
Any assertions that specific techniques work are just opinions that you should listen to, but not treat as gospel. The real way to learn anything is to constantly monitor yourself and intelligently pick your targets by poking holes in your weaknesses and fight them. To be fair, I would put synthesia in sheet music mode and cop that hit. If you're moving forward with synthesia, you're moving forward. A lot of people have exactly one person's experience and are keen to assert that based on what they've experienced (and reinforced by reading other 1 opinion people), that there is a specific way to learn something. I'd be careful who you listen to as far as the right way to learn is. My goal is a bit more grandiose - I want to be able to play everything, so I don't focus too heavily on playing specific songs. Other people would have perfected many songs in the time I've been playing. The only songs I'm overly interested in playing to 100% fruition are the hardest songs. I do not ever spend much time perfecting any particular song because I am more actively seeking out things I can't play rather than working on playing. It's a constant numerical (and audible) improvement. There is zero doubt that progress is being made though. Most of my songs are at 90%+ accuracy but there's a lot more work to be done. I have 1000 tracks and I can sight read any song that flies at me in rocksmith in real time. I had played a bit of bass, but I can confirm I was completely useless at chords ant whatnot.Ĭan I reliably play songs with this? I'm not sure I can answer that. That will be the new way I play Rocksmith. Good thing the new NonStop Play is so good. I mostly sorted by Mastery and tried to improve my numbers.

But this will change how I play Rocksmith. No, I did not know how to play guitar prior to playing rocksmith. I understand I don't have a right to complain, because they have no obligation to support CDLC.
