Posts Tagged Learning Music

How to Fix Practicing Frustration

 

Do One Thing at a Time!

Students at any level can get frustrated when a passage, riff or chord-change doesn’t lock in quickly.

Did that ever happen to you?

Playing music involves doing many things at once. Whether you are reading, improvising, playing by ear, or just foolin’ around, many coordinated actions are happening simultaneously. Much of the time, you need to break things down into smaller pieces in order to get all of the elements working together. The more practiced one is, the quicker the process will be. Learning a new chord-change might take a pro 20 minutes to nail, while an intermediate player might take four hours on that same chord change.

If you are not already used to the process, here it is:

1. Isolate one part of what you are learning and work on it. Take a short section of a guitar riff, piano fingering, scale, vocal passage, whatever it is, and work it out. Get it smooth and correct: coordinate the motions and master it. Break it down to just the right-hand picking directions on guitar, the left-hand piano shifts, where to breath, etc. Start with whichever element interests you the most, or is the easiest thing to tackle.

2. Isolate another element and work that out.

3. As you gain control over each part-of-the-whole, start combining them until the passage or section is complete.

It could take ten minutes or ten days to master one small thing, so have patience! Go for the new skill and don’t worry about time.

 

Common isolations:

1. The rhythm of the melody, or passage, without the pitches: Tap or clap the rhythm, and count it out if you can. I suggest doing this to a pulse: metronome, drum machine or internal pulse, if your “time” is good.

2. The pitches of the melody in any rhythm: Concentrate on the fingerings, attack and the ear training. Sometimes a passage is difficult simply because you don’t really hear it.

3. The accompaniment rhythm: If you can count and clap it, do so. If it’s not something that can be clapped easily, tap it with your fingers, “drum” it with your hands and feet, or clap the main feel or accents.

4. Fingerings and hand/body positions: Left hand, right hand, together.

5. Feet and leg motions: Pedals and levers.

6. If it’s in an odd-meter, like 5/8 or 7/4, drill the meter first by counting it out, then work on the rhythm.

7. Stabilize your technique and articulation (attack): Picking, plucking, bowing, blowing or percussively attacking like piano or percussion. At this point a singer could focus on timbre and vocal technique.

These same principles apply to all instruments—everything really :-) , whether you play flute, trombone or bagpipe!

If you isolate troublesome passages and practice them correctly, you should have them under your control in less time than you might have thought!

 

Marty B.

Email: marty@buttwinickmusic.com
http://buttwinickmusic.com
http://Personalized Music Lessons Facebook Page

 

 

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Give Music Lessons for Mother’s Day!

 

 

2009 Gift Cert

 

 

Hello!

 

It’s time for Mother’s Day Gift Specials!

Where would any of us be without mom? Well…, we wouldn’t! In most cases, mom took care of us, changed our diapers, fed us, and everything!

So if mom is a musician or a singer, or would like to be: in addition to flowers and sleeping in and an iPad3, get her some music lessons! (I think that’s a great idea :-) ) (I also provide a wide array of musical services she might need that you can contact me about.)

Now is your time to give mom a truly unique present for her special day. And guys, you could use this as an opportunity to get any gal who is a mom this cool gift. Right?

Browse through my teacher pages to see what I do, then get some lessons as a gift!

 

Here are the specials:

  • Normal rate: $65 / lesson (an hour)
  • Gift Rate #1: $55 / lesson — Buy two lessons (minimum) at $110
  • Gift Rate #2: Same price with a four-lesson package at $220 (Normally $260)
  • Gift Rate #3: A five-lesson package for $275 and you get one free! (This is a great deal.) This applies to anyone paying by May 13th and starting before the end of May. (Gift Packages apply to new or returning students only.

All lessons need to be weekly, at least one a week. (More is always fine.) Until a student is stable with the learning process, it’s easy to get off track when a week is missed. Once someone is grooved in, occasional misses aren’t an issue.

 

Here are some starting links to see how things work:

Introduction
Teaching Method
Student Comments
Clearing up Confusions About Music

 

Take advantage of this offer!
(Click here to download and print the gift certificate.)

 

Marty B.
(818) 242-7551
Email
(And remember that I deliver lessons by phone and Skype to your out-of-town mothers, mothers-in-law, and other people’s mothers if you really like them :-) )

 

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Guitar and Bass: Which Way is Up?

Learning what “up or down the neck” means is one of the funniest things about learning beginning bass and guitar. This has perplexed and embarrassed more adult students then almost any other point! (Almost…)

Musically, the words “up” and “down” most often refer to pitch. “Pitch” is the highness or lowness of a note determined by how fast the string is vibrating. (More about pitch at the glossary at my website.)

An open guitar or bass string vibrates at a certain speed. When you press the string down to a fret, it shortens the string thereby making the string vibrate faster and the pitch higher. When you play notes going from the head of the instrument towards the sound hole, or pickups, the pitch’s are getting higher and is called going “up” the neck. Using a vertical guitar as an example, going up the neck is going down in gravity, and going down the neck is going up in gravity! So down is up and up is down!

It can take a while to get used to this when learning to play. Often enough I’ll say “move your finger down one fret” and the student moves it according to gravity instead of pitch, laughs then corrects the motion. This becomes rather humorous after the 20th or 30th time it happens. Some people get used to this after a few weeks, though most actually take a few months to stabilize this concept.

After all, we’ve been dealing with gravity longer than dealing with vibrating strings!

Marty B.

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Glossary of Musical Terms

Check out my new Glossary of Musical Terms!

It is an expanding list of musical and music-business related terms. It has brief, yet concise definitions of important words. Not everything will be here as we already have dictionaries for those terms.

There are often many definitions for a word and I will mainly list a musically-oriented, simple definition or two for each one. Sometimes simple is good! (As time goes on I will be adding more involved and more in-depth definitions that you can access by clicking on words that are hyper-linked.)

The main focus is musical terms that are commonly mis-understood, or should be known by anyone playing or studying music.

I just started this project in March or 2010 and it will be expanding over the next few months. If there is anything you need a definition for let me know.

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Am I Too Old to Learn an Instrument?

old young music

Am I too old to learn an instrument?

Have you ever said that? Many of my students and prospective students have said those exact words to me.

And my answer – no!

You can be too old to be a teen rock star and you can be too old or not good looking enough to be a sex-god or goddess, but never too old to learn an instrument.

I’ve had students ranging from nine to seventy-five. The main difference between learning when young and learning when older, is THINKING! Older people tend to think too much! Younger people tend to just dive in and do what they need to do. They have their weekly lesson and they go home and practice it. Since they invest themselves into the activity, they benefit from it and achieve their musical goals.
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The Seven Different Types of Written Music

As a bassist, bandleader, teacher and music copyist I’ve worked with hundreds of singers throughout the years. Though working musicians know hundreds of tunes, singers need to have good charts in order to have their music played the way they want. I define a “good chart” as a piece of written music that effectively tells the musicians what they should play.

Written music comes in seven basic forms: chord charts, sheet music, songbooks, leadsheets, fake books, master rhythm charts and fully notated parts.

As a musician has a responsibility to correctly play the chart before him, the supplier of the chart has the responsibility of providing the right kind of chart. Knowing what type of chart to use for what kind of tune or gig is very important.

This article explains what the different types of charts are, and under what circumstances to use them. I hope you find it useful.

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The Fascinating Thing About Teaching

The most fascinating thing about teaching, is how different everyone is. Different levels of alertness, interest, ability and aesthetic levels.

There are two main categories of teaching that I apply: pure enhancement and correction.

 

Pure Enhancement

I guess you can call this straight-ahead teaching. I know what the student want’s to do and I show him the skills needed to accomplish that.

 

Correction

Though there are various levels of correction possible, this mainly entails fixing up any bad habits or incomplete knowledge or skills a person could have. For example: I had a guitar student once who had developed some really bad picking technique and wanted to fix it. Another student didn’t understand what she was playing on the piano and kept on getting confused in the middle of songs. I just needed to fill in her theory holes.

I could go on and on.

In following through with this post topic, people respond in all different ways. Some are resistive, some gladly accept whatever I give them to do, while others learn so fast they end up teaching me something!

And people have asked me If I ever get bored teaching? I don’t think so.

Student’s have cried when they didn’t like some music they wrote, or rejoiced from playing something perfectly.

I could on and on, but it’s time for dinner.

What kind of student have you been?

Marty B.
Personalized Music Lessons

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The Language of Music – Part 2

An interesting part of teaching has been getting the idea across to students that you can’t experience something until you actually experience it; and you can’t experience it until you can actually do it. As you don’t know what it’s like to sit on a horse until you sit on a horse, you don’t really know what it’s like to play something well until you actually play something well! And until you actually hear something, recognize it and play on it on your instrument the first time you try you haven’t experienced “playing by ear.” To learn these things, calm, relaxed and efficient practicing is necessary. There’s no way around this.

On a physical level, the purpose of practicing is to work out the kinks and hesitations to develop control over what you’re playing. To play with a tense body is like driving a car with the emergency brake on. Practicing too fast is like speeding through the mountains and screeching around the corners—you will most likely end up in a tree. You need to develop relaxed control before going fast—even with playing one note. Learn to relax when you play!

For ear training, practicing achieves a familiarity with sounds and what they are called. It’s similar to knowing what words mean verses being able to say them without understanding their definitions. An infant most likely doesn’t know what “green” is until someone points to something green and says “This is green.” It’s the same thing with ear training. You take some sounds, learn what they’re called and how to play them, then drill listening and identifying them. Then as you can know and recognize a few different colors or many of them, you learn to recognize a few musical sounds or hundreds of them: small vocabulary—large vocabulary.

A major part of learning the language of music is practicing at the right speed; the speed in which you can actually DO what it is, then through repetition gaining control and certainty. (And some things need to be repeated hundreds of times before you get it so be patient!) Then once you can do whatever it is you can get it faster and more fluid. Practicing too fast is probably the number one boo-boo students make.

There are many elements to the language, and until the pieces are put together the puzzle remains unfinished. When I teach I spend a great deal of time simply filling in the holes that people have in their puzzles and creating sequences of things to do to complete the picture: small picture or big picture.

Whether you are learning your first songs, learning to read or filling in the holes, find something you want to improve and create a realistic practice routine. Put your puzzle together piece by piece and eventually the picture will appear and you’ll speak more of the language of music.

Play on!

Marty B.

Personalized Music Lessons

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