this is so interesting but so true. i used to dance a lot and what helped me learn the choreographies was listening to the song on loop and it helped me in _remembering_ and _understanding_ the musicality and structure of the songs. i also sing and had a 3-piece band last year as lead vocal and in our first-ever performance, i looped our setlist everyday even if i wasn't able to sing with it/hum to it all the time. now compare that to our last performance last year, i looped our setlist like half of when i did the first time. that performance was _so_ not as good as our very first. i didn't feel the music, the lyrics, or the structure as well as i did the first time. in the first perf, the songs were like "a part of me". and interestingly too, i thought i practiced more in our last performance than the first time. 🤓👍 so, these are *definitely* critically vital tips to practice as any kind of musician... or dancer
Hi Brent. All useful stuff. Oddly my most productive time is often when I'm not actually playing. I live in the country, and and walk a lot. Often, almost subconsciously, I find myself soloing in my head over the chords of a particular piece, and because I am not limited by the constraints of the instrument, but rather simply 'hearing' what I want to play, I often have a melodic idea for a certain phrase, perhaps a 2-5-1 or the last 4 bars of a blues. When I get home, I pick up the instrument and try it. Often, these ideas take me to new places.
If I‘m creating a playlist of a song I’m learning, I make notes on the tempo and feel of each recording, and what impressed me most about a given musician’s performance of the tune. It might be a particular lick or chord choice but normally it is the mood or pace they chose, and what they did to make the tune their own.
This is exactly how I always learned new music. The mystery is how I used to give playlists to band mates to learn and the would show up at practice having maybe listened to it once in the background. Needless to say that was pretty frustrating as they would try to learn it on the fly and of course failing. Another problem would be if they did kind of get it but would be satisfied with it if we got through it once. As a band it is going to make the whole thing really good if you play a song many times as each time one hears new interactions between the instruments. It's not work, its fun. I don't care how good you are, I want to polish every song to the highest possible level.
I did a lot of this in preparation for my senior recital c’:
Words of affirmation is absolutely my love language 🎵🎶
Thing is, every week I get a new lesson on RUclips! I have to stop chasing every new lesson I see.
this is so interesting but so true. i used to dance a lot and what helped me learn the choreographies was listening to the song on loop and it helped me in _remembering_ and _understanding_ the musicality and structure of the songs.
i also sing and had a 3-piece band last year as lead vocal and in our first-ever performance, i looped our setlist everyday even if i wasn't able to sing with it/hum to it all the time. now compare that to our last performance last year, i looped our setlist like half of when i did the first time. that performance was _so_ not as good as our very first.
i didn't feel the music, the lyrics, or the structure as well as i did the first time. in the first perf, the songs were like "a part of me". and interestingly too, i thought i practiced more in our last performance than the first time. 🤓👍
so, these are *definitely* critically vital tips to practice as any kind of musician... or dancer
Hi Brent. All useful stuff. Oddly my most productive time is often when I'm not actually playing. I live in the country, and and walk a lot. Often, almost subconsciously, I find myself soloing in my head over the chords of a particular piece, and because I am not limited by the constraints of the instrument, but rather simply 'hearing' what I want to play, I often have a melodic idea for a certain phrase, perhaps a 2-5-1 or the last 4 bars of a blues. When I get home, I pick up the instrument and try it. Often, these ideas take me to new places.
That's great to hear, Adrian! Thank you for sharing.
11: you can learn music theory on youtube.
12: You can analyze the standards and remember what the masters are playing on top of the chords
Great advice. I find the part about naming the chords as you’re listening to the tune to be very helpful, and something I need to do much more
If I‘m creating a playlist of a song I’m learning, I make notes on the tempo and feel of each recording, and what impressed me most about a given musician’s performance of the tune. It might be a particular lick or chord choice but normally it is the mood or pace they chose, and what they did to make the tune their own.
This is exactly how I always learned new music. The mystery is how I used to give playlists to band mates to learn and the would show up at practice having maybe listened to it once in the background. Needless to say that was pretty frustrating as they would try to learn it on the fly and of course failing. Another problem would be if they did kind of get it but would be satisfied with it if we got through it once. As a band it is going to make the whole thing really good if you play a song many times as each time one hears new interactions between the instruments. It's not work, its fun. I don't care how good you are, I want to polish every song to the highest possible level.
Good tips regardless of musical genre as well!
I work to visualize all the relationships on the circle of 5ths.
11. Learn solfeggio. Recognize notes from a song, or solo. Sing your own solo with solfeggio notes.
Wow I do almost all of this
I am a far better jazz musician without my instrument.
Great video! Thanks
Glad you liked it!
Good stuff here
Thanks! I appreciate it.
Great advice.
Another one is to sing the melody repeatedly while musicians on the record are soloing !
After I listen to a solo a bunch of times, I try to “play” it on my instrument in my head, without the instrument in my hands. Seems to work.