Editorial
Reviews
Jonathan
Bloomer, at
GuitarNoize.com
May, 2008
I was contacted recently by a guitarist called Jian who
wanted to bring to my attention their guitar teacher and in
particular this teacher’s guitar method book that she wrote.
I was intrigued and was put in contact with Susan Palmer, a
guitar instructor at Seattle University. Susan is very
passionate about teaching guitar which led her to create
‘The Guitar Lesson Companion’. This method book was created
to help students get more out of their lessons and provide a
structured framework that provides teachers with an outline
to expand upon and exercises that students can work through
on their own.
First of all the book is ring bound which instantly makes it
very usable, there is nothing more frustrating than trying
to play from a book that keeps closing, this book will sit
on your music stand, table, lap whatever and stay open at
the page you want. This is usually overlooked by publishers
or maybe it is more expensive to produce books this way? The
book starts with the basics of playing guitar and reminded
me of the Fred Noad classical guitar book that my teacher
used when I was starting my classical guitar studies. To
begin with there are some warm up exercises which a beginner
will probably have trouble with but it is something that
they can continually reference and use and it makes sense to
be at the start of the book. Next up Susan dives into
musical notation in relation to open strings. If you have
ever wanted to learn how to read music, even if you can
already play guitar, it is essential that take it slowly and
learn to recognise each note on the stave in relation to the
fretboard. Susan’s studies give you the opportunity to step
through the reading exercises filling in the blanks so that
you are reading the music, rather than just looking at it.
So Susan’s idea is you start out slowly, using a few notes
on the top E string to progress through basic Rhythmic
exercises. Each exercise is available on the included CD to
help you to follow the rhythmic examples to start out. After
a few pages of studies Susan moves on to the B string and so
on slowly building in rhythmic complexity and expanding your
fretboard knowledge and reading abilities until you are
reading music that covers all 6 strings in the first
position (first 3 frets and open strings). This is a great
stepping stone for learning to read music across the entire
fretboard and is the first thing you learn as a classical
guitarist. The next section of the book moves on to scales
and theory with plenty of exercises to help you learn. Susan
has written studies to take you through the Major keys
starting with G Major and then through the cycle of fifths
each using all 6 strings to play the scale, a scale pattern
and then arpeggiating the major scale to finish.
The next section of the book focuses on chords, using
diagrams and TAB for chord changing exercises and jams. Each
chord sequence either has a melody using the Major/Minor and
Pentatonic scales that you have already learned or a set of
scale diagrams that you can use to improvise over the
changes. There are diagrams showing the Major and Pentatonic
Minor scales in all 5 “box” positions and exercises to
complete to make sure you know the actually notes as well as
the scale degrees. There is also a section on the CAGED
system of movable chord shapes to help you open up even more
possibilities over the fretboard.
All in all it is a very thorough book, so who is this book
for? Well it is definitely aimed at guitar teachers and
students who are beginner to intermediate level or perhaps
the more advanced player who simply wants to learn to read
standard musical notation rather than just TAB. I can see
how teachers would benefit from having this teaching
framework to aid their own teaching syllabus and it gives
students the opportunity to complete exercises on their own
and work with the CD between lessons. Every aspect of
learning guitar is covered in a systematic but simplified
manner. What I’m saying is, don’t expect to learn entire
songs or instrumental pieces however you will have the chord
and scale vocabulary to learn your favourite songs if you
follow Susan’s method, practice and don’t try to rush
through it (easy to say I know!).
If you would like to order ‘The Guitar Lesson Companion’
head over to Lead Cat Press.
Nick Torres,
at
GuitarNoise.com
March, 2008
On the surface Susan Palmer’s “The Guitar Lesson Companion”
seems to be a throwback to the Method books of old. You know
the ones, “this is the sixth string, this note is E, it’s
played like this, here is what it looks like on the musical
staff.” And as a reward you learn to play “She’ll be coming
round the mountain” Ah, but to dismiss this gem of a book as
that beginning guitarist’s nightmare would be foolish. This
book is more of a hybrid of lesson companion, instruction
manual and method book.
This book is presented as a method book to guide teachers
and students on a logical path through the learning process.
"The Guitar Lesson Companion" isn’t really a book for
beginners to use on their own; the material needs to be
supplemented with direction and exercises from a teacher.
But what if you don’t have a teacher? Well the book does
come with a CD with tracks to supplement your learning
experience, but here’s an extraordinary value for you,
Susan has put together a companion website for the book with
video lessons that match the book. Videos are no substitute
for a teacher, but these videos with Susan, who has been
teaching guitar in Seattle, Washington for 10 years, are a
close second. If you are looking for a method book to teach
yourself to read and understand music, look no further. Be
aware that the book is written in standard notation and if
you have no intent of learning standard notation you won’t
find much use for the book.
Who is it for?
• Teachers who want a thorough method book for
their students
• Students who want to learn standard notation
• Students who want their current teacher to
take a more methodical approach to their lessons
Who isn’t it for?
• Tab readers who are happy with tab
What’s in the book?
• Standard Notation
• Major Scale Theory
• Reading studies
• Chord Changing exercises/Barre Chords/Jazzy
Barre Chords/ Chord Formulas
• CAGED
It’s a well thought out book, easy to use with the CD and an
excellent value with the videos.
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