Skip to lesson content

When you're playing, your brain is busy. Fretting hand, picking hand, rhythm, memory - attention is split in four directions. Your ear fills gaps with what you expected to hear. A recording doesn't do that. It captures what came out of the guitar, not what you meant to play.

This is why players who record themselves regularly improve faster than those who don't. Not because recording is magic, but because it replaces guesswork with data.

Gear: keep it simple

A phone propped against a book on a desk is enough. Built-in laptop mics work. The Voice Memos app on iOS, or any free recorder on Android, is sufficient for diagnostic recording.

Place the mic about 50-80 cm from the guitar body, angled slightly toward the soundhole without pointing directly at it. Too close and you get excessive bass and pick noise. Too far and the room takes over. One test recording and a quick listen tells you if the placement is working.

Pick noise is the first thing recordings expose. If you hear a harsh click on every downstroke, your pick angle is too steep or your grip is too tight. You won't notice this while playing - but the mic will.

How to review what you recorded

Two passes. First pass, listen all the way through without stopping. Form an impression: did the tempo hold? Did anything fall apart noticeably?

Second pass, pick one question before pressing play. One only.

  • Timing - are you rushing chord changes or dragging when you ease up?
  • Note clarity - are barre chords ringing fully, or are some strings muted or buzzing?
  • Transitions - where are the hesitations? Which chord pair causes the gap?
  • Palm muting - is the mute consistent, or does it cut in and out unpredictably?
  • Dynamics - is every stroke identical in volume, or do accents land where you intended?

String buzz from barre shapes, unwanted open strings ringing out, pick noise on fast passages - these are guitar-specific problems that are nearly impossible to catch in real time. The recording catches all of them.

Notes that actually help

After listening, write one specific observation. Not "barre chords need work" - that's useless. "F barre buzzes on the B string in bar 3 of the verse" tells you exactly where to put your hand and what to fix.

Specific notes produce specific practice. Specific practice produces results.

When and how often

Record at the end of every practice session, or whenever you think you've nailed a section. Keep it short - two to three minutes is enough. One long monthly recording is almost worthless compared to brief daily or weekly snapshots.

After four or five sessions of recording the same piece, compare the oldest and newest clip. The difference there is a more honest measure of progress than anything else.

Practice exercise

Record yourself playing a chord progression you know well. Listen back with one question: are the barre chords ringing clean on every string? Write down which chord is the problem and which string is muting. Practice that chord for five minutes, then record again and compare.

Questions and Answers

How can recording yourself help you improve on guitar?
Recording captures what you actually played rather than what you intended to play. It reveals pick noise, string buzz from barre shapes, timing inconsistencies, and hesitations between chord changes - all of which are difficult to notice while actively playing. Listening back gives you an objective view of what needs work.
What should you listen for when reviewing a practice recording?
Focus on one area per listening session: timing (rushing or dragging), note clarity (barre chords fully ringing vs. muted strings), chord transitions (where hesitations occur), palm muting consistency, or dynamics. Guitar-specific issues like pick noise and unwanted string buzz also become clearly audible on even a simple phone recording.

Next up: Playing with Others - how to lock in with another player, listen while you play, and hold your part when the tempo isn't set by you alone.