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#204455 - 10/25/04 08:29 AM
Re: Practice/Playing Slumps
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/02/04
Posts: 7305
Loc: Lexington, Ky, USA
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Dave is right. Each time I've become a little bored, a new song, style, arrangement, etc. made things fun and exciting again.
After a particularly hard week in the mid-seventies, I was driving to work and heard Masquerade by George Benson. I was familiar with this tune (The Carpenters, Leon Russell). This gave George Benson a whole new career, with the "Breezin" album and made me appreciate what innovative arrangements can mean.
There have been many other experiences that add new excitement, including the advances in equipment. If you never stop learning and experimenting, the slumps will dissappear.
Best of luck!
Russ
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#204456 - 10/25/04 10:24 AM
Re: Practice/Playing Slumps
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Senior Member
Registered: 11/19/02
Posts: 2867
Loc: Tampa, FL
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Originally posted by capt_doug61: Hi all, I'm mostly a beginner and need some advice. Doug Hi Doug, Are you taking lessons? I advise taking lessons with a beautiful young female teacher!! All kidding aside, one of the reasons I study with a music teacher learning jazz at age 49 is for inspiration. I find a coorelation between how much I practice and how much inspiration I get from my teacher. When I'm struggling with a piece, he sits down and plays the hell out of it and I just sit there with my mouth open agasp! His chops and talent inspire me to work harder, practice longer, and not miss a lesson. However, I do suffer burnout by playing too much. When I have 3 four hour jobs in a week, I can't bring myself to practice. My teacher tells me not to worry about it because I've already practiced 12 hours!!!! Stay with it Doug, it's what separates the bees from the wanna bees!!! Al
_________________________
Al
Pa4x - LD Systems Maui 28 - Mackie Thumps
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#204457 - 10/25/04 10:56 AM
Re: Practice/Playing Slumps
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/01/99
Posts: 10427
Loc: San Francisco Bay Area, CA, US...
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Doug, don't feel too bad. I've been there and experienced the same MANY times over myself. Music is a lifelong path of discovery and we can only master a bite at time. Take the time to taste all the various entrees on your plate and eventually you'll have enjoyed a thoroughly satsifying meal. I often face stumbling blocks when faced with a particularly challenging song project, but find that by letting it go temporarily, and working on some other aspect of music, from working on another song, or other aspect of music making, or even listening to a music CD, or going out to see music performed live) can provide added perspective & inspiration for you to come back and work past your current slump. Doug, rest assured that your feelings are normal. Don't give up on music. Scott
_________________________
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#204459 - 10/25/04 11:24 AM
Re: Practice/Playing Slumps
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Member
Registered: 09/16/02
Posts: 1704
Loc: Toronto
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Instead of boring exercises, try fun exercises. My organ teacher, of 25 some years ago, asked me to buy a book of jigs and reels, and to work on these pieces. They were fantastic finger exercises, they had to be played quikly,but not boring, because they were an actual song, not an exercise. After "practicing" on these jigs and reels my fingers would burn from the workout. Like U.D. said, mix it up. I might start practicing a piano piece in full keyboard mode (no arranger), get bored, and play that same song with the arranger. This reinforces the right hand, or I might play some other song I know. Starkeeper
_________________________
I play Roland EM20 and Yamaha PSR550
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