Episodios

  • Too Much Advice Can Make You Worse At Guitar
    Apr 16 2026

    Send Steve a Text Message

    Your guitar playing probably doesn’t need more information. It needs less noise. We live in a world where presets, plugins, YouTube guitar lessons, short-form tips, and endless gear reviews are always one click away, and that abundance quietly steals the one thing that actually creates progress: focused practice. So we step back and get honest about why so many players feel stuck even though they “study” all the time.

    We walk through six common traps that derail a solid guitar practice routine. First is gear distraction, when a new amp modeler, pedal, or profile turns into an hour of scrolling instead of playing. Then comes YouTube overload, where you graze from video to video and never stay with a single skill long enough to own it. We also talk about having too many study materials like courses, PDFs, tabs, apps, and saved links, and how that backlog creates stress instead of clarity.

    From there, we get practical about building a guitar practice plan with intention. We cover how to choose exercises and songs that serve your goals, how fretboard visualization and the right amount of guitar theory fit in, and why device distractions sabotage even the best intentions. We also hit the “new thing” trap, when a fresh lick or scale takes over and you drop everything else that was moving you forward. The goal is simple: clarity, structure, and consistency, even if you only have 10 to 30 minutes.

    If you want help getting organized and finally making your practice time count, there’s a link to learn more about the Guitar Zoom Academy. Subscribe, share this with a guitarist who feels overwhelmed, and leave a review so more players can find a calmer way to improve.

    Thanks for being here!! I will continue to do my best to bring you the best, most informative guitar discussions to help you along your guitar journey!

    The more you share this podcast with others, the more I can continue to grow this channel and offer the best information and advice I can to you.
    Thank you!
    Steve

    Links:

    Check out the GuitarZoom Academy:
    https://academy.guitarzoom.com/

    • Steve’s Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/stinemus...
    • GuitarZoom Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/guitarz0...
    • Songs Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/GuitarSo... .
    Más Menos
    11 m
  • A Student's Experience inside the GuitarZoom Academy
    Apr 9 2026

    Send Steve a Text Message

    You can love guitar for decades and still feel like you’re standing outside the music, looking in. That’s where Cary Bynum found himself: a creative professional from Birmingham, Alabama, raised on the Beatles, the Stones, classic rock, blues, and old-school country, with a house full of guitars and a long history of stalled-out lessons.

    We talk through the pattern that kept tripping him up, from instructors who dazzled more than they guided to weekly sessions that reset to “what are we working on today?” Cary shares the moment things finally clicked when he discovered the pentatonic scale explained as a simple, repeatable pattern you can actually use. It’s a great reminder that guitar theory is only powerful when it turns into something your hands can do, right now.

    Then we get into the bigger shift: why structured online guitar lessons work best when they include real humans. Cary explains how a personalized plan, consistent feedback, and the ability to review recorded coaching sessions helped him move farther faster than years of trying alone. We also dig into the unexpected force multiplier: a supportive guitar community where beginners feel safe posting progress, advanced players stay curious, and encouragement creates momentum.

    If you’ve been stuck, overwhelmed, or tired of the YouTube rabbit hole, this conversation will help you rethink what “practice” should feel like. Subscribe, share this with a guitarist friend, and leave a review so more players can find the guidance that makes the instrument fun again.

    Thanks for being here!! I will continue to do my best to bring you the best, most informative guitar discussions to help you along your guitar journey!

    Please like, share and subscribe to get the word out about this podcast, and please check out the GuitarZoom Academy if you are ready to achieve your guitar goals!!
    GuitarZoom Homepage

    The more you share this podcast with others, the more I can continue to grow this channel and offer the best information and advice I can to you.
    Thank you!
    Steve

    Links:

    Check out the GuitarZoom Academy:
    https://academy.guitarzoom.com/

    • Steve’s Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/stinemus...
    • GuitarZoom Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/guitarz0...
    • Songs Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/GuitarSo... .
    Más Menos
    31 m
  • Levi Clay Interview - The Master of Guitar Transcription
    Apr 2 2026

    Send Steve a Text Message

    The fastest way to stall on guitar is to confuse memory with musicianship. That is where Levi takes us, starting with the honest origin story of learning guitar for the wrong reasons, then quickly finding the right ones: teaching, curiosity, and the addictive moment when a student’s “light bulb” turns on.

    We dig into what actually makes practice work. Levi explains how his Guided Practice Routines grew from years of teaching and from noticing a huge gap in modern guitar education: plenty of people say “practice these scales,” but almost nobody demonstrates how to practice in a way that keeps you engaged, tracks progress, and builds usable skills like fretboard visualization. We talk psychology, structure, and why being “results driven” does not have to mean boring or mechanical.

    Then we go deep on ear training and transcription, the craft Levi is best known for. He breaks down transcription as reading in reverse, why rhythmic notation and subdivision are the real bottleneck, and why starting simple beats chasing flashy solos. We also get practical about the tools: how he uses Transcribe for looping, why Guitar Pro is still the most learner-friendly format, and why AI cannot replace the human job of deciding where the beat lives and what a phrase means. If you want a clearer process for learning songs, writing accurate tabs, and hearing music inside a full band mix, you will leave with a plan.

    If this conversation helps you, subscribe, share it with a guitarist who feels stuck, and leave a review so more players can find it. What is one song you want to transcribe by ear this month?

    https://www.youtube.com/c/LeviClay
    https://www.fundamental-changes.com/levi-clay
    https://guidedpracticeroutines.com/

    Thanks for being here!! I will continue to do my best to bring you the best, most informative guitar discussions to help you along your guitar journey!

    Please like, share and subscribe to get the word out about this podcast, and please check out the GuitarZoom Academy if you are ready to achieve your guitar goals!!
    GuitarZoom Homepage

    The more you share this podcast with others, the more I can continue to grow this channel and offer the best information and advice I can to you.
    Thank you!
    Steve

    Links:

    Check out the GuitarZoom Academy:
    https://academy.guitarzoom.com/

    • Steve’s Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/stinemus...
    • GuitarZoom Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/guitarz0...
    • Songs Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/GuitarSo... .
    Más Menos
    44 m
  • If You’re Not Setting Deadlines, You’re Wasting Practice Time
    Mar 26 2026

    Send Steve a Text Message

    Your practice can be consistent and still feel like it’s going nowhere. When there’s no deadline, it’s easy to drift through scales, licks, and exercises without ever feeling finished, and that “unfinished” feeling quietly kills motivation. We talk about the simplest fix: give your guitar practice a real finish line, even if you don’t have a band, a gig, or a rehearsal on the calendar.

    I walk through a pressure test that makes the idea click fast: imagine getting called to learn a 30-song set list in two weeks. Suddenly you’re not casually practicing, you’re planning. You’re sorting songs by difficulty, learning structures first, deciding which riffs and fills actually matter, and adapting parts that are outside your current wheelhouse. That’s not cheating, that’s real-world musicianship: prioritizing, simplifying when needed, and delivering the song.

    From there, we turn it into a repeatable system using mock deadlines. Pick a timeframe, choose songs that are challenging but realistic, set a clear outcome (play start to finish, record yourself, memorize forms), and hold yourself accountable. I also share why “professional” isn’t about getting paid, it’s a mindset of being prepared, using your time wisely, and building a cushion so you can handle surprises with confidence.

    If you want more support, I also explain how GuitarZoom Academy works and what daily interaction and custom guidance can look like. Subscribe for more practical guitar lessons, share this with a friend who feels stuck, and leave a review with the next deadline you’re committing to.

    Thanks for being here!! I will continue to do my best to bring you the best, most informative guitar discussions to help you along your guitar journey!

    The more you share this podcast with others, the more I can continue to grow this channel and offer the best information and advice I can to you.
    Thank you!
    Steve

    Links:

    Check out the GuitarZoom Academy:
    https://academy.guitarzoom.com/

    • Steve’s Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/stinemus...
    • GuitarZoom Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/guitarz0...
    • Songs Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/GuitarSo... .
    Más Menos
    12 m
  • Why Most Practice Doesn’t Work (And How to Fix It)
    Mar 19 2026

    Send Steve a Text Message

    Noodling feels like practice until you realize you’re getting the same results month after month. We sit down and get blunt about what actually creates progress on guitar: a plan that matches your real schedule, plus the discipline to practice with intention and focus.

    We walk through how we think about a guitar practice routine when time is limited. The big shift is moving from “I should practice scales” to specific targets you can measure, like learning one scale position clearly, improving left and right hand synchronization, or fixing a weak finger with the right strength and stamina drills. We also talk about the difference between maintenance, elevation, and regression, and why doing the same comfortable stuff can keep you stuck even when you’re playing every day.

    Then we use guitar soloing and improvisation as the example framework. We start with fretboard visualization so you can actually see the scale shapes, roots, and connections, including ideas many players learn through the CAGED system. From there we build skill and navigation so your fingers can move smoothly instead of getting “boxy” and lost. Finally we make it musical: picking backing tracks in the right key and tempo, using scat singing to invent rhythms, turning grooves into phrasing, controlling dynamics and space, and adding vocal tools like bends, vibrato, slides, hammer-ons, and pull-offs so the notes sound valid to a listener.

    If you want a clearer roadmap for guitar practice, better phrasing, and more confident solos, listen now, then share it with a friend who’s stuck and leave a review. What part of your practice feels most scattered right now?

    Thanks for being here!! I will continue to do my best to bring you the best, most informative guitar discussions to help you along your guitar journey!

    The more you share this podcast with others, the more I can continue to grow this channel and offer the best information and advice I can to you.
    Thank you!
    Steve

    Links:

    Check out the GuitarZoom Academy:
    https://academy.guitarzoom.com/

    • Steve’s Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/stinemus...
    • GuitarZoom Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/guitarz0...
    • Songs Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/GuitarSo... .
    Más Menos
    23 m
  • How Great Guitar Players Use Slides (And How You Should Too)
    Mar 19 2026

    Send Steve a Text Message

    Want your solos to breathe, sing, and feel human without learning a new scale? We dive into the art of slides and show how three simple categories—intentional slides, subtle half-step drifts, and “airplane” landings—transform stiff lines into vocal phrases with character. From deciding whether to let the listener hear the start note to treating it like a fast grace note, you’ll learn how tiny choices change the mood, timing, and shape of every lick.

    We break down clear, practical examples: sliding up and down between targets, bouncing back to where you started to create tension and release, and linking slides with hammer-ons and pull-offs to escape robotic picking. Then we zoom into the details that separate pros from dabblers—micro slides that brush a blue note, controlled muting so exits sound clean, and tasteful landings that glide into a target note right on the beat. You’ll hear how larger interval slides inject drama, how subtle drifts add grit without hijacking harmony, and how to keep the feel intact across positions.

    Along the way, we talk about studying the “isms” of your favorite players and folding them into your own voice. You don’t need to copy entire solos; you can borrow the one glide, the one landing, the one micro slide that gives their lines life. With a little focused practice—listening for timing, clarity, and target notes—you’ll build a personal toolkit that works in blues, rock, pop, and beyond. By the end, you’ll know when to plant on the first note, when to leave instantly, and when to slide in or drop off to make melodies speak.

    If this inspires you to go deeper, tap the link to explore GuitarZoom Academy, subscribe for more lessons, and leave a review to tell us which slide move changed your playing the most.

    Thanks for being here!! I will continue to do my best to bring you the best, most informative guitar discussions to help you along your guitar journey!

    The more you share this podcast with others, the more I can continue to grow this channel and offer the best information and advice I can to you.
    Thank you!
    Steve

    Links:

    Check out the GuitarZoom Academy:
    https://academy.guitarzoom.com/

    • Steve’s Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/stinemus...
    • GuitarZoom Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/guitarz0...
    • Songs Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/GuitarSo... .
    Más Menos
    11 m
  • The One Guitar Pedal I Always Travel With (My Live Rig in a Backpack)
    Mar 12 2026

    Send Steve a Text Message

    Ever wish your live rig could fly under the seat and still sound huge? Steve Stein breaks down a travel-first guitar setup that trades heavy amps for a Quad Cortex without sacrificing feel, clarity, or stage confidence. We walk through why portability wins more nights than nostalgia, how a consistent four-sound layout speeds decisions, and what happens when you stop chasing the “perfect” profile and start playing more music.

    We take you step by step through a simple, reliable mapping: clean or clean-ish for shimmer, rock crunch that sits in the mix, a heavier rhythm voice for authority, and a focused, liquid lead. In hybrid mode, the top row locks in those tones while the bottom row handles a Tube Screamer boost, an always-on subtle delay for space, a bigger solo delay, and the occasional song-specific patch—for example, a tailored delay for Heaven and Hell. The result is muscle-memory switching, fewer menus, and more attention to timing, vibrato, and audience connection.

    Steve also shares why he moved from the Kemper to the Quad Cortex for flights and clinics, not because one “wins,” but because the smaller footprint fits the job. He explains how endless profile hunting wrecked practice time and how choosing a versatile commercial pack—currently an Eric Steckel set from Boutique Tones—keeps the tone family consistent across gain levels. If you’ve been debating modeler size, stage ergonomics, or how many presets you actually need, this conversation gives you a practical blueprint for getting great guitar tone through a PA or monitor with minimal fuss.

    If this helped you rethink your rig, follow the show, share it with a friend who’s drowning in presets, and leave a quick review—what’s your current portable setup and why does it work for you?

    Thanks for being here!! I will continue to do my best to bring you the best, most informative guitar discussions to help you along your guitar journey!

    The more you share this podcast with others, the more I can continue to grow this channel and offer the best information and advice I can to you.
    Thank you!
    Steve

    Links:

    Check out the GuitarZoom Academy:
    https://academy.guitarzoom.com/

    • Steve’s Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/stinemus...
    • GuitarZoom Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/guitarz0...
    • Songs Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/GuitarSo... .
    Más Menos
    9 m
  • Stop Chasing Gear, Start Making Music
    Mar 5 2026

    Send Steve a Text Message

    Feeling stuck even with endless lessons, tabs, and shiny gear at your fingertips? We dig into the surprising reason progress stalls for so many players: overload. From preset chasing to YouTube grazing, we unpack six traps that quietly drain your focus and lay out a practical framework to turn short, daily sessions into real, measurable growth.

    We start by calling out the biggest culprits—gear distraction and information bloat—and share simple ways to reduce friction: limit tone-tweaking to a scheduled window, cap your lesson sources, and keep a living “Now, Next, Later” list so today’s work is obvious. Then we build a clear practice structure that fits real life: technique for clean mechanics, fretboard fluency to connect shapes and keys, and repertoire that serves your goals instead of just your playlist. You’ll hear how to choose songs that strengthen the exact skills you’re training, and how just a few constraints can elevate phrasing, dynamics, and time feel.

    We also talk about protecting depth by shutting down device distractions and using focused, intentional minutes. The “new thing trap” gets a spotlight too—why that fresh lick feels amazing at first and how to balance it with review so older gains do not fade. By the end, you’ll have three anchors to guide every session: clarity about what you want, structure that turns goals into drills, and consistency that compounds, even when you only have 15 minutes.

    If you’re ready to trade scattered effort for steady progress, hit play, build your plan, and start seeing movement in your hands and ears. Subscribe, share this with a guitarist who needs focus, and leave a review to tell us the one change you’ll make this week.

    Thanks for being here!! I will continue to do my best to bring you the best, most informative guitar discussions to help you along your guitar journey!

    The more you share this podcast with others, the more I can continue to grow this channel and offer the best information and advice I can to you.
    Thank you!
    Steve

    Links:

    Check out the GuitarZoom Academy:
    https://academy.guitarzoom.com/

    • Steve’s Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/stinemus...
    • GuitarZoom Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/guitarz0...
    • Songs Channel → https://www.youtube.com/user/GuitarSo... .
    Más Menos
    11 m