Follow the link for a great interview with Hal Galper on what to practice
http://bobreynoldsmusic.us1.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=c683eda1f2997a776b69f0b30&id=f816300302&e=23e65adae5
Bob is a great young tenor sax player and educator. I have had a number of online discussions with him on practicing.
some great stuff on the oral (aural ) tradition.
The Magic really starts to happen when you can play it with your eyes closed
Comments
Recently, I've decided to really focus on ear worms that appear when I'm listening to this music. As background, I am still working on the technical grounding that is necessary. I think what Hal hammers home is what to practice and using what your ear finds interesting as a means of determining what to practice. It makes a lot of sense to me.
What is important in this video, at least for me, is that if my ear finds a lick, phrase, or idea interesting, it shouldn't be just about learning that lick. It's trying to figure out what about that lick is grabbing me and doing some work, inline with technical development to work this thing that I'm finding into my playing. Hal illustrates that very well with his Bill Evans example.
There's a lot more here than just this idea, but it is the major point that I took from this. I highly recommend taking 15 minutes to watch this.
Sounds to me like he's saying is practice one thing at a time everyone has their own path.
I wanna check out more of his stuff.
I was gonna sit down to practice but I remembered this thread and wanted to see the video and I spent last hour and a half going through various videos from his master classes (they're all posted on YouTube under the same user)
Everything he says is a gem that you can go back to many times over.
In one video he reminded me of Kenny Worker's thinking and then he cited Kenny somewhere towards the end of the video.
Thank you Jay for bringing him to my attention.