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Playing Without Pain!!
"...Hi Jamie.
I recently ordered your 'principles- DVD's, and now have studied it a couple
of times...
It is truly amazing! I have played both the classical and the electric
guitar a couple of years, and developed quite fast (because of a great
desire, and enjoyment of it). But doing so, my muscles developed
tensions, resulting in growing pain. Then someone told me that correct playing should be done through relaxation, but there was one problem. I couldn't find
anyone telling me HOW that should be
accomplished!
Well to make the story short, somehow I came across your homepage on the
net, and decided to buy the DVD's. It is probably the best investment I have
done, since buying my guitar.
Those 'simple' movements have already improved my playing, and best of all;
given me a tool to finally play without more tension and pain.
Thank you for that!
Annica from Sweden

"The Principles" DVD Set
Jamie brings "The
Principles" to life, showing you exactly how to establish the "bottom
of your practice" on The Foundation Exercises...more
info on the DVD's
To Put It Simply, "The Principles Are Essential!
"
The Perfect Start Package! "The Principles Of Correct Practice For Guitar"
more info on The Principles
The Path Level One: Chords & Rhythm"
more
info on The Path...

Click on photo to order
-don't really
understand rhythm?
-having trouble
changing chords smoothly?
-having trouble
strumming & singing?

Get
On
"The Path"
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One
of the aspects of a properly balanced practice approach that is VERY often
overlooked is REVIEW. The common tendency of most students is to focus on
"new" things to play, even if last month’s or last year’s
"new" thing was never properly learned. There are a few reasons
for this:
Reasons
We Don’t Review:
1.
New is always exciting. There is a certain rush of exhilaration as
we begin a new song or piece, especially if we really like it. Some of us
are just addicted to that buzz!
2.
Taking on something new gives us the feeling that we are
"moving along". Well, I guess we are, but where we are going is
not going to be any better than the place we just left!
3.
Our teacher may want us to "move along" to the next page
in the book, or a new song. This is because he/she is afraid we will think
we are not learning if we stay to long on one thing, or go back to
something we had previously worked on.
4.
Going back and reviewing something makes us feel bad about
ourselves as guitar players, since we know what is going to happen if we
go back and try to get that solo, or that piece, to sound better than it
did last time we played it. We won’t be able to! We will hit all the same
problem spots,
and they will still be problems, and the music will sound the same as it
did the last time we battled with it. We will fight the same battles, and
we will lose again. That is because we are fighting them the same way!
Because we never learned how to practice, WE DON’T KNOW HOW TO IMPROVE
THINGS!
(As I began to learn how to practice, how to take something and make it
better, reviewing took on a very enjoyable, even exciting aspect. Since I
was getting better all the time, I couldn’t wait to see how much
improvement I could create on a piece I really loved, and had some little,
maybe big problems, with.)
You
must examine yourself, and see where you stand with all of this. Ask
yourself these questions:
1.
Do I regularly review songs, pieces, solos, and exercises?
2.
Do I see the results of regular review bearing fruit for me in the
form of an ever growing repertoire (group of pieces we have mastered and
can play)?
3.
Is this repertoire getting "better" all the time, or is
it plagued with weak spots?
We
are, of course, looking for YES answers here. If you come up with
"No’s" , "Maybe’s", or "Um, could you
re-phrase the question", then you need to take serious heed of what I
am saying.
Now
of course, we must, on a regular basis, take on new material. But we must
also, on a regular basis, review old material. Let’s look at some of the
reasons why this is so.
Reasons
We Should Review: Long Range/Short Range Building of Skills
Often,
as I give a student something new, I will tell them "it is not
possible for you at the present level of your development, to learn this
piece (or song) well enough to be able to play it the way it is supposed
to be played. Consider this piece like a tree you are planting. It will
take a while, maybe a year or two, to grow fully. Each time you come back
to work on this again, each time you review it, it will grow taller and
stronger. Right now, we are just going to "plant the seed".
We then work on the piece or song or even exercise, until a "first
goal" is reached. A "first goal" is the level of
proficiency that I feel the student is capable of achieving at their
present level of development. Of course, this means the level they can
bring the music to IF they do their absolute best in terms of practicing
it. This may take two weeks, it may take two months, it may even take 4 to
6 months before I feel the student has taken it as far as they can.
At
this point, they can stop "working on" the music, and just
"play it". It can become part of their repertoire even if it
hasn’t been brought up to performance level. Playing it will keep it in
their fingers, and in a general way, it may even improve just by playing
it, but usually whatever technical problems still remain WILL remain.
Whether
the music is still played, or put aside, the point is that at some later
time that music must be re-visited. Those technical problems that were
beyond reach must be gone back to later on, maybe six months later, maybe
a year. IF THE STUDENT HAS BEEN DEVELOPING PROPERLY THEY WILL BE ABLE TO
TAKE THAT MUSIC FURTHER, BEYOND THEIR FIRST GOAL.
It
is this process, repeated over and over, that builds a solid repertoire,
and a solid player.
A
good example is a student of mine who was new to fingerpicking. We worked
on Dust in the Wind for about 6 months, and I mean the whole song as a
guitar solo, chord melody arrangement, including transcribing the violin
solo for guitar. He learned it pretty well, but it broke down in a few
places due to left hand problems and the fact that he wasn’t properly
trained in classical right hand technique ( we had been doing mostly
electric and jazz up till then).
We
then spent about a year doing classical studies, and recently, I told him
to review Dust in the Wind. What a difference! He now can play it very
fluently, and it is extremely satisfying for both of us to see the
progress that was made. This is the way it should be for all of us.
Review
with a "New You"
Robert
Louis Stevenson said "A man who holds the same views at forty that he
did at twenty, is a man who has been stupefied for twenty years!" I
say, a person who plays a piece of music at the same level now as he did a
year ago, does not know how to practice and does not know how to create
vertical growth in their playing ability.
At
any given point, there should be a "new you", when it comes to
life, or guitar. When this "new, improved you" reviews an
"old piece of music", it should become a "new, improved,
piece of music" once again.
Copyright 2000 by Jamie Andreas. All rights reserved.
Related Topic:
Practice Organization...the vital areas to cover.
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