Meta description: Looking for guitar lessons electric that actually stick? Use this quiet, repeatable routine to map your fretboard, tighten your rhythm, and unlock solo ideasโplus a direct invite to a fresh lesson every Friday.
Most players binge random licks and still feel lost above the 7th fret. Letโs replace the scroll with a small practice loop that makes the neck feel familiar everywhere. You donโt need hoursโjust 10 focused minutes a day.
The 3-Part Guitar Lessons (Electric) Routine
1) Single-String Compass (Circle of 4ths)
Pick one string and travel through keys by fourths (C โ F โ Bb โ Eb โ โฆ). Play one note per beat with a metronome and say the note names as you go. Switch strings each day.
Why it works: your hands learn where the next key lives while your ear learns the way progressions often move. Youโre training direction, not just dots.
Keep it musical
- Aim for an even touch from the picking hand.
- Let notes ring slightly; donโt hurry to mute.
- Start at one note every four clicks; gradually shorten the space to one click.

๐ธ Join the Guitar Freaks Patreon!
Get SoloCraft E-Book FREE!
Join Guitar Freaks on Patreon and instantly unlock my full e-book SoloCraft & FretDeckโข Guitar Scalesโyour step-by-step guide to fretboard mastery and crafting soulful solos.
New video lesson drops every Friday so youโve always got a fresh, focused practice plan for the week.
๐ Donโt miss outโjoin now and grab your free copy!
2) Shape Shifting (Chord Form Hops)
Choose a compact, movable voicing (e.g., a small barre on the top four strings). Move that exact shape through all 12 keys by locating the correct root on either the 1st or 4th string. Listen for voice-leadingโhow inner notes shift just a fret or two while the color stays consistent.
Gotcha to remember: when your grip crosses the B string, some fingerings shift by one fret because of standard tuning. Adjust and keep the shapeโs intervals intact.
3) Interval Naming (Anchor & Locate)
Anchor one noteโtry E on the 7th fret of the 5th stringโand find its neighbors by interval: 2nds, 3rds, 4ths, 5ths, 6ths, 7ths, and the octave, all in position. Say the interval names as you land on them.
Why it works: riffs and solos are just intervals in motion. If your ear can ask for a 3rd or 6th and your hands know where it lives, your phrasing opens up immediately.
A 10-Minute Daily Plan for Guitar Lessons (Electric)
- Minutes 0โ2: Sound & Time
Clean to edge-of-breakup tone. Metronome at 60โ70 BPM. Breathe. - Minutes 2โ5: Single-String Compass
One string only. Around the 4ths you go, naming notes. - Minutes 5โ8: Shape Shifting
Move your chosen voicing through the same 12 keys. - Minutes 8โ10: Interval Naming
From your anchor E, call out 3rds โ 6ths โ 7ths โ octave.
Repeat MondayโThursday. Friday: record a one-minute clip summarizing the week. Youโll hear timing tighten and shapes lock in.
Tone Notes for Electric Players
- Pick dynamics over gain. Start clean; then add grit to feel how articulation changes.
- Neck pickup for mapping. Clearer pitch plus forgiving highs = better intonation training.
- Delay & reverb light. Theyโre spiceโuse them after you lock time.
- Wah/filters for intervals. Slow sweeps exaggerate harmonic movement and help your ear.
Micro-Prompts You Can Steal This Week
- Play the 4ths cycle on the D string. Record at 60 BPM, then again at 80 BPM.
- Move a four-string dominant-7 shell through 12 keys; keep the top note singing.
- From your E anchor, alternate M3 โ P4 โ m7 โ octaveโrepeat ascending, then descending.
- Backing track in A? Target the 3rd of each chord you pass, then decorate with minor pentatonic.
Common Pitfalls (and Fixes)
- Rushing: lengthen the gap between notes for a day. Focus on even tone, not speed.
- Neck-staring: set your eyes forward and use side dots for quick checks only.
- Losing track on the B string: stop and re-map the same idea one position higher; the tuning offset is realโembrace it.
- Over-gripping: lighten fretting pressure until buzzing appears, then add just enough to clear it.
Ready for More? Join My Weekly Guitar Lessons (Electric)
Every Friday, I post a new lesson for members: concise videos, tabs, backing tracks, and targeted prompts that build week to week. Two tiers keep it simpleโone for bite-size accountability, one for deeper study and Q&A.
- Short on time? The lessons are designed to fit inside a 10โ15 minute block.
- Want clarity? Each drop ties directly to fretboard mapping, timing, and toneโno fluff.
- Prefer results you can hear? Post your Friday clip; Iโll give specific feedback.
Join now and lock in this weekโs routine while itโs fresh.

๐ธ Join the Guitar Freaks Patreon!
Get SoloCraft E-Book FREE!
Join Guitar Freaks on Patreon and instantly unlock my full e-book SoloCraftโyour step-by-step guide to fretboard mastery and crafting soulful solos.
New video lesson drops every Friday so youโve always got a fresh, focused practice plan for the week.
๐ Donโt miss outโjoin now and grab your free copy!








