Adamın Anasını Sikmenin 51 Yolu
Adamın Anasını Sikmenin 51 Yolu
Adamın Anasını Sikmenin 51 Yolu
Taghavi
Pro Practice Secrets Handbook
1. Set aside separate time for “playing”
- Sometimes when students go to “practice” they just end up noodling around
for an hour and call that their “practice”. So the idea here is to leave
designated time for yourself to just let loose and play. After all, the goal is to
have fun and express ourselves! So jamming is certainly a rewarding and
healthy thing to do. But this way you make sure to separate your “playing”
time from “practicing” time.
Bijan Taghavi
7. Learn Tunes
- Why are learning tunes important? Knowing tunes provides you with a
framework to apply new information, and allows you to play with other
people!
- A tune a week is a good, reasonable goal to set for yourself – if you stay
consistent with it, you will have learned over 50 tunes in a year!
8. Listen
- Try listening to a new album every week.
- Listening is one way of fueling your practice – it could be: learning a tune
played off a particular album, analyzing the rhythmic comping of a pianist on
a quartet recording, learning a solo off a piano trio recording, or listening for
the interplay on a piano-vocal duo recording to name a few examples.
9. Transpose
- Transposing forces you to truly understand harmonic movement rather than
rote memorization. While it’s not necessary to transpose every tune in every
key, every now and then it’s healthy to take tunes through the cycle to keep
yourself honest and see the changes for what they really are (for ex: IMaj7 /
VIMaj7 / VI7 / II7, rather than, Dbmaj7 / Bbmaj7 / Bb7 / Eb7).
Bijan Taghavi
12. Focus
- 45 minutes of focused, fully engaged practice is more efficient than 5
hours of disengaged, unfocused practice. It is crucial to have a clear and
focused mind in order to be able to concentrate on every detail when
practicing.
16. Practice Away From The Piano
- Whether you are in the shower, on the bus or train to work, or on a walk
in the park, there are plenty of opportunities to practice away from the
piano. In fact, mental piano practice can be just as productive as
practicing at the piano
- For example: try working out lines over All The Things You Are,
imagining the drums and bass playing and constructing a solo in your
head. Or try to transpose Have You Met Miss Jones in your head, away
from the piano.