Guitar, sequenced for Nepali music lovers

Know three chords? You already have songs.

PickMyPath turns the 63 songs in its catalog, 42 of them Nepali, into one path: mark the chords you know, get the real songs you can already play, and learn about one new chord per song. Barre chords get routed around with a capo until you are ready.

63real songs, difficulty scored
42Nepali, 21 English
58hand-checked chord shapes

This is the actual path, computed from the catalog

Each song adds at most a chord or two to the ones before it. Green = the new chord that song teaches you.

How the path works

STEP 1

Mark what you know

Even if that is nothing. You tell the app which chords you can already play, and how confidently: solid, shaky, or new.

STEP 2

Get songs you can play now

The engine scores every song against your chords and shows what is already playable, plus what is exactly one chord away.

STEP 3

Detour around the wall

When a song needs a barre chord, the engine looks for a capo position that turns every chord into an open shape, so you keep playing instead of quitting at F.

The capo detour, on a real song

The single biggest reason self-taught guitarists quit is the F-shaped wall of barre chords. This is how the path routes around it.

Capo detour ↪ fret 5

Thamana Haat by Samir Shrestha is written with Am, G, F. Put a capo on fret 5 and the shapes you actually fret become:

Am EmG DF C

Same song, same key, zero barre chords. Every song page on this site shows its detour when one exists.

Stop practicing. Start playing songs.

PickMyPath is free, runs in the browser, works offline, and never guilt-trips you about streaks. Mark your chords and see your first playable song in under a minute.

Open PickMyPath