Episode
283 - Should You Practice Guitar Faster Than You Can Play?
- Podcast
- Beginner Guitar Academy
- Published
- Apr 25, 2026
- Duration seconds
- 686
- Processing state
processed- Canonical source
- https://www.bgapodcast.com/
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Summary
Learn how to use 'functional overload' to increase playing speed without sacrificing accuracy. This technique uses brief bursts of high tempo to prime your nervous system for easier execution at normal speeds.
Topics
- Guitar Technique
- Music Practice
- Muscle Memory
- Speed Training
- Functional Overload
- Music Theory
- Skill Development
Highlights
- Main idea: Functional overload involves pushing slightly past your comfort zone to force neurological adaptation
- Failure mode: Using high speeds as a primary practice method leads to sloppy timing and ingrained bad habits
- Practical takeaway: Use the 'Rule of Three'—if you make three mistakes in a row, slow down or simplify immediately
- Practical takeaway: Treat speed bursts like seasoning; sprinkle them on top of a foundation of slow, clean practice
- Implementation: Play a riff cleanly, push the tempo for 1–2 attempts, then return to the original speed to feel the ease
Chapters
1:00The Concept of Functional Overload: Introduction to the idea of practicing faster than your comfortable limit to drive speed improvements.1:50Tutorial Update: Come As You Are: Details on the re-recorded Nirvana tutorial, including new tabs and play-along tracks for all levels.4:10The Danger of Practicing Mistakes: Why playing too fast without accuracy creates permanent bad habits and how to use the Rule of Three.5:50The Science of Speed Adaptation: How pushing the tempo briefly forces the brain and fingers to process information faster, similar to interval training.6:30How to Implement Overload Training: A step-by-step guide to using speed bursts for riffs, scales, and chord changes without losing control.8:10The Weekly Practice Challenge: A simple exercise to test the overload technique on your current repertoire.9:40Building a Foundation: Final thoughts on balancing slow, clean practice with occasional speed challenges.