8 Things Top Practicers Do Differently

I read a great article recently that really supports some of my own thinking and experience in practice and playing and what really gets you bang for your practice buck. Or in other words what actually works and what doesn’t. The article references a study undertaken a few years ago at the University of Texas at Austin looking at pianists. Different instrument admittedly, but the same principles most definitely apply.

One of the most important of these 8 things that apparently top practicers do differently that I find works extremely well for m (and used to recommend highly to my students), is not practicing in mistakes. Play something through very slowly, be confident of where you’re placing your left hand and right hand fingers before playing. Even if it means you’re playing reeeeaaaaaaaaallllly sllllllooooooooooooooowwwwwly. Much better this way, that encourages the correct learning of a phrase or piece, with the correct physiology, building the correct habit, than literally practicing in a incorrect movement and then doing the work all over again to unpick it and learn it correctly.

Yes, it may not sound so fluid initially, but stopping and just taking the time to make sense of what you’re doing and how you’re doing it will pay musical dividends in the long run. I promise you.

It also has a couple of interesting concepts that I had been thinking about too recently, including does aiming to play with ‘feeling’ right away assist in the learning? My instinct in has been yes for some time, and there seems to be something to it according to this study referenced by the article. My figuring is that you’re not only using your practice to build in a physiological habit, but also a musical one, and getting to know the music itself not just the fingering. That can only strengthen ones learning of a piece in my opinion.

Classical Guitar

So here are the 8 things that top practicers do differently:

1. Playing was hands-together early in practice (OK this is quite a piano-based one, but in applying this to the guitar think knowing what fingering you’re using for both left and right hands, not just your fingerboard hand)

2. Practice was with inflection early on; the initial conceptualization of the music was with inflection. (See!!)

3. Practice was thoughtful, as evidenced by silent pauses while looking at the music, singing/humming, making notes on the page, or expressing verbal “ah-ha”s. (i.e. don’t just go through the motions – 10 minutes of thoughtful, focussed practice is worth way more than 30 minutes of just going through motions)

4. Errors were preempted by stopping in anticipation of mistakes. (Stop playing those mistakes in every time!)

5. Errors were addressed immediately when they appeared. (And again stop playing those mistakes in every time!)

6. The precise location and source of each error was identified accurately, rehearsed, and corrected. (Shall I say it one more time?!)

7. Tempo of individual performance trials was varied systematically; logically understandable changes in tempo occurred between trials (e.g. slowed things down to get tricky sections correct).

8. Target passages were repeated until the error was corrected and the passage was stabilized, as evidenced by the error’s absence in subsequent trials.

To read the whole article, and I strongly encourage you to do so particularly for the top three practice strategies and one strategy to rule them all, head along to:  http://www.creativitypost.com/psychology/8_things_top_practicers_do_differently

Five of My Key Learnings On My Journey With The Classical Guitar

I was thinking the other day what my top tips would be, or rather key pieces of wisdom, I’ve come to learn over the past twenty-odd years of playing classical guitar. And (as I always say) I thought I’d share! So here is quick on with five of my key learnings on my journey with the classical guitar……. (I’m sure more will follow in the ensuing weeks as more gems pop into my brain!)

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(1) Trust yourself

Trust your own interpretation of the music you’re playing. You’re the musician bringing the music to life, trust what you bring to the music, your thoughts and ideas on how it should sound. Avoid the temptation to try and make it sound like someone else’s interpretation. And don’t be beholden to stylistic boundaries – sure be reverent to the style, time period etc, but don’t get too hung up on it in my opinion, particularly if you feel moved in a certain direction otherwise we’ll all sound the same! Go for it.

(2) Cultivate your sound

Aways listen to what you’re producing. The music is in the sound – sound quality rules over note accuracy (well, kind of, to a point!) Note accuracy, technique and so on is just the mechanics of the music. Your sound is where it comes alive. Listen to it. Be inspired by others, but don’t wish to have the sound of others. Your sound is you.

(3) Turn up and practice regularly

Regularity and being truly present in the process is the key to making progress. Practicing more often than not practicing in terms of days of the week. Keeping things moving. It’s a never ending process.

(4) But don’t stress out if you can’t practice

The guitar is not going anywhere. And you may find the break has done you good. Not stressing is also vitally important in making progress!

(5) Things don’t necessarily get easier the pieces just get more challenging!

Well, that’s only partly true really, a number of things really do get easier over time with consistent practice – sight reading, left and right hand techniques, tonal control and so on. What doesn’t necessarily feel easier is the learning and getting to grips with a new piece, that is to say if you’re pushing yourself with more challenging repertoire.

And you don’t notice this change at the time. It kind of feels like things are still hard. But go back to something you were playing or learning a year or two (or more) back, or better yet something you might have looked at at that time but found perhaps a little too challenging at the time and you may just surprise yourself. I know I have and continue to!