Knowledge Centre · Guitar Lessons

What to Expect in Your First Guitar Lesson

A practical guide to the first guitar lesson, including acoustic or electric routes, chords, rhythm, technique and realistic beginner expectations.

Short answer

The first lesson is not an audition.

A first guitar lesson usually checks the student’s musical interests, coordination, rhythm, hand position and whether acoustic or electric guitar is the right route. Beginners do not need to arrive knowing chords already.

Starting point: the tutor checks experience, confidence, musical interests and any previous learning.
Practical work: the student tries simple, manageable tasks linked to the instrument or voice.
Next step: the tutor can advise on lesson length, weekly focus and whether a regular route is suitable.
First lesson

What usually happens.

A first lesson should give the tutor enough information to understand the student and give the student a calm introduction to the subject. The aim is not to prove ability. It is to find the right starting level, pace and approach.

For children and nervous beginners, the first lesson should also help build trust. For adults or students with previous experience, it may include a more detailed check of technique, confidence, repertoire and goals.

Guitar focus

What the tutor may look at.

Setup Instrument and posture The tutor may check how the student holds the guitar, sits or stands, and whether the instrument size feels manageable.
Hands First coordination Early work may include simple fretting, picking, strumming or finger movement depending on the student’s level.
Rhythm Pulse and timing Guitar is strongly rhythm-based, so the first lesson may include clapping, counting, strumming or simple rhythmic patterns.
Style Acoustic or electric direction The tutor can consider whether the student is more motivated by songs, chords, riffs, exams or creative playing.
Lesson flow

A typical first lesson pathway.

Step 1 Goals and musical interests The tutor asks what the student wants to play and whether they are drawn to acoustic, electric or a broader guitar route.
Step 2 Basic technique check Beginners may start with posture, tuning, hand position and very simple sound production.
Step 3 First musical task The student may try a simple chord, rhythm, picking pattern or riff depending on confidence and age.
Step 4 Practice direction The tutor gives a small, realistic task so practice at home does not feel vague.
Before attending

How to prepare without overthinking it.

Students do not need to prepare a perfect performance. If they have learned before, it can help to bring or mention previous pieces, books, exam history or musical goals. Beginners can simply arrive ready to try, listen and ask questions.

Parents can help younger students by keeping the first lesson calm and practical. The student does not need to know everything before they begin; the point of lessons is to build those skills gradually.

GSofM approach

How GSofM handles the first step.

The Glasgow School of Music uses the first stage to understand the student’s level, goals and suitability for a weekly route. Where lessons are suitable and timetable availability allows, the student can then move into structured one-to-one tuition.

This approach helps avoid guessing. It also supports tutor matching, lesson length decisions and a clearer weekly learning plan.

Related routes
Lesson route Guitar Lessons Glasgow Explore one-to-one guitar lessons at GSofM. Setup Acoustic vs Electric Guitar for Beginners Compare beginner guitar routes before choosing an instrument. Structure How Lessons Work Understand trial lessons and weekly lesson structure. Beginners Beginner Music Lessons A broader route for first-time learners.
FAQs

Common questions

Do I need my own guitar for the first lesson?

It is helpful, but if you are unsure what to buy, ask the school before committing to an instrument.

Should beginners start with acoustic or electric guitar?

Both can work. The best route depends on the student’s age, musical interests, instrument setup and tutor guidance.

Will I learn a song in the first lesson?

Possibly, but the first lesson may focus more on posture, rhythm, hand position and a simple starting task.

Are guitar lessons suitable for adults?

Yes. Adults can start guitar from scratch or return after years away with a structured route.

Does the first guitar lesson include music reading?

It may include basic notation, chord symbols, tab, rhythm or listening depending on the student’s route.

Next step

Begin guitar with the right route from the start.

Whether the student is interested in acoustic guitar, electric guitar, chords, songs or structured progress, a first lesson helps set the right direction.

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