What are the problems in teaching guitar via Skype?





.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty{
margin-bottom:0;
}








23















I have taught guitar one-to-one for several years and would now like to start offering lessons via Skype.



What are the major problems in teaching guitar by Skype and can they be overcome? Are there any advantages?










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    Can it just be the same? Tech is pretty smooth nowadays

    – Dr. Shmuel
    May 27 at 14:06






  • 1





    @Dr.Shmuel Tech is still nowhere near being in the same room as another person, especially with "consumer" grade tools like Skype on a laptop.

    – JPhi1618
    May 30 at 18:51


















23















I have taught guitar one-to-one for several years and would now like to start offering lessons via Skype.



What are the major problems in teaching guitar by Skype and can they be overcome? Are there any advantages?










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    Can it just be the same? Tech is pretty smooth nowadays

    – Dr. Shmuel
    May 27 at 14:06






  • 1





    @Dr.Shmuel Tech is still nowhere near being in the same room as another person, especially with "consumer" grade tools like Skype on a laptop.

    – JPhi1618
    May 30 at 18:51














23












23








23


4






I have taught guitar one-to-one for several years and would now like to start offering lessons via Skype.



What are the major problems in teaching guitar by Skype and can they be overcome? Are there any advantages?










share|improve this question














I have taught guitar one-to-one for several years and would now like to start offering lessons via Skype.



What are the major problems in teaching guitar by Skype and can they be overcome? Are there any advantages?







teaching






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked May 27 at 10:44









MlshoeMlshoe

1181 silver badge5 bronze badges




1181 silver badge5 bronze badges











  • 2





    Can it just be the same? Tech is pretty smooth nowadays

    – Dr. Shmuel
    May 27 at 14:06






  • 1





    @Dr.Shmuel Tech is still nowhere near being in the same room as another person, especially with "consumer" grade tools like Skype on a laptop.

    – JPhi1618
    May 30 at 18:51














  • 2





    Can it just be the same? Tech is pretty smooth nowadays

    – Dr. Shmuel
    May 27 at 14:06






  • 1





    @Dr.Shmuel Tech is still nowhere near being in the same room as another person, especially with "consumer" grade tools like Skype on a laptop.

    – JPhi1618
    May 30 at 18:51








2




2





Can it just be the same? Tech is pretty smooth nowadays

– Dr. Shmuel
May 27 at 14:06





Can it just be the same? Tech is pretty smooth nowadays

– Dr. Shmuel
May 27 at 14:06




1




1





@Dr.Shmuel Tech is still nowhere near being in the same room as another person, especially with "consumer" grade tools like Skype on a laptop.

– JPhi1618
May 30 at 18:51





@Dr.Shmuel Tech is still nowhere near being in the same room as another person, especially with "consumer" grade tools like Skype on a laptop.

– JPhi1618
May 30 at 18:51










6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes


















18
















Advantages are things like:




  • You can teach people around the world, from all countries as long as they speak your language.


  • You save time... Neither you nor your student have to drive around with all the instruments to get to each other. Additionally, if someone cancels the session, you could just put someone else in between without any troubles.


  • If you allow the student to record the session, he can watch it over and over again in case he missed anything or just want to see it again.



Some disadvantages:




  • There is always the possibility of internet connection problems or trouble with your PC in general. It would be sad if they take their time and you can't start the lesson because of technical issues. There may also be lag or delay-issues with some software and it's a stupid feeling to start talking and after 2 seconds the voices are overlapping, because the other person actually wasn't finished or started to speak again :P


  • You're just not able to show all the things via Skype that you could do in person. You can't correct his finger position, you can only show him how your fingers are. But if he just doesn't get it, it would be great to be able to touch his hand and position the fingers the correct way. You also can't demonstrate things like how much pressure they should apply to the strings... I mean, how would you tell somebody over Skype how hard they should press a string? :/


  • In general, it's just always better to meet someone in person rather than seeing him virtually on a PC.


  • The sound quality is of course way better in real life and I think with instruments this is really important... Let the student have a bad microphone, or you not the best speakers. I wouldn't want to teach a student how to play an instrument when the guitar sounds like a crying cat on your side of the line.


  • You can't hand out any sheet music to the student or similar and if you want to discuss something, you can't just point at the position and say there... you would have to say in bar X, the Xth beat etc.


  • It's probably harder to follow on a video where your fingers actually are on the guitar. It's so much easier when the student is right in front of you or can look you over the shoulder.


  • It's unusual but still possible you might want to trade guitars with the student, either to help them tune or fix something on their guitar, or so they can feel/hear/experience something with your guitar that is different from theirs, and of course you can't do this over Skype.



...






share|improve this answer























  • 1





    Thank you for taking the time to write all of these in-depth comments! Definitely some points I had not yet considered!

    – Mlshoe
    May 29 at 16:24











  • I've touched student's hands, fingers, elbows, and shoulders many times over the years when I've been teach (I suggest always asking for permission to touch before doing so), and to me that would be a big downside to Skype teaching.

    – Todd Wilcox
    May 30 at 18:07











  • For a little more detail on sound quality - the compression that is used on the voice streams for online calls (and even many phone calls) is tuned to be sensitive only to common voice frequencies. Anything outside of the expected human voice can end up being wildly distorted. If there is some kind of "HD" calling feature, make sure that is enabled before even attempting this.

    – JPhi1618
    May 30 at 18:47



















33
















A major disadvantage is that you can't jam together because of the delay. You can explain and show things clearly, no problem, but playing together is impossible.



The obvious advantage is that you can reach students around the world. The question is just if potential students around the world will be able to find you instead of many thousand other teachers offering online lessons.



More than half of my skype/internet students are former real-life students that moved away such that video lessons became more convenient or were actually the only choice if they wanted to continue with me.






share|improve this answer





















  • 3





    You might add that it would be hard to see or show hand positions in detail.

    – Todd Wilcox
    May 27 at 14:17






  • 1





    @ToddWilcox: I haven't experienced that as a real problem though. If necessary you can move your hand towards the camera and move around a bit. But of course, it's easier in a real-life lesson.

    – Matt L.
    May 27 at 14:51






  • 3





    I agree with Todd and cite this in my answer. I think another issue is you cannot adjust the students hand posture if it's wrong.

    – ggcg
    May 28 at 17:55











  • And sound quality can often be a concern, if you're looking for that.

    – Cullub
    May 28 at 19:12






  • 1





    Thank you for your insights! I hadn't thought about how crucial jamming together may be for building confidence/rapport.

    – Mlshoe
    May 29 at 16:23



















11
















I teach both ways and I would say that by far the biggest issues involve proper posture and technique, and not being able to physically assist the student in altering these.



One cause of this is a lack of 360 view of the student's hands. You can ask them to change the angle of their camera or how they sit but that is very cumbersome and wastes time. In person you can always just get up and look to see if their left hand is correct etc. You simply cannot do this (at least not easily) via a video chat.



The second issue that arises is that you cannot physically touch their hands to correct certain problems. We can try our best to describe what to do and show what we are doing but things get lost in translation. The student thinks they are doing what you described but they are not. Also, it is customary for the instructor to test a student's grip by pulling on the fingers, etc. You cannot do these things via skype and there is really no telling what the student is doing.



Students could be developing bad habits that will lead to tendonitis or other problems and you'll never catch it via skype, and not be able to help them. For me, I will do skype lessons with students that I've met and done in person lessons with. This is good for keeping students who move etc. But I'd be reluctant to start lessons with a true beginner vie skype. All these other issue related to time delay, PC issues, etc, pale in comparison to the issue of not being able to physically correct bad habits.






share|improve this answer


























  • Very interesting point about taking on beginners through Skype, something I will have to consider! Thank you for your answer!

    – Mlshoe
    May 29 at 16:25



















7
















Basically the most disadvantages are based on your Internet. Things you most likely encountered generally. For instance:




  • Call drops. It's not uncommon for a Skype session to fail. This can be okay when you are talking with a friend but during a lesson, it might be valuable time lost and annoying.

  • Bandwidth. If someone else is the same using the same router, your connection might be slow.

  • Video lag. This is something that happens if your internet connection is slow, and your video (or your student's) might have some lag

  • Audio Latency. This is something again that is caused by a slow internet connection and it can be really annoying when someone is trying to see and hear what you are playing.






share|improve this answer


























  • Very true - and something that has to be solid on both the student, and the teachers part. Thank you for your answer, it's very helpful!

    – Mlshoe
    May 29 at 16:26



















2
















Other answers have highlighted several issues, namely:




  • Audio/Video Quality (do they have a good mic / webcam?)

  • Latency of Connection (delay)

  • Quality of Connection (dropping call, stuttering)


To alleviate some of these concerns/issues, I'd suggest instead producing video tutorials / 5-10 minute lessons and charge a nominal fee (either included with physical instruction, or a subscription fee) for access. Topics that are more informational in nature, such as Music Theory, How to tune the instrument, Picking Technique, etc. don't really require one-on-one instruction, except for follow-up questions.



Because this would replace the need for some of the 1-on-1 instruction, it reduces the impact of the issues above. You can supplement the videos with one-on-one instruction either included in the subscription, or for an extra per-lesson fee, which could more precisely answer questions, evaluate technique, explain theory, etc.



Additionally, you can alleviate some of these concerns yourself by ensuring that you have:




  • A solid Internet connection

  • A high-quality camera

  • Studio-level microphones + audio interface


    • At least two mics - one for guitar, and one for you talking








share|improve this answer


























  • I had not yet thought about shorter video tutorials - definitely another interesting aspect of e-teaching! Thank you for your response, lots of information to consider!

    – Mlshoe
    May 29 at 16:26



















2
















All of these are great answers. As a student who started taking lessons and then moved out of state, my guitar teacher worked with me to start teaching via Skype. It's been a just over a couple years, and we have learned a few ways to make it even better than it started out to be. While Skype does a pretty good job, if you are able to get a video conferencing application, like Zoom, or Webex, the call quality is so much better. Also, if you are planning to keep taking lessons via video, invest in an HDMI high resolution wide angle camera. I use a Logitech HD webcam on a tripod. The tripod I bought for $2 at a thrift shop, the camera I paid about $95 dollars, and the wide angle allows for my entire guitar, head, and hands to be in the picture. And it also has a reasonable microphone with the camera, so I haven't needed to purchase another piece of equipment.



We also know that bad weather will sometimes impact the signal, but overall it's a great repeatable experience I have been enjoying for awhile. Now it's become my regular Tuesday morning way to start my day. I hope you find the same results! - Catz






share|improve this answer



























    Your Answer








    StackExchange.ready(function() {
    var channelOptions = {
    tags: "".split(" "),
    id: "240"
    };
    initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

    StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
    // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
    if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
    StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
    createEditor();
    });
    }
    else {
    createEditor();
    }
    });

    function createEditor() {
    StackExchange.prepareEditor({
    heartbeatType: 'answer',
    autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
    convertImagesToLinks: false,
    noModals: true,
    showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
    reputationToPostImages: null,
    bindNavPrevention: true,
    postfix: "",
    imageUploader: {
    brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
    contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/"u003ecc by-sa 4.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
    allowUrls: true
    },
    noCode: true, onDemand: true,
    discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
    ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
    });


    }
    });















    draft saved

    draft discarded
















    StackExchange.ready(
    function () {
    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmusic.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f85273%2fwhat-are-the-problems-in-teaching-guitar-via-skype%23new-answer', 'question_page');
    }
    );

    Post as a guest















    Required, but never shown

























    6 Answers
    6






    active

    oldest

    votes








    6 Answers
    6






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    18
















    Advantages are things like:




    • You can teach people around the world, from all countries as long as they speak your language.


    • You save time... Neither you nor your student have to drive around with all the instruments to get to each other. Additionally, if someone cancels the session, you could just put someone else in between without any troubles.


    • If you allow the student to record the session, he can watch it over and over again in case he missed anything or just want to see it again.



    Some disadvantages:




    • There is always the possibility of internet connection problems or trouble with your PC in general. It would be sad if they take their time and you can't start the lesson because of technical issues. There may also be lag or delay-issues with some software and it's a stupid feeling to start talking and after 2 seconds the voices are overlapping, because the other person actually wasn't finished or started to speak again :P


    • You're just not able to show all the things via Skype that you could do in person. You can't correct his finger position, you can only show him how your fingers are. But if he just doesn't get it, it would be great to be able to touch his hand and position the fingers the correct way. You also can't demonstrate things like how much pressure they should apply to the strings... I mean, how would you tell somebody over Skype how hard they should press a string? :/


    • In general, it's just always better to meet someone in person rather than seeing him virtually on a PC.


    • The sound quality is of course way better in real life and I think with instruments this is really important... Let the student have a bad microphone, or you not the best speakers. I wouldn't want to teach a student how to play an instrument when the guitar sounds like a crying cat on your side of the line.


    • You can't hand out any sheet music to the student or similar and if you want to discuss something, you can't just point at the position and say there... you would have to say in bar X, the Xth beat etc.


    • It's probably harder to follow on a video where your fingers actually are on the guitar. It's so much easier when the student is right in front of you or can look you over the shoulder.


    • It's unusual but still possible you might want to trade guitars with the student, either to help them tune or fix something on their guitar, or so they can feel/hear/experience something with your guitar that is different from theirs, and of course you can't do this over Skype.



    ...






    share|improve this answer























    • 1





      Thank you for taking the time to write all of these in-depth comments! Definitely some points I had not yet considered!

      – Mlshoe
      May 29 at 16:24











    • I've touched student's hands, fingers, elbows, and shoulders many times over the years when I've been teach (I suggest always asking for permission to touch before doing so), and to me that would be a big downside to Skype teaching.

      – Todd Wilcox
      May 30 at 18:07











    • For a little more detail on sound quality - the compression that is used on the voice streams for online calls (and even many phone calls) is tuned to be sensitive only to common voice frequencies. Anything outside of the expected human voice can end up being wildly distorted. If there is some kind of "HD" calling feature, make sure that is enabled before even attempting this.

      – JPhi1618
      May 30 at 18:47
















    18
















    Advantages are things like:




    • You can teach people around the world, from all countries as long as they speak your language.


    • You save time... Neither you nor your student have to drive around with all the instruments to get to each other. Additionally, if someone cancels the session, you could just put someone else in between without any troubles.


    • If you allow the student to record the session, he can watch it over and over again in case he missed anything or just want to see it again.



    Some disadvantages:




    • There is always the possibility of internet connection problems or trouble with your PC in general. It would be sad if they take their time and you can't start the lesson because of technical issues. There may also be lag or delay-issues with some software and it's a stupid feeling to start talking and after 2 seconds the voices are overlapping, because the other person actually wasn't finished or started to speak again :P


    • You're just not able to show all the things via Skype that you could do in person. You can't correct his finger position, you can only show him how your fingers are. But if he just doesn't get it, it would be great to be able to touch his hand and position the fingers the correct way. You also can't demonstrate things like how much pressure they should apply to the strings... I mean, how would you tell somebody over Skype how hard they should press a string? :/


    • In general, it's just always better to meet someone in person rather than seeing him virtually on a PC.


    • The sound quality is of course way better in real life and I think with instruments this is really important... Let the student have a bad microphone, or you not the best speakers. I wouldn't want to teach a student how to play an instrument when the guitar sounds like a crying cat on your side of the line.


    • You can't hand out any sheet music to the student or similar and if you want to discuss something, you can't just point at the position and say there... you would have to say in bar X, the Xth beat etc.


    • It's probably harder to follow on a video where your fingers actually are on the guitar. It's so much easier when the student is right in front of you or can look you over the shoulder.


    • It's unusual but still possible you might want to trade guitars with the student, either to help them tune or fix something on their guitar, or so they can feel/hear/experience something with your guitar that is different from theirs, and of course you can't do this over Skype.



    ...






    share|improve this answer























    • 1





      Thank you for taking the time to write all of these in-depth comments! Definitely some points I had not yet considered!

      – Mlshoe
      May 29 at 16:24











    • I've touched student's hands, fingers, elbows, and shoulders many times over the years when I've been teach (I suggest always asking for permission to touch before doing so), and to me that would be a big downside to Skype teaching.

      – Todd Wilcox
      May 30 at 18:07











    • For a little more detail on sound quality - the compression that is used on the voice streams for online calls (and even many phone calls) is tuned to be sensitive only to common voice frequencies. Anything outside of the expected human voice can end up being wildly distorted. If there is some kind of "HD" calling feature, make sure that is enabled before even attempting this.

      – JPhi1618
      May 30 at 18:47














    18














    18










    18









    Advantages are things like:




    • You can teach people around the world, from all countries as long as they speak your language.


    • You save time... Neither you nor your student have to drive around with all the instruments to get to each other. Additionally, if someone cancels the session, you could just put someone else in between without any troubles.


    • If you allow the student to record the session, he can watch it over and over again in case he missed anything or just want to see it again.



    Some disadvantages:




    • There is always the possibility of internet connection problems or trouble with your PC in general. It would be sad if they take their time and you can't start the lesson because of technical issues. There may also be lag or delay-issues with some software and it's a stupid feeling to start talking and after 2 seconds the voices are overlapping, because the other person actually wasn't finished or started to speak again :P


    • You're just not able to show all the things via Skype that you could do in person. You can't correct his finger position, you can only show him how your fingers are. But if he just doesn't get it, it would be great to be able to touch his hand and position the fingers the correct way. You also can't demonstrate things like how much pressure they should apply to the strings... I mean, how would you tell somebody over Skype how hard they should press a string? :/


    • In general, it's just always better to meet someone in person rather than seeing him virtually on a PC.


    • The sound quality is of course way better in real life and I think with instruments this is really important... Let the student have a bad microphone, or you not the best speakers. I wouldn't want to teach a student how to play an instrument when the guitar sounds like a crying cat on your side of the line.


    • You can't hand out any sheet music to the student or similar and if you want to discuss something, you can't just point at the position and say there... you would have to say in bar X, the Xth beat etc.


    • It's probably harder to follow on a video where your fingers actually are on the guitar. It's so much easier when the student is right in front of you or can look you over the shoulder.


    • It's unusual but still possible you might want to trade guitars with the student, either to help them tune or fix something on their guitar, or so they can feel/hear/experience something with your guitar that is different from theirs, and of course you can't do this over Skype.



    ...






    share|improve this answer















    Advantages are things like:




    • You can teach people around the world, from all countries as long as they speak your language.


    • You save time... Neither you nor your student have to drive around with all the instruments to get to each other. Additionally, if someone cancels the session, you could just put someone else in between without any troubles.


    • If you allow the student to record the session, he can watch it over and over again in case he missed anything or just want to see it again.



    Some disadvantages:




    • There is always the possibility of internet connection problems or trouble with your PC in general. It would be sad if they take their time and you can't start the lesson because of technical issues. There may also be lag or delay-issues with some software and it's a stupid feeling to start talking and after 2 seconds the voices are overlapping, because the other person actually wasn't finished or started to speak again :P


    • You're just not able to show all the things via Skype that you could do in person. You can't correct his finger position, you can only show him how your fingers are. But if he just doesn't get it, it would be great to be able to touch his hand and position the fingers the correct way. You also can't demonstrate things like how much pressure they should apply to the strings... I mean, how would you tell somebody over Skype how hard they should press a string? :/


    • In general, it's just always better to meet someone in person rather than seeing him virtually on a PC.


    • The sound quality is of course way better in real life and I think with instruments this is really important... Let the student have a bad microphone, or you not the best speakers. I wouldn't want to teach a student how to play an instrument when the guitar sounds like a crying cat on your side of the line.


    • You can't hand out any sheet music to the student or similar and if you want to discuss something, you can't just point at the position and say there... you would have to say in bar X, the Xth beat etc.


    • It's probably harder to follow on a video where your fingers actually are on the guitar. It's so much easier when the student is right in front of you or can look you over the shoulder.


    • It's unusual but still possible you might want to trade guitars with the student, either to help them tune or fix something on their guitar, or so they can feel/hear/experience something with your guitar that is different from theirs, and of course you can't do this over Skype.



    ...







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited May 31 at 11:53









    TrebledJ

    1419 bronze badges




    1419 bronze badges










    answered May 27 at 14:56









    AndyAndy

    2,3602 silver badges32 bronze badges




    2,3602 silver badges32 bronze badges











    • 1





      Thank you for taking the time to write all of these in-depth comments! Definitely some points I had not yet considered!

      – Mlshoe
      May 29 at 16:24











    • I've touched student's hands, fingers, elbows, and shoulders many times over the years when I've been teach (I suggest always asking for permission to touch before doing so), and to me that would be a big downside to Skype teaching.

      – Todd Wilcox
      May 30 at 18:07











    • For a little more detail on sound quality - the compression that is used on the voice streams for online calls (and even many phone calls) is tuned to be sensitive only to common voice frequencies. Anything outside of the expected human voice can end up being wildly distorted. If there is some kind of "HD" calling feature, make sure that is enabled before even attempting this.

      – JPhi1618
      May 30 at 18:47














    • 1





      Thank you for taking the time to write all of these in-depth comments! Definitely some points I had not yet considered!

      – Mlshoe
      May 29 at 16:24











    • I've touched student's hands, fingers, elbows, and shoulders many times over the years when I've been teach (I suggest always asking for permission to touch before doing so), and to me that would be a big downside to Skype teaching.

      – Todd Wilcox
      May 30 at 18:07











    • For a little more detail on sound quality - the compression that is used on the voice streams for online calls (and even many phone calls) is tuned to be sensitive only to common voice frequencies. Anything outside of the expected human voice can end up being wildly distorted. If there is some kind of "HD" calling feature, make sure that is enabled before even attempting this.

      – JPhi1618
      May 30 at 18:47








    1




    1





    Thank you for taking the time to write all of these in-depth comments! Definitely some points I had not yet considered!

    – Mlshoe
    May 29 at 16:24





    Thank you for taking the time to write all of these in-depth comments! Definitely some points I had not yet considered!

    – Mlshoe
    May 29 at 16:24













    I've touched student's hands, fingers, elbows, and shoulders many times over the years when I've been teach (I suggest always asking for permission to touch before doing so), and to me that would be a big downside to Skype teaching.

    – Todd Wilcox
    May 30 at 18:07





    I've touched student's hands, fingers, elbows, and shoulders many times over the years when I've been teach (I suggest always asking for permission to touch before doing so), and to me that would be a big downside to Skype teaching.

    – Todd Wilcox
    May 30 at 18:07













    For a little more detail on sound quality - the compression that is used on the voice streams for online calls (and even many phone calls) is tuned to be sensitive only to common voice frequencies. Anything outside of the expected human voice can end up being wildly distorted. If there is some kind of "HD" calling feature, make sure that is enabled before even attempting this.

    – JPhi1618
    May 30 at 18:47





    For a little more detail on sound quality - the compression that is used on the voice streams for online calls (and even many phone calls) is tuned to be sensitive only to common voice frequencies. Anything outside of the expected human voice can end up being wildly distorted. If there is some kind of "HD" calling feature, make sure that is enabled before even attempting this.

    – JPhi1618
    May 30 at 18:47













    33
















    A major disadvantage is that you can't jam together because of the delay. You can explain and show things clearly, no problem, but playing together is impossible.



    The obvious advantage is that you can reach students around the world. The question is just if potential students around the world will be able to find you instead of many thousand other teachers offering online lessons.



    More than half of my skype/internet students are former real-life students that moved away such that video lessons became more convenient or were actually the only choice if they wanted to continue with me.






    share|improve this answer





















    • 3





      You might add that it would be hard to see or show hand positions in detail.

      – Todd Wilcox
      May 27 at 14:17






    • 1





      @ToddWilcox: I haven't experienced that as a real problem though. If necessary you can move your hand towards the camera and move around a bit. But of course, it's easier in a real-life lesson.

      – Matt L.
      May 27 at 14:51






    • 3





      I agree with Todd and cite this in my answer. I think another issue is you cannot adjust the students hand posture if it's wrong.

      – ggcg
      May 28 at 17:55











    • And sound quality can often be a concern, if you're looking for that.

      – Cullub
      May 28 at 19:12






    • 1





      Thank you for your insights! I hadn't thought about how crucial jamming together may be for building confidence/rapport.

      – Mlshoe
      May 29 at 16:23
















    33
















    A major disadvantage is that you can't jam together because of the delay. You can explain and show things clearly, no problem, but playing together is impossible.



    The obvious advantage is that you can reach students around the world. The question is just if potential students around the world will be able to find you instead of many thousand other teachers offering online lessons.



    More than half of my skype/internet students are former real-life students that moved away such that video lessons became more convenient or were actually the only choice if they wanted to continue with me.






    share|improve this answer





















    • 3





      You might add that it would be hard to see or show hand positions in detail.

      – Todd Wilcox
      May 27 at 14:17






    • 1





      @ToddWilcox: I haven't experienced that as a real problem though. If necessary you can move your hand towards the camera and move around a bit. But of course, it's easier in a real-life lesson.

      – Matt L.
      May 27 at 14:51






    • 3





      I agree with Todd and cite this in my answer. I think another issue is you cannot adjust the students hand posture if it's wrong.

      – ggcg
      May 28 at 17:55











    • And sound quality can often be a concern, if you're looking for that.

      – Cullub
      May 28 at 19:12






    • 1





      Thank you for your insights! I hadn't thought about how crucial jamming together may be for building confidence/rapport.

      – Mlshoe
      May 29 at 16:23














    33














    33










    33









    A major disadvantage is that you can't jam together because of the delay. You can explain and show things clearly, no problem, but playing together is impossible.



    The obvious advantage is that you can reach students around the world. The question is just if potential students around the world will be able to find you instead of many thousand other teachers offering online lessons.



    More than half of my skype/internet students are former real-life students that moved away such that video lessons became more convenient or were actually the only choice if they wanted to continue with me.






    share|improve this answer













    A major disadvantage is that you can't jam together because of the delay. You can explain and show things clearly, no problem, but playing together is impossible.



    The obvious advantage is that you can reach students around the world. The question is just if potential students around the world will be able to find you instead of many thousand other teachers offering online lessons.



    More than half of my skype/internet students are former real-life students that moved away such that video lessons became more convenient or were actually the only choice if they wanted to continue with me.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered May 27 at 13:54









    Matt L.Matt L.

    16.6k2 gold badges32 silver badges61 bronze badges




    16.6k2 gold badges32 silver badges61 bronze badges











    • 3





      You might add that it would be hard to see or show hand positions in detail.

      – Todd Wilcox
      May 27 at 14:17






    • 1





      @ToddWilcox: I haven't experienced that as a real problem though. If necessary you can move your hand towards the camera and move around a bit. But of course, it's easier in a real-life lesson.

      – Matt L.
      May 27 at 14:51






    • 3





      I agree with Todd and cite this in my answer. I think another issue is you cannot adjust the students hand posture if it's wrong.

      – ggcg
      May 28 at 17:55











    • And sound quality can often be a concern, if you're looking for that.

      – Cullub
      May 28 at 19:12






    • 1





      Thank you for your insights! I hadn't thought about how crucial jamming together may be for building confidence/rapport.

      – Mlshoe
      May 29 at 16:23














    • 3





      You might add that it would be hard to see or show hand positions in detail.

      – Todd Wilcox
      May 27 at 14:17






    • 1





      @ToddWilcox: I haven't experienced that as a real problem though. If necessary you can move your hand towards the camera and move around a bit. But of course, it's easier in a real-life lesson.

      – Matt L.
      May 27 at 14:51






    • 3





      I agree with Todd and cite this in my answer. I think another issue is you cannot adjust the students hand posture if it's wrong.

      – ggcg
      May 28 at 17:55











    • And sound quality can often be a concern, if you're looking for that.

      – Cullub
      May 28 at 19:12






    • 1





      Thank you for your insights! I hadn't thought about how crucial jamming together may be for building confidence/rapport.

      – Mlshoe
      May 29 at 16:23








    3




    3





    You might add that it would be hard to see or show hand positions in detail.

    – Todd Wilcox
    May 27 at 14:17





    You might add that it would be hard to see or show hand positions in detail.

    – Todd Wilcox
    May 27 at 14:17




    1




    1





    @ToddWilcox: I haven't experienced that as a real problem though. If necessary you can move your hand towards the camera and move around a bit. But of course, it's easier in a real-life lesson.

    – Matt L.
    May 27 at 14:51





    @ToddWilcox: I haven't experienced that as a real problem though. If necessary you can move your hand towards the camera and move around a bit. But of course, it's easier in a real-life lesson.

    – Matt L.
    May 27 at 14:51




    3




    3





    I agree with Todd and cite this in my answer. I think another issue is you cannot adjust the students hand posture if it's wrong.

    – ggcg
    May 28 at 17:55





    I agree with Todd and cite this in my answer. I think another issue is you cannot adjust the students hand posture if it's wrong.

    – ggcg
    May 28 at 17:55













    And sound quality can often be a concern, if you're looking for that.

    – Cullub
    May 28 at 19:12





    And sound quality can often be a concern, if you're looking for that.

    – Cullub
    May 28 at 19:12




    1




    1





    Thank you for your insights! I hadn't thought about how crucial jamming together may be for building confidence/rapport.

    – Mlshoe
    May 29 at 16:23





    Thank you for your insights! I hadn't thought about how crucial jamming together may be for building confidence/rapport.

    – Mlshoe
    May 29 at 16:23











    11
















    I teach both ways and I would say that by far the biggest issues involve proper posture and technique, and not being able to physically assist the student in altering these.



    One cause of this is a lack of 360 view of the student's hands. You can ask them to change the angle of their camera or how they sit but that is very cumbersome and wastes time. In person you can always just get up and look to see if their left hand is correct etc. You simply cannot do this (at least not easily) via a video chat.



    The second issue that arises is that you cannot physically touch their hands to correct certain problems. We can try our best to describe what to do and show what we are doing but things get lost in translation. The student thinks they are doing what you described but they are not. Also, it is customary for the instructor to test a student's grip by pulling on the fingers, etc. You cannot do these things via skype and there is really no telling what the student is doing.



    Students could be developing bad habits that will lead to tendonitis or other problems and you'll never catch it via skype, and not be able to help them. For me, I will do skype lessons with students that I've met and done in person lessons with. This is good for keeping students who move etc. But I'd be reluctant to start lessons with a true beginner vie skype. All these other issue related to time delay, PC issues, etc, pale in comparison to the issue of not being able to physically correct bad habits.






    share|improve this answer


























    • Very interesting point about taking on beginners through Skype, something I will have to consider! Thank you for your answer!

      – Mlshoe
      May 29 at 16:25
















    11
















    I teach both ways and I would say that by far the biggest issues involve proper posture and technique, and not being able to physically assist the student in altering these.



    One cause of this is a lack of 360 view of the student's hands. You can ask them to change the angle of their camera or how they sit but that is very cumbersome and wastes time. In person you can always just get up and look to see if their left hand is correct etc. You simply cannot do this (at least not easily) via a video chat.



    The second issue that arises is that you cannot physically touch their hands to correct certain problems. We can try our best to describe what to do and show what we are doing but things get lost in translation. The student thinks they are doing what you described but they are not. Also, it is customary for the instructor to test a student's grip by pulling on the fingers, etc. You cannot do these things via skype and there is really no telling what the student is doing.



    Students could be developing bad habits that will lead to tendonitis or other problems and you'll never catch it via skype, and not be able to help them. For me, I will do skype lessons with students that I've met and done in person lessons with. This is good for keeping students who move etc. But I'd be reluctant to start lessons with a true beginner vie skype. All these other issue related to time delay, PC issues, etc, pale in comparison to the issue of not being able to physically correct bad habits.






    share|improve this answer


























    • Very interesting point about taking on beginners through Skype, something I will have to consider! Thank you for your answer!

      – Mlshoe
      May 29 at 16:25














    11














    11










    11









    I teach both ways and I would say that by far the biggest issues involve proper posture and technique, and not being able to physically assist the student in altering these.



    One cause of this is a lack of 360 view of the student's hands. You can ask them to change the angle of their camera or how they sit but that is very cumbersome and wastes time. In person you can always just get up and look to see if their left hand is correct etc. You simply cannot do this (at least not easily) via a video chat.



    The second issue that arises is that you cannot physically touch their hands to correct certain problems. We can try our best to describe what to do and show what we are doing but things get lost in translation. The student thinks they are doing what you described but they are not. Also, it is customary for the instructor to test a student's grip by pulling on the fingers, etc. You cannot do these things via skype and there is really no telling what the student is doing.



    Students could be developing bad habits that will lead to tendonitis or other problems and you'll never catch it via skype, and not be able to help them. For me, I will do skype lessons with students that I've met and done in person lessons with. This is good for keeping students who move etc. But I'd be reluctant to start lessons with a true beginner vie skype. All these other issue related to time delay, PC issues, etc, pale in comparison to the issue of not being able to physically correct bad habits.






    share|improve this answer













    I teach both ways and I would say that by far the biggest issues involve proper posture and technique, and not being able to physically assist the student in altering these.



    One cause of this is a lack of 360 view of the student's hands. You can ask them to change the angle of their camera or how they sit but that is very cumbersome and wastes time. In person you can always just get up and look to see if their left hand is correct etc. You simply cannot do this (at least not easily) via a video chat.



    The second issue that arises is that you cannot physically touch their hands to correct certain problems. We can try our best to describe what to do and show what we are doing but things get lost in translation. The student thinks they are doing what you described but they are not. Also, it is customary for the instructor to test a student's grip by pulling on the fingers, etc. You cannot do these things via skype and there is really no telling what the student is doing.



    Students could be developing bad habits that will lead to tendonitis or other problems and you'll never catch it via skype, and not be able to help them. For me, I will do skype lessons with students that I've met and done in person lessons with. This is good for keeping students who move etc. But I'd be reluctant to start lessons with a true beginner vie skype. All these other issue related to time delay, PC issues, etc, pale in comparison to the issue of not being able to physically correct bad habits.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered May 28 at 11:07









    ggcgggcg

    8,0357 silver badges28 bronze badges




    8,0357 silver badges28 bronze badges
















    • Very interesting point about taking on beginners through Skype, something I will have to consider! Thank you for your answer!

      – Mlshoe
      May 29 at 16:25



















    • Very interesting point about taking on beginners through Skype, something I will have to consider! Thank you for your answer!

      – Mlshoe
      May 29 at 16:25

















    Very interesting point about taking on beginners through Skype, something I will have to consider! Thank you for your answer!

    – Mlshoe
    May 29 at 16:25





    Very interesting point about taking on beginners through Skype, something I will have to consider! Thank you for your answer!

    – Mlshoe
    May 29 at 16:25











    7
















    Basically the most disadvantages are based on your Internet. Things you most likely encountered generally. For instance:




    • Call drops. It's not uncommon for a Skype session to fail. This can be okay when you are talking with a friend but during a lesson, it might be valuable time lost and annoying.

    • Bandwidth. If someone else is the same using the same router, your connection might be slow.

    • Video lag. This is something that happens if your internet connection is slow, and your video (or your student's) might have some lag

    • Audio Latency. This is something again that is caused by a slow internet connection and it can be really annoying when someone is trying to see and hear what you are playing.






    share|improve this answer


























    • Very true - and something that has to be solid on both the student, and the teachers part. Thank you for your answer, it's very helpful!

      – Mlshoe
      May 29 at 16:26
















    7
















    Basically the most disadvantages are based on your Internet. Things you most likely encountered generally. For instance:




    • Call drops. It's not uncommon for a Skype session to fail. This can be okay when you are talking with a friend but during a lesson, it might be valuable time lost and annoying.

    • Bandwidth. If someone else is the same using the same router, your connection might be slow.

    • Video lag. This is something that happens if your internet connection is slow, and your video (or your student's) might have some lag

    • Audio Latency. This is something again that is caused by a slow internet connection and it can be really annoying when someone is trying to see and hear what you are playing.






    share|improve this answer


























    • Very true - and something that has to be solid on both the student, and the teachers part. Thank you for your answer, it's very helpful!

      – Mlshoe
      May 29 at 16:26














    7














    7










    7









    Basically the most disadvantages are based on your Internet. Things you most likely encountered generally. For instance:




    • Call drops. It's not uncommon for a Skype session to fail. This can be okay when you are talking with a friend but during a lesson, it might be valuable time lost and annoying.

    • Bandwidth. If someone else is the same using the same router, your connection might be slow.

    • Video lag. This is something that happens if your internet connection is slow, and your video (or your student's) might have some lag

    • Audio Latency. This is something again that is caused by a slow internet connection and it can be really annoying when someone is trying to see and hear what you are playing.






    share|improve this answer













    Basically the most disadvantages are based on your Internet. Things you most likely encountered generally. For instance:




    • Call drops. It's not uncommon for a Skype session to fail. This can be okay when you are talking with a friend but during a lesson, it might be valuable time lost and annoying.

    • Bandwidth. If someone else is the same using the same router, your connection might be slow.

    • Video lag. This is something that happens if your internet connection is slow, and your video (or your student's) might have some lag

    • Audio Latency. This is something again that is caused by a slow internet connection and it can be really annoying when someone is trying to see and hear what you are playing.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered May 27 at 14:58









    ShevliaskovicShevliaskovic

    23k15 gold badges87 silver badges189 bronze badges




    23k15 gold badges87 silver badges189 bronze badges
















    • Very true - and something that has to be solid on both the student, and the teachers part. Thank you for your answer, it's very helpful!

      – Mlshoe
      May 29 at 16:26



















    • Very true - and something that has to be solid on both the student, and the teachers part. Thank you for your answer, it's very helpful!

      – Mlshoe
      May 29 at 16:26

















    Very true - and something that has to be solid on both the student, and the teachers part. Thank you for your answer, it's very helpful!

    – Mlshoe
    May 29 at 16:26





    Very true - and something that has to be solid on both the student, and the teachers part. Thank you for your answer, it's very helpful!

    – Mlshoe
    May 29 at 16:26











    2
















    Other answers have highlighted several issues, namely:




    • Audio/Video Quality (do they have a good mic / webcam?)

    • Latency of Connection (delay)

    • Quality of Connection (dropping call, stuttering)


    To alleviate some of these concerns/issues, I'd suggest instead producing video tutorials / 5-10 minute lessons and charge a nominal fee (either included with physical instruction, or a subscription fee) for access. Topics that are more informational in nature, such as Music Theory, How to tune the instrument, Picking Technique, etc. don't really require one-on-one instruction, except for follow-up questions.



    Because this would replace the need for some of the 1-on-1 instruction, it reduces the impact of the issues above. You can supplement the videos with one-on-one instruction either included in the subscription, or for an extra per-lesson fee, which could more precisely answer questions, evaluate technique, explain theory, etc.



    Additionally, you can alleviate some of these concerns yourself by ensuring that you have:




    • A solid Internet connection

    • A high-quality camera

    • Studio-level microphones + audio interface


      • At least two mics - one for guitar, and one for you talking








    share|improve this answer


























    • I had not yet thought about shorter video tutorials - definitely another interesting aspect of e-teaching! Thank you for your response, lots of information to consider!

      – Mlshoe
      May 29 at 16:26
















    2
















    Other answers have highlighted several issues, namely:




    • Audio/Video Quality (do they have a good mic / webcam?)

    • Latency of Connection (delay)

    • Quality of Connection (dropping call, stuttering)


    To alleviate some of these concerns/issues, I'd suggest instead producing video tutorials / 5-10 minute lessons and charge a nominal fee (either included with physical instruction, or a subscription fee) for access. Topics that are more informational in nature, such as Music Theory, How to tune the instrument, Picking Technique, etc. don't really require one-on-one instruction, except for follow-up questions.



    Because this would replace the need for some of the 1-on-1 instruction, it reduces the impact of the issues above. You can supplement the videos with one-on-one instruction either included in the subscription, or for an extra per-lesson fee, which could more precisely answer questions, evaluate technique, explain theory, etc.



    Additionally, you can alleviate some of these concerns yourself by ensuring that you have:




    • A solid Internet connection

    • A high-quality camera

    • Studio-level microphones + audio interface


      • At least two mics - one for guitar, and one for you talking








    share|improve this answer


























    • I had not yet thought about shorter video tutorials - definitely another interesting aspect of e-teaching! Thank you for your response, lots of information to consider!

      – Mlshoe
      May 29 at 16:26














    2














    2










    2









    Other answers have highlighted several issues, namely:




    • Audio/Video Quality (do they have a good mic / webcam?)

    • Latency of Connection (delay)

    • Quality of Connection (dropping call, stuttering)


    To alleviate some of these concerns/issues, I'd suggest instead producing video tutorials / 5-10 minute lessons and charge a nominal fee (either included with physical instruction, or a subscription fee) for access. Topics that are more informational in nature, such as Music Theory, How to tune the instrument, Picking Technique, etc. don't really require one-on-one instruction, except for follow-up questions.



    Because this would replace the need for some of the 1-on-1 instruction, it reduces the impact of the issues above. You can supplement the videos with one-on-one instruction either included in the subscription, or for an extra per-lesson fee, which could more precisely answer questions, evaluate technique, explain theory, etc.



    Additionally, you can alleviate some of these concerns yourself by ensuring that you have:




    • A solid Internet connection

    • A high-quality camera

    • Studio-level microphones + audio interface


      • At least two mics - one for guitar, and one for you talking








    share|improve this answer













    Other answers have highlighted several issues, namely:




    • Audio/Video Quality (do they have a good mic / webcam?)

    • Latency of Connection (delay)

    • Quality of Connection (dropping call, stuttering)


    To alleviate some of these concerns/issues, I'd suggest instead producing video tutorials / 5-10 minute lessons and charge a nominal fee (either included with physical instruction, or a subscription fee) for access. Topics that are more informational in nature, such as Music Theory, How to tune the instrument, Picking Technique, etc. don't really require one-on-one instruction, except for follow-up questions.



    Because this would replace the need for some of the 1-on-1 instruction, it reduces the impact of the issues above. You can supplement the videos with one-on-one instruction either included in the subscription, or for an extra per-lesson fee, which could more precisely answer questions, evaluate technique, explain theory, etc.



    Additionally, you can alleviate some of these concerns yourself by ensuring that you have:




    • A solid Internet connection

    • A high-quality camera

    • Studio-level microphones + audio interface


      • At least two mics - one for guitar, and one for you talking









    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered May 28 at 16:46









    TyzoidTyzoid

    1211 bronze badge




    1211 bronze badge
















    • I had not yet thought about shorter video tutorials - definitely another interesting aspect of e-teaching! Thank you for your response, lots of information to consider!

      – Mlshoe
      May 29 at 16:26



















    • I had not yet thought about shorter video tutorials - definitely another interesting aspect of e-teaching! Thank you for your response, lots of information to consider!

      – Mlshoe
      May 29 at 16:26

















    I had not yet thought about shorter video tutorials - definitely another interesting aspect of e-teaching! Thank you for your response, lots of information to consider!

    – Mlshoe
    May 29 at 16:26





    I had not yet thought about shorter video tutorials - definitely another interesting aspect of e-teaching! Thank you for your response, lots of information to consider!

    – Mlshoe
    May 29 at 16:26











    2
















    All of these are great answers. As a student who started taking lessons and then moved out of state, my guitar teacher worked with me to start teaching via Skype. It's been a just over a couple years, and we have learned a few ways to make it even better than it started out to be. While Skype does a pretty good job, if you are able to get a video conferencing application, like Zoom, or Webex, the call quality is so much better. Also, if you are planning to keep taking lessons via video, invest in an HDMI high resolution wide angle camera. I use a Logitech HD webcam on a tripod. The tripod I bought for $2 at a thrift shop, the camera I paid about $95 dollars, and the wide angle allows for my entire guitar, head, and hands to be in the picture. And it also has a reasonable microphone with the camera, so I haven't needed to purchase another piece of equipment.



    We also know that bad weather will sometimes impact the signal, but overall it's a great repeatable experience I have been enjoying for awhile. Now it's become my regular Tuesday morning way to start my day. I hope you find the same results! - Catz






    share|improve this answer






























      2
















      All of these are great answers. As a student who started taking lessons and then moved out of state, my guitar teacher worked with me to start teaching via Skype. It's been a just over a couple years, and we have learned a few ways to make it even better than it started out to be. While Skype does a pretty good job, if you are able to get a video conferencing application, like Zoom, or Webex, the call quality is so much better. Also, if you are planning to keep taking lessons via video, invest in an HDMI high resolution wide angle camera. I use a Logitech HD webcam on a tripod. The tripod I bought for $2 at a thrift shop, the camera I paid about $95 dollars, and the wide angle allows for my entire guitar, head, and hands to be in the picture. And it also has a reasonable microphone with the camera, so I haven't needed to purchase another piece of equipment.



      We also know that bad weather will sometimes impact the signal, but overall it's a great repeatable experience I have been enjoying for awhile. Now it's become my regular Tuesday morning way to start my day. I hope you find the same results! - Catz






      share|improve this answer




























        2














        2










        2









        All of these are great answers. As a student who started taking lessons and then moved out of state, my guitar teacher worked with me to start teaching via Skype. It's been a just over a couple years, and we have learned a few ways to make it even better than it started out to be. While Skype does a pretty good job, if you are able to get a video conferencing application, like Zoom, or Webex, the call quality is so much better. Also, if you are planning to keep taking lessons via video, invest in an HDMI high resolution wide angle camera. I use a Logitech HD webcam on a tripod. The tripod I bought for $2 at a thrift shop, the camera I paid about $95 dollars, and the wide angle allows for my entire guitar, head, and hands to be in the picture. And it also has a reasonable microphone with the camera, so I haven't needed to purchase another piece of equipment.



        We also know that bad weather will sometimes impact the signal, but overall it's a great repeatable experience I have been enjoying for awhile. Now it's become my regular Tuesday morning way to start my day. I hope you find the same results! - Catz






        share|improve this answer













        All of these are great answers. As a student who started taking lessons and then moved out of state, my guitar teacher worked with me to start teaching via Skype. It's been a just over a couple years, and we have learned a few ways to make it even better than it started out to be. While Skype does a pretty good job, if you are able to get a video conferencing application, like Zoom, or Webex, the call quality is so much better. Also, if you are planning to keep taking lessons via video, invest in an HDMI high resolution wide angle camera. I use a Logitech HD webcam on a tripod. The tripod I bought for $2 at a thrift shop, the camera I paid about $95 dollars, and the wide angle allows for my entire guitar, head, and hands to be in the picture. And it also has a reasonable microphone with the camera, so I haven't needed to purchase another piece of equipment.



        We also know that bad weather will sometimes impact the signal, but overall it's a great repeatable experience I have been enjoying for awhile. Now it's become my regular Tuesday morning way to start my day. I hope you find the same results! - Catz







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered May 29 at 23:01









        rockerba8erockerba8e

        414 bronze badges




        414 bronze badges


































            draft saved

            draft discarded



















































            Thanks for contributing an answer to Music: Practice & Theory Stack Exchange!


            • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

            But avoid



            • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

            • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


            To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




            draft saved


            draft discarded














            StackExchange.ready(
            function () {
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmusic.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f85273%2fwhat-are-the-problems-in-teaching-guitar-via-skype%23new-answer', 'question_page');
            }
            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown





















































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown

































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown







            Popular posts from this blog

            Bruad Bilen | Luke uk diar | NawigatsjuunCommonskategorii: BruadCommonskategorii: RunstükenWikiquote: Bruad

            What is the offset in a seaplane's hull?

            Slayer Innehåll Historia | Stil, komposition och lyrik | Bandets betydelse och framgångar | Sidoprojekt och samarbeten | Kontroverser | Medlemmar | Utmärkelser och nomineringar | Turnéer och festivaler | Diskografi | Referenser | Externa länkar | Navigeringsmenywww.slayer.net”Metal Massacre vol. 1””Metal Massacre vol. 3””Metal Massacre Volume III””Show No Mercy””Haunting the Chapel””Live Undead””Hell Awaits””Reign in Blood””Reign in Blood””Gold & Platinum – Reign in Blood””Golden Gods Awards Winners”originalet”Kerrang! Hall Of Fame””Slayer Looks Back On 37-Year Career In New Video Series: Part Two””South of Heaven””Gold & Platinum – South of Heaven””Seasons in the Abyss””Gold & Platinum - Seasons in the Abyss””Divine Intervention””Divine Intervention - Release group by Slayer””Gold & Platinum - Divine Intervention””Live Intrusion””Undisputed Attitude””Abolish Government/Superficial Love””Release “Slatanic Slaughter: A Tribute to Slayer” by Various Artists””Diabolus in Musica””Soundtrack to the Apocalypse””God Hates Us All””Systematic - Relationships””War at the Warfield””Gold & Platinum - War at the Warfield””Soundtrack to the Apocalypse””Gold & Platinum - Still Reigning””Metallica, Slayer, Iron Mauden Among Winners At Metal Hammer Awards””Eternal Pyre””Eternal Pyre - Slayer release group””Eternal Pyre””Metal Storm Awards 2006””Kerrang! Hall Of Fame””Slayer Wins 'Best Metal' Grammy Award””Slayer Guitarist Jeff Hanneman Dies””Bullet-For My Valentine booed at Metal Hammer Golden Gods Awards””Unholy Aliance””The End Of Slayer?””Slayer: We Could Thrash Out Two More Albums If We're Fast Enough...””'The Unholy Alliance: Chapter III' UK Dates Added”originalet”Megadeth And Slayer To Co-Headline 'Canadian Carnage' Trek”originalet”World Painted Blood””Release “World Painted Blood” by Slayer””Metallica Heading To Cinemas””Slayer, Megadeth To Join Forces For 'European Carnage' Tour - Dec. 18, 2010”originalet”Slayer's Hanneman Contracts Acute Infection; Band To Bring In Guest Guitarist””Cannibal Corpse's Pat O'Brien Will Step In As Slayer's Guest Guitarist”originalet”Slayer’s Jeff Hanneman Dead at 49””Dave Lombardo Says He Made Only $67,000 In 2011 While Touring With Slayer””Slayer: We Do Not Agree With Dave Lombardo's Substance Or Timeline Of Events””Slayer Welcomes Drummer Paul Bostaph Back To The Fold””Slayer Hope to Unveil Never-Before-Heard Jeff Hanneman Material on Next Album””Slayer Debut New Song 'Implode' During Surprise Golden Gods Appearance””Release group Repentless by Slayer””Repentless - Slayer - Credits””Slayer””Metal Storm Awards 2015””Slayer - to release comic book "Repentless #1"””Slayer To Release 'Repentless' 6.66" Vinyl Box Set””BREAKING NEWS: Slayer Announce Farewell Tour””Slayer Recruit Lamb of God, Anthrax, Behemoth + Testament for Final Tour””Slayer lägger ner efter 37 år””Slayer Announces Second North American Leg Of 'Final' Tour””Final World Tour””Slayer Announces Final European Tour With Lamb of God, Anthrax And Obituary””Slayer To Tour Europe With Lamb of God, Anthrax And Obituary””Slayer To Play 'Last French Show Ever' At Next Year's Hellfst””Slayer's Final World Tour Will Extend Into 2019””Death Angel's Rob Cavestany On Slayer's 'Farewell' Tour: 'Some Of Us Could See This Coming'””Testament Has No Plans To Retire Anytime Soon, Says Chuck Billy””Anthrax's Scott Ian On Slayer's 'Farewell' Tour Plans: 'I Was Surprised And I Wasn't Surprised'””Slayer””Slayer's Morbid Schlock””Review/Rock; For Slayer, the Mania Is the Message””Slayer - Biography””Slayer - Reign In Blood”originalet”Dave Lombardo””An exclusive oral history of Slayer”originalet”Exclusive! Interview With Slayer Guitarist Jeff Hanneman”originalet”Thinking Out Loud: Slayer's Kerry King on hair metal, Satan and being polite””Slayer Lyrics””Slayer - Biography””Most influential artists for extreme metal music””Slayer - Reign in Blood””Slayer guitarist Jeff Hanneman dies aged 49””Slatanic Slaughter: A Tribute to Slayer””Gateway to Hell: A Tribute to Slayer””Covered In Blood””Slayer: The Origins of Thrash in San Francisco, CA.””Why They Rule - #6 Slayer”originalet”Guitar World's 100 Greatest Heavy Metal Guitarists Of All Time”originalet”The fans have spoken: Slayer comes out on top in readers' polls”originalet”Tribute to Jeff Hanneman (1964-2013)””Lamb Of God Frontman: We Sound Like A Slayer Rip-Off””BEHEMOTH Frontman Pays Tribute To SLAYER's JEFF HANNEMAN””Slayer, Hatebreed Doing Double Duty On This Year's Ozzfest””System of a Down””Lacuna Coil’s Andrea Ferro Talks Influences, Skateboarding, Band Origins + More””Slayer - Reign in Blood””Into The Lungs of Hell””Slayer rules - en utställning om fans””Slayer and Their Fans Slashed Through a No-Holds-Barred Night at Gas Monkey””Home””Slayer””Gold & Platinum - The Big 4 Live from Sofia, Bulgaria””Exclusive! Interview With Slayer Guitarist Kerry King””2008-02-23: Wiltern, Los Angeles, CA, USA””Slayer's Kerry King To Perform With Megadeth Tonight! - Oct. 21, 2010”originalet”Dave Lombardo - Biography”Slayer Case DismissedArkiveradUltimate Classic Rock: Slayer guitarist Jeff Hanneman dead at 49.”Slayer: "We could never do any thing like Some Kind Of Monster..."””Cannibal Corpse'S Pat O'Brien Will Step In As Slayer'S Guest Guitarist | The Official Slayer Site”originalet”Slayer Wins 'Best Metal' Grammy Award””Slayer Guitarist Jeff Hanneman Dies””Kerrang! Awards 2006 Blog: Kerrang! Hall Of Fame””Kerrang! Awards 2013: Kerrang! Legend”originalet”Metallica, Slayer, Iron Maien Among Winners At Metal Hammer Awards””Metal Hammer Golden Gods Awards””Bullet For My Valentine Booed At Metal Hammer Golden Gods Awards””Metal Storm Awards 2006””Metal Storm Awards 2015””Slayer's Concert History””Slayer - Relationships””Slayer - Releases”Slayers officiella webbplatsSlayer på MusicBrainzOfficiell webbplatsSlayerSlayerr1373445760000 0001 1540 47353068615-5086262726cb13906545x(data)6033143kn20030215029