How They Practise

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I’m just sending out my May edition of “Notes from the Harp” (are you getting them? Why not?!) and I wanted to supplement my thoughts in it on redeeming the time.

As a music teacher, I’ve found that the single factor that makes the biggest difference in a student’s progress is:

Talent

Musicality

Hard work

Those are all great, but no cigar.

It is:

How they practise. 

Here’s an excerpt from my article to expand on that:

When you play a musical instrument, planning makes the difference between self-defeating practise sessions and transformative practise sessions. 

Once I became a mother, I was amazed by how much I could accomplish at my instrument in 30 minutes, or even just 10 minutes, compared to the less structured way I used to practise when I had all the time in the world.

Here are some practical questions to ask yourself if, like me, you are not a planner by nature (it took a blitz of small children to force me to start planning well):

  • What is the hardest part of my day?
  • What makes it hard?
  • If I can’t change it, can I change my attitude?
  • Can I change my strategy for dealing with it?

Now apply this to music practise.

  • What is the worst part of this piece?
  • Why is this hard?
  • What strategies am I employing to deal with it?
  • Am I breaking it up into the smallest possible units?
  • Am I analysing what techniques are used?
  • Do I have a plan for how I will gradually master this?
  • How would I tackle this passage if I could only spend 10 minutes focused wholeheartedly on it every day?

No matter how long you’ve been playing the harp, it’s a really good idea to assess yourself on this.

How do you practise?

Join the conversation here. 

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