Guitar Superstars Review

This is a Guitar Superstars review.  If you’re looking for the actual Guitar Superstars download page, click here.

So you’re probably here because you’re interested in getting a Guitar Superstars review before deciding to buy the product.  This is a good idea, as you should always know what you’re getting into before you get involved.  Does Guitar Superstars work?

To make a long story short, my Guitar Superstars review will list some pros and cons about the program.  From there, I hope you’ll have the info you need in order to make a decision.

I bought the Guitar Superstars program about three months ago.  I had taken lessons for a few months about a year before that, but I had to stop because the cost was just too high for me.

Once my friend Randy told me (and showed me) what the Guitar Superstars program was doing for his skills, I decided I’d give it a shot.  The videos looked pretty helpful and I liked the fact that each different style had a separate teacher, and a really accomplished one at that.  I read a Guitar Superstars review that gave the program high marks, and there was a money back guarantee so I figured I didn’t have much to lose.

Check out the Guitar Superstars site here.

So, a few days later I laid out the $97 for the program and decided I’d give it a spin. I’ve read somewhere that this product sold in stores for $997 before it came online, but I don’t know if that’s true or not.

Anyway, what I can say is that the lesson center is packed with videos, tips, and drills, and it’s really easy to work your way through a logical progression that gets more challenging as it goes.  The teachers obviously know what they’re doing, and they answer a lot of the questions in advance that I’d normally have for a teacher if I was taking the same lesson in person.

For the price of two in person guitar lessons, I have months’ worth of stuff to keep me busy and I can take these “lessons” whenever I want.  I like the fact that I can pause and rewind them too (which I find myself doing often), as you obviously can’t do that in a real lesson.

See some sample Guitar Superstars lessons on their site.  Or, continue reading my Guitar Superstars review.

As far as the pros go, I’ve basically just listed them.  My guitar skills have gotten so much better and I’m playing some pretty difficult classic rock solos that I never would have been able to play even weeks ago.  It’s pretty exciting to think about where I’ll be a few weeks from now.

Here are the cons about the program.  First of all, Andy Johnson hasn’t invented a magical pill that you take that automatically makes everything great.  The drills are great, but boring sometimes…and they take a decent amount of work and dedication.  You might want to go at a slower pace than I did, which is fine.  You’ll definitely get out of it what you put into it though.

I’m also not such a fan of the GSS Jam Machine.  Even though they throw it in as a freebie, I haven’t used it since the first time I tried it out.

Then again, that’s not what the program’s all about.  At $97 for a lifetime’s worth of updates that seem to continue to hit the site very regularly, my guitar skills have improved in a matter of weeks what it’d take me a couple thousand dollars’ worth of weekly lessons to achieve in a year.  It’s a bargain if you’re willing to invest the time.

Well I guess that just about sums of my Guitar Superstars review.  Good luck if you choose to go with the product, and stay committed if you’re serious.

Click here for the Guitar Superstars site.

Guitar Superstars review