#2
Originally Posted by:
William MG
Hi Gary
I am 63 and started when I was 57. My ambitions were quite broad when I began and have been tempered as I grow older. I think those of us on in years, need to decide what it is that is really important to us and work to accomplish it, rather than try and "take it all on" as I did when I started.
Fundamentals are great, but they are just an intro into a very broad study. Which is my point. At 68, I will say to you what I say to a lot of people I meet in the same age group - pick what you want to accomplish now that is doable. A song. And work on that song until you can play it to a degree that people recognize it.
Choose a song you like and will enjoy playing, and make sure it is a simple open chord strummer. 4 chords tops. Once you learn 1 song and know the chords and can transition between them, the easiest next step is to ask "what other songs use these same chords?" This is the easiest way I know to build up a song list that you can play. We are not looking for perfection here, just recognition. Your playing will improve over time. Just get it the place that people say "hey I know that song".
If you really wanted to get into the weeds at 68, you could chase down theory and ask/answer "why does this song use these chords and these notes?" That will take you down a rabbit hole that can be interesting, but also time consuming. But you would gain a better understanding of why music works the way it does and if someone said to you "let's jam in F#" you would just go along with it and jam away. Or maybe write yourself a song.
From my experience with other people in our age group, we just want to play songs. And songs that everyone can learn quickly because they already know how to make some basic open chords.
Good luck
Bill