Bottleneck chooser

Find the exact point your guitar practice breaks down.

Start with the symptom you can hear or feel today, then use the matching diagnosis page to isolate the cause and choose a focused fix.

Start with what you notice first

The chord arrives lateYou know the shapes, but the transition misses the beat. Notes buzz or dieThe finger is down, but the note still sounds weak, buzzy, or muted. Fingers collapseA fretting finger flattens, folds, or spreads into nearby strings after it lands. Notes sound sharpThe guitar is tuned, but fretted notes or chords still sound slightly high or sour. Open strings dieThe chord shape looks right, but an open string sounds dull, muted, or missing. Chords overlapThe old chord keeps ringing into the next change and makes the transition sound smeared. Fingers fly awayThe fretting fingers lift high above the strings and arrive late on the next note. Wide stretches lock upThe hand freezes, twists, or buzzes as soon as the frets spread apart. The slide missesThe note glides toward the fret but arrives weak, late, sharp, or flat. The shift squeaksYour fretting hand makes a scrape or squeak as it moves along wound strings. The hand gets tightPressure, pain, or clamping appears before the phrase is truly difficult. The pick sounds scratchyThe notes are correct, but every attack has a harsh scrape, click, or brittle edge. The pick keeps movingThe pick slips, rotates, or changes exposed tip length while you play. Down-up strokes sound unevenThe notes are correct, but every other pick stroke sounds louder, thinner, or late. Strums hit wrong stringsThe chord is correct, but the pick starts on the wrong string or sweeps through too much of the chord. The pick missesThe fretting hand knows the notes, but the pick path breaks down. Extra strings ringThe right notes are there, but noise makes the part sound messy. The hands separateOne hand arrives before the other, especially as speed rises. Pull-offs yank sharpThe lower note speaks, but the release drags it sideways or out of tune. The bend diesThe pitch moves, but the note fades, buzzes, or chokes before it can sustain.

Fast chooser

Shortcuts for the most common practice failures.

Chord and fretting-hand control

Start here when the fretting hand is late, tense, unstable, or unable to hold the shape together.

Timing

Why your chord changes are still slow and what to fix first

You know the shapes, but the change itself arrives late.Open diagnosis
Contact

Why fretted notes buzz or die even when you press hard

The finger is down, but the note still sounds weak, buzzy, or muted.Open diagnosis
Finger shape

Why your fretting fingers collapse or flatten when you play

A finger folds, flattens, or spreads after it lands on the string.Open diagnosis
Pitch

Why fretted notes sound sharp even when your guitar is in tune

The open strings are tuned, but fretted notes still sound high or sour.Open diagnosis
Clearance

Why open chords sound muted even when your fingers are in the right places

An open string inside the chord sounds dull, muted, or missing.Open diagnosis
Release

Why your chords keep ringing into each other during changes

The old chord keeps sounding while the next shape starts.Open diagnosis
Motion

Why your fingers lift too far from the fretboard when you play

The fingers travel too far away and arrive late on the next note.Open diagnosis
Reach

Why wide fretting stretches make your hand lock up

The hand freezes, twists, or loses clean notes as soon as the shape gets wider.Open diagnosis
Shift noise

Why your fretting hand makes string squeaks when you shift positions

The notes land, but the movement between them adds a scrape or squeak.Open diagnosis
Pressure

Why barre chords hurt and fall apart so quickly

Your hand clamps down and the chord still dies.Open diagnosis
Tension

Why chord changes collapse when you tense up

A change works slowly, then falls apart under pressure.Open diagnosis
Release

Why your fretting hand gets tight even before the phrase is difficult

The hand tightens before the phrase is truly hard.Open diagnosis
Control

Why your fingers do not stay independent when you play

One finger movement drags the others out of position.Open diagnosis

Picking and string control

Use these when the notes are known, but the pick path, string choice, muting, or attack makes the result unreliable.

Timing, coordination, and expression

Use these when the phrase technically exists, but timing, hand alignment, pitch control, or expressive control breaks down.

Still not sure where to start?

Pick the page that describes the first audible failure in the chain. For example, if a chord is late and then the strumming becomes uneven, start with the chord-change page before diagnosing rhythm.