Finger fluency is one of the main virtues of a musician and an indicator of his experience and skill. The development of this quality takes place constantly, from the first days of training in the performing arts. But a real high-speed game can only be learned by performing special pieces, which for their methodological significance are called etudes - from the French "lesson", "exercise".
Instructions
Step 1
Etudes are written for any instrument and any skill level. Sketches for beginners do not exceed pages in volume, and the shortest lengths in them are quarters, less often eighths. The masters play sketches on 4-6 pages, the duration in them is 32nd and 64th. Before choosing a repertoire for the development of speed, determine your level. If you take a piece that is too difficult at once, you will injure your hands, and too simple an exercise will not be beneficial.
Step 2
Classical etudes for six-string guitar by guitarists Sor and Carcassi. Other composers who have left their mark on this genre of guitar music: Villa Lobos, Paganini, Costa, Ferre. Purchase a collection of one of these authors, but first look through it in the store with your eyes, estimate the level of complexity of the works.
Step 3
Start to disassemble the first sketch you like, preferably a small one (page or two). Play one line at a time every day. Play at a slow pace at first in order to have time to play all the notes, gradually increase to the original, then increase a little more (this reserve will come in handy if you will perform an etude on stage: you can safely play at the original tempo if in a calm atmosphere, they played a little faster). At the end of the session, play again at a slow pace.
Step 4
Memorize notes not with your fingers, but with your head. Keep the graphic in your mind before your eyes, even when you learn the sketch. Gradually increase the repertoire of fast pieces, but dilute with other genres: accompaniment, polyphony, large form, pieces.