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should i keep practicing one song or many at the same time   You are logged in as Guest
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blinkknilb

 

Posts: 20
Joined: Mar. 31 2013
 

should i keep practicing one song or... 

In a dilema, should i ecxell in one song or move to another to learn more techniques?
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Apr. 13 2013 2:01:02
 
Leñador

Posts: 5237
Joined: Jun. 8 2012
From: Los Angeles

RE: should i keep practicing one son... (in reply to blinkknilb

What are you learning? Can you record a video? That's the best way to get feedback if you don't have a teacher.

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Apr. 13 2013 4:01:30
 
Sr. Martins

Posts: 3079
Joined: Apr. 4 2011
 

RE: should i keep practicing one son... (in reply to blinkknilb

Ive been practicing bits and pieces from everything I like, not really playing any "full songs".

I do this because this way I get to play the bits that stuck in my mind (which makes things fun) and also to make sure that Iam practicing all the techniques.
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Apr. 13 2013 10:59:58
 
Erik van Goch

 

Posts: 1787
Joined: Jul. 17 2012
From: Netherlands

RE: should i keep practicing one son... (in reply to blinkknilb

Best is to play material that fits your level of playing and on top study material that is a challenge but "within reach" (if you give it some effort). There is no reason to stick to 1 song. Depending on your personality and needs you can work on a couple of songs/techniques simultaneously, favoring the more easy to play parts (leaving out the parts and techniques that are still out of reach to much) and then slowly build your way up by adding increasingly more difficult material (techniques, exercises, falsetas, compas variations, songs). Best is not to mind playing complete songs but selected parts and bits that you like/need for your development and can play, developing your skills bit by bit. Over time you can return to/switch between various things you work on, improving and extending your repertoire and skills in the process .The more comes "within reach" the more easy it will be to construct and add (complete) pieces.
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Apr. 13 2013 11:56:22
 
n85ae

 

Posts: 877
Joined: Sep. 7 2006
 

RE: should i keep practicing one son... (in reply to blinkknilb

My little things:

Practice many things, and revisit stuff periodically. Many things that you cannot play
properly today you will find in a few years you can play properly. Practice stuff beyond your ability as well, not just at your level.

Practice stuff that you can also listen to somebody else play. Work on little bits
trying very carefully to play it properly.

Move on when you get bored with something, and revisit it later. I can always play
something I learned yesterday better than what I learned today ... It needs to
absorb into the subconscious to work. Some times that yesterday is 5 years ago ...

Always move your foot. A metronome is good, but teaching your foot to be your
metronome is very important.

Better to miss a few notes, and stay in time, than play all the notes and getting
out of time ...

If practicing begins to suck, your playing will begin to suck. That's my experience.
So work on different stuff to keep practicing from sucking.

Always try to play properly, it's not just memorizing the notes. Does is sound like
Pepe really played it? At least a little bit?

Regards,
Jeff
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Apr. 13 2013 17:08:56
 
gbv1158

 

Posts: 410
Joined: May 29 2009
From: Italy

RE: should i keep practicing one son... (in reply to blinkknilb

my little experience :

with pieces caracterized by a specific tecnique, than you can work on more than one piece.
If instead you go with pieces having inside different tecnique, then you should play the next one when you have well executed the piece before.

this is still my method.

ciao,
giambattista
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Apr. 13 2013 18:22:53
 
Ricardo

Posts: 14825
Joined: Dec. 14 2004
From: Washington DC

RE: should i keep practicing one son... (in reply to blinkknilb

if the techniques you are trying to learn are basic rasgueado arpegio and pulgar, basic time keeping compas, I would stick with the one form until you can comfortably play through the little parts you know with no error. Once you have some basic rhythm skills under your belt, picking up the detail of the different palos will go MUCH smoother as each form is the same basic concept....get some compas patterns down then a couple of nice falsetas that use different techniques and you just keep adding to the bag....forever.

ricardo

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CD's and transcriptions available here:
www.ricardomarlow.com
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Apr. 13 2013 20:13:37
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