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Finger Strength

By: David Coates

The more you follow the tips below the more strength you will build in your fingers fast. Lack of finger strength is one of the big problems with beginner’s fingers. If you are practicing and making progress quickly your fingers probably get tired rather quickly. Finger exercises will work your fingers over well and if you practice your fingers won’t get tired as quickly. Most finger exercises horrifying at all and may be tough to perform at first. Most of them are good for mental exercise as well.
Scales
The best way to get quality practice time is to exercise your scales up and down. Start with a simple major or minor scale and play it up and down without stopping for about 5 minutes. While you're playing, focus on making clear, crisp notes and keeping both hands in time. Make sure that you also focus on the feel of the scale and the sound. Make sure that our fingers are between metal frets. Keep your fingers down on the fretboard until you have to move them to a new string. When you move to a new string, don’t lift your fingers off the fretboard farther than you have to. This is a very common mistake in brass horn players and can happen to guitarists as well. Only move your fingers as far as you must so you can avoid wasting time moving your fingers farther than you have to. With ALL of these points in mind, let's move on to the next exercise.
Staircase Exercise
This is a popular John Petrucci exercise. It involves playing a staircase like pattern and inverting it and playing it again. To start on the first fret use your index finger to start and fret frets 1, 2, 3, and 4 and each finger sound be on a different string. Index finger on the E string 1st fret, Ring finger on the 2nd fret A string and so on. Pluck each string and once you get to the G invert the shape so that the index finger is on the 1st fret and the G string and pluck the strings from G down to E. After plucking the E string on the 4th fret invert the shape again and move the shape up a fret and repeat. This exercise is difficult at first but if you can get to a point where you can play this quickly and fluently you will find it a lot easier to play certain chords and even some solo lines.
Chromatic Exercises
Another great exercise is the chromatic scale, or any chromatics for that matter. Running up and down the chromatic scale can help speed, accuracy and of course finger strength. Do this often to keep your fingers synched up. And of course, if you have some favorite guitar solos with long eighth- or sixteenth-note runs, you can practice them over and over as well.

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