Thursday, 11 December 2008

Exhausted

A lot of heavy stuff happened yesterday so although it was my day off I didn't get much practice done. I did spend about twenty minutes sketching through to the end of the Allegro Assai.

Today I did about an hour:

Sight Reading ex 40-50
Scales
Allegro Assai - concentrating on page two
Running through the Grade 3 material

I can't wait until next Tuesday - although I have a lot of stuff to organise and sort out I think the Christmas break will mean an increase in piano-time.

Tuesday, 9 December 2008

Five Tempo Method

I keep referring to this so I thought I'd better explain it. The following is cut and pasted from a handout I give to my drum students:

The Five Tempo Method

Speed – The Final Frontier!

Most musicians have at some stage wanted to be able to play a particular pattern or piece faster. The usual advice regarding this is to start slowly and gradually work the patterns up to speed. The Five Tempo Method is a way of doing just that in an organised, methodical way.

In order to practise a pattern or piece using the Five Tempo Method you need a metronome and a note of the traditional metronome markings. These are:

40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50, 52, 54, 56, 58, 60, 63, 66, 69, 72, 76, 80, 84, 88, 92, 96,100, 104, 108, 112, 116, 120, 126, 132, 138, 144, 152, 160, 168, 176, 184, 192, 200, 208

At the slower tempos the difference between the markings is small. The difference increases as you move into the faster tempos.

If you have a particular pattern or piece you want to work up to speed you first need to find a tempo that allows you to play the piece/pattern with ease. Practise the pattern/piece through at that tempo and then repeat the whole thing at the next four tempos. The aim is to play the entire exercise at five tempos. The next time you work on this pattern/piece your starting point is one tempo faster than your previous starting point.

Example:
Day 1 - 60, 63, 66, 69, 72
Day2 - 63, 66, 69, 72, 76
Day 3 – 66, 69, 72, 76, 80

Try to be patient when you reach your top speed. Keep working up to your top speed on a daily basis and eventually you will get beyond it. Remember to remain relaxed (physically and mentally) and enjoy the process, not just the result.

This method works particularly well when applied to whole pieces. If you are practising a short phrase or lick try repeating the pattern 16 or 20 times at each speed.
Give it a try – it always works for me!

Tuesday

15 minutes: Grade 1 Sight Reading exercises 41-50 & F, C, G, D, A, E, B Major Scales (at 40bpm)

15 minutes Allegro Assai bar 1-40 at 40bpm

30 minutes reviewing Grade 3 pieces

Study in F (52-60bpm)

Bach (92-108bpm)

Top Cat! (76-92bpm)

I'm using the five tempo method to work the Grade 3 pieces up to the marked tempos. I will make a new post explaining it as I keep referring to it here!

I could concentrate better today. I'm still exhausted but there were fewer distractions tonight...

Monday, 8 December 2008

Change of Scenery...

I'm staying with family for a bit so I brought my piano with me (!)

I'm a little tired today so found it a bit tricky to concentrate.

15 minutes - Allegro Assai

15 minutes - Study in F

15 minutes - Top Cat/Bach piece

15 minutes - scales/sight reading F, C, G, D, A, E, B major scales and Grade One sight reading exercises 31-40

Sunday, 7 December 2008

Sunday Morning

Started the day with 10 minutes scales:

F, C, G, D, A, E major - 2 octaves ascending and descending with both hands together. I start at F and run round part of the cycle of fifths playing each scale once, then moving on. This is so that I have to actually engage my brain every few seconds instead of switching off and playing the scales 'mechanically.'

So far I'm doing this at 40 bpm. Once I'm comfortable in all major keys I'll work up to tempo using the Five Tempo Method.

I also spent 10 minutes running through Grade One sight reading exercises 21-30.

Last night I dug out some of my old Grade 1 and 2 pieces. Some of them I could play without any problems but some took a bit of work. I may make a habit of regularly revisiting old pieces to keep them up to scratch.

I'm off to get the paper and eat breakfast. More later!

30 minutes playing through the first 32 bars of the Allegro Assai at a snails pace - 30 bpm