Left shoulder position


The change from the classical position has brought the guitar more to the right and while it’s not good for the right shoulder it is better for the left side. The main problem that people face here is the tendency to lift the shoulder. This is totally avoidable and easily managed.

Left shoulder elevatedLeft shoulder elevatedElevation of the lefts shoulder will accompany elbow winging and this thumb positionPrevious Image 1/8 Next


As you’ll have seen from the biomechanical analysis if the left elbow is tucked into your side, hanging vertically from your shoulder, then your shoulder is doing it’s job. In order to achieve this and to encourage maximum relaxation all the way down the arm it needs to be as relaxed and in as neutral a position as possible. The strategies that we applied to the right shoulder are just as relevant here.

  • Take a breath in and then as you breathe out allow your shoulders to simply fall.
  • Continue this relaxed breathing and focus on the large muscle at the top of your shoulder (trapezius). The upper traps make a line between the back of the neck and the top of your shoulder so the common tendency for the head to protrude forward will also pull the shoulders forward. As the tension in these superior fibres is reduced you’ll notice you’re shoulders start to straighten as well as fall.
  • Now focus on the muscles at the side of your neck, you probably won’t notice any shape change with this, the scalenes are generally hard as a rock, but it will take a lot of the stress away from structures all around the neck and connect the upper traps with the front of the chest.
  • Focus now on the area just below your clavicle, a reduction in the tension here will bring your shoulders back, opening your chest.

The left scapula is less likely to tip up over the rib cage, instead the entire shoulder complex tends to lift, either through inherent tension in the shoulder elevators, or the position of the hand and elbow. There’s a full description of these patterns in the biomechanics pages.

To stop the shoulder lifting and the elbow winging out we need to find another way to reach high up on the neck of the guitar. With the shoulder in the position we are prescribing here the humerus can rotate at the glenohumeral joint with little if any affect on the rest of the shoulder complex. Shoulder rotation is not a straightforward movement, keeping it stable and mobile through such a wide range of rotation does take some tricky engineering. The shoulder is well adapted to do this however and when there are no loads other than gravity acting on the arm this movement won’t add to the myofascial tension in your arm and shoulder.

To keep it there you need to ensure that as you move down the fretboard toward the headstock your shoulder rotates. Take a look at this short video.


Supporting exercises

the relaxation program This is a pre-requisite for most of the approaches you'll find here
medial rotator stretch The medial rotators of the shoulder are often short, closing off the chest and contributing to rounded shoulders.
shoulder elevators stretch The lateral neck streatch will stretch the shoulder elevators, If they muscles are short the shoulder tends to lift throwing out the positions of both the elbow and the hand.
shoulder massage sequence The shoulder massage sequence in conjunction with the stretches will increase blood flow and assist the relaxation response.
technique exercises These exercises will help you reach up and down the neck without lifting your shoulder.