Theory and Soloing" course is beneficial to any player of any level who wants to learn modes and soloing. It shares the same instructional and video format of the Rock Guitar Techniques course. The instructor provides modal theory (how to construct a mode scale), how to choose modes for specific chords, and so forth. The course builds the modes starting from G (G Ionian, A Dorian, B Phrygian, C Lydian, etc.) The instruction expects the student to use the modal theory to build the scales/modes for other keys. The CD also includes jam sessions in various keys/modes so you can apply the soloing techniques to the instructor’s accompaniment. Very cool.

The content of both courses is excellent. I also thought both the camera work and screen layout is quite special and unique.

Every guitar instruction video/CD I have seen was produced with the camera positioned facing the instructor. This is the "accepted" way of teaching and evidently filming, but for some of us, trying to follow the left-hand fingerings of someone sitting opposite you can be difficult.

The GuitarConsultant videos are filmed from over-the-shoulder of the instructor--in essence the same view you see when you look down at your own guitar fretboard. I immediately found that this over-the-shoulder filming technique made it easier to follow and learn the instructor's left-hand fingerings. It is simply a more natural way to learn fretboard activity.

The screen layout of the GuitarConsultant CDs is very clean, easy to navigate, and the video viewer screen resolution is much larger than those of other courses (RiffInteractive). And this is my biggest gripe of the RiffInteractive courses: the screen layout is way too complex-busy. They pack too many media players into the right-hand (main) window and squeeze the instruction and music notation into the narrow left-hand column. Second, it takes a while to figure out which media player in the right-hand window to select to view/hear a particular media object listed in the narrow left-hand window. Third, the RiffInteractive video media objects are much smaller than those of the GuitarConsultant courses.

Bottom Line

You can learn a lot from both the RiffInteractive and GuitarConsultant instructional CDs. I prefer the layout and camera work of the GuitarConsultant CDs, they just need a larger variety of CDs. RiffInteractive has a slick but over-complicated interface, but they cover a lot ground with their wide variety of courses.


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