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Start here!
Welcome to Bluegrass Guitar Dads. Glad you’re here. To get things rolling (and help me shape useful content for the group), please take a minute to introduce yourself in the comments below: 1. Instrument(s) What are you playing these days? 2. One bluegrass player you love Could be a legend or a current inspiration. 3. What you want to improve right now Timing, rhythm, flatpicking, backup, repertoire, confidence, etc. This doesn’t need to be polished, just honest. We’re all balancing music, work, and family, and this is a supportive space to keep the music moving. Looking forward to picking with you. Trevor
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Dividing Time & Building Stamina
This video introduces the core idea behind our 15-minute flatpick workout: learning to divide time cleanly and build right-hand stamina without tension. We walk through: - Counting and subdividing with a metronome - Quarter notes, eighths, triplets, and sixteenths - How stamina is built by staying relaxed, not forcing speed If you’ve ever felt your timing fall apart as tempos go up, this is the work that fixes it. Watch the video, try the drill at 100 BPM, and post a comment if: - A certain subdivision feels harder than expected - You notice tension creeping in - You have a question about counting or pick motion This is foundational stuff. Everything else builds on it.
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On teachers and learning paths
One thing I’ve learned the hard way is how important good teachers are. Bluegrass is an oral tradition. Most of us don’t figure this stuff out alone. We borrow phrasing, timing, and feel from people who can clearly explain what’s going on and show us how to practice it. For me, Music With Ryan and Ryan Kimm’s approach really clicked. I want to be very clear that I am not paid by him, I do not receive any benefits, and I have no affiliation beyond being a student. His method just worked for my brain, especially learning simple songs note-for-note before trying to improvise. That said, there is no single right teacher or path. I would love to hear from you all. Who has helped you make progress? What courses, YouTube channels, books, or teachers have really worked for you? Please share links and experiences. I’m genuinely excited to see what has helped other people succeed.
Confession of a pick convert: why I have three BlueChips
For a long time I didn’t think very much about picks. I’d grab whatever felt decent, play, and move on. That changed once I started practicing seriously. At some point it hit me: the pick is the tool that actually touches the strings more than anything else. My hands, my guitar, my posture. But the single piece of gear in constant contact with my hand is the pick. That realization pushed me to stop treating it like an afterthought. That’s how I ended up with three BlueChip TP48s. One lives on my house keys, one on my RV keys, and one tucked into the little watch pocket of my jeans. If a guitar is around, a BlueChip is never far away. Before BlueChip, I used every gauge of nylon Dunlop right through the Primetones. They’re genuinely good picks, especially if you’re on a budget, and I still recommend them to anyone who doesn't want to spend a small fortune on hi-tech polymers. But once I tried a BlueChip, I couldn’t go back. The feel is smoother, the attack is cleaner, and I just play with more confidence. For me, they're worth the money. If you’re thinking about one, a pro tip: if you can wait until the holidays, BlueChip often does free laser engraving at Christmas, and sometimes they’ll even throw in a small leather pouch and free shipping. The downside is that demand is intense right now. Between Billy Strings and Bryan Sutton making the TP-48 picks famous, custom orders are often delayed or paused entirely. One more wrinkle in my pick story. I do own a genuine tortoise shell pick, and I use it exclusively when I play these days. There is something subtly different about the feel that I genuinely love. But I want to be very clear about this: I did not buy it. I found it in an old guitar case at my former guitar shop and decided to put it to work rather than let it sit in a drawer. I'll use it until I lose it or it breaks. I’m firmly opposed to the modern trade in endangered tortoise shell. If you’re going to use one, make sure it is a documented antique and legally sourced. Please.
Favorite guitars. One true love, or many flavors?
I’ve been thinking about this lately. My daughter asked me how many guitars I have. It was fun coming up with the answer. Some of us seem to be “one guitar people.” We find our instrument early on, learn it inside out, and ride with it for decades. Same neck, same sound, same feel... it's part of our identity. Other folks are more like a coffee menu. A dreadnought for bluegrass. A smaller body for late-night practice. Maybe a resonator when the mood gets swampy, or an electric for recording. Different tools for different jobs. I’m curious where you land. If you have a main one, what makes it the guitar for you? Tone, feel, history, or something else? If you have several, how do you think about their “roles” in your playing? No right answer here. Just good conversation for guitar people who also have real lives.
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