u/MarkTiarra

What other guitar learning tools are needed?

So I started posting a bunch of free tools online for learning/assisting guitar players. So far I have:

  • Find the right scale over any chord.
  • Chord progression scale finder.
  • What chords work in a key finder.
  • Arpeggio finder.
  • About to add find any note on the fretboard.

I want to put up a bunch more and am looking to find out what people would find most useful. It's all at https://guitarlicklab.com/tools/ Hopefully that's okay to share.

reddit.com
u/MarkTiarra — 3 days ago

Hey everyone — a couple weeks ago I posted Guitar Lick Lab here, and I really appreciated the feedback and response.

Since then, I’ve been expanding it beyond just the main practice app and trying to build more of a useful free ecosystem for learning guitar players.

The main app is still here:

https://guitarlicklab.com

It’s a structured practice tool for building speed with guitar exercises, practice licks, famous-style licks, drills, common lead guitar patterns, a built-in metronome, and progress tracking.

If you want to use the main app, enter this code when signing up:

reddit326

I also added a free tools hub here:

https://guitarlicklab.com/tools/

Right now it includes:

Scale Over Chord Finder

Type in a chord like G, Am, D7, Cmaj7, etc., and it shows scale options, chord tones, explanations, and a fretboard view with position filters.

Chord Progression Scale Finder

Enter a progression like G D Em C or Am F C G and it helps find the likely key, scale choices, pentatonic options, chord tone targets, and fretboard positions.

EnviroFilter

This one is more of an audio tool. It lets you make audio sound like it’s coming from another room / next door / a different environment.

A few people mentioned wanting tools that connect theory to something more visual and playable, so that’s the direction I’m trying to take this.

The goal is to keep building practical, free tools that help learning guitar players actually use this stuff instead of just reading charts.

Feedback is genuinely welcome. If anything is confusing, too advanced, missing, or just not useful yet, I’d love to know so I can keep improving it.

Hope it helps someone here.

reddit.com
u/MarkTiarra — 21 days ago