Home › Lessons › Morristown, TN
Morristown Guitar & Music Lessons
2 music stores in Morristown, Tennessee show real evidence — from the store's own site or students' and parents' reviews — of an actual lesson program: teaching rooms, a roster of teachers, weekly slots. Store lessons typically run around $25–40 for a half-hour private lesson, billed monthly; private beats group for anyone past the just-testing-it stage, because a teacher watching your hands is what stops bad habits before they set. For kids, around age 6–7 is when guitar lessons realistically start working (a 3/4-size guitar helps a lot); for school band kids, ask about instrument rentals — several stores here run rental programs. Stores are ranked below by local reputation (rating weighted by review count) — and with two programs in town, it's worth asking each about a trial lesson before committing to a weekly slot.
1. Trade Center
4.5 ★★★★★ 319 reviews
“This was the first music store I went to and where I got guitar lessons. The staff here is friendly and knowledgeable. The owner is one of the kindest people I have ever met. I…” — Nick
2. The Guitar Vault
4.8 ★★★★★ 233 reviews
“I was there a few weeks back getting a setup to learn the bass guitar. Tony was awesome. Didn't try to upsale me on anything and basically sold me what I need. He also pointed me…” — Broyles
Picking a lesson program in Morristown: practical notes
- Ask for a trial lesson or a meet-the-teacher. Teacher fit decides everything — the same program is a different experience two rooms apart. Most stores will set up a first lesson before you commit to monthly billing, and a ten-minute conversation tells you a lot.
- Get the boring policies up front. Makeup lessons for missed weeks, registration fees, how summer and holidays bill — this is where programs actually differ, more than rates do. $25–40 per half-hour is the normal range; a program outside it should be able to say why.
- Kids: size the instrument, not just the lesson. A 6–8 year old on a full-size guitar is fighting the instrument instead of learning it — ask about 3/4-size and short-scale options, which the store conveniently sells or rents down the hall. If a teacher says your kid should wait a year, believe them.
- Band and orchestra: rent before you buy. Rental programs with rent-to-own credit are built for exactly the kid who might quit trombone in March. Ask what maintenance coverage is included and check the school's supply list first — stores flagged for rentals above run these programs.
- Adults: you're not too old, and you're not alone. Store rosters teach plenty of adult beginners and returners. Say what you actually want to play — a teacher who starts you on the songs you came in for keeps you practicing; the method-book march can wait.