hi, i would like to ask the professional performers what their practice routines are like. i've read a few articles lately on this subject, seems i have bad habits. some nights i work on rhythm all night, or i'll just pick four or five licks from gypsy fire and play them with the ever increasing metronome tempo all night. other times i'll spend days in a row learning tunes, but then my speed and technical facility have diminished, then i'll spend days running through arps with the metronome. thank you
shut up and play your guitar
Comments
My two cents:
Try to have a balanced "diet", make a list of five or ten things you want to work on, and follow the list everyday.
Example.
- Arpeggios: Min7
- Licks: Gypsy fire 1-5
- Speed: "Shine" solo from Gypsy Fire :shock:
- Rhythm: Line cliches
- Tune of the week: Djangology
In month or so, when you' ve mastered the list, make a new one and set aside one day every two weeks or so for reviewing previously learned material.And don' t just practice stuff with a metronome, make a point of aplying everything you learn to tunes.
And don't forget to warm up!
Good luck!
1) Rhythm
You need to get la pompe wired. It takes a lot of practice to play good, solid rhythm. Mostly concentrate on the right hand at first.
2) Gypsy Picking
Getting you're rest stroke picking down is probably the single best thing you can do for your lead playing. The Gypsy Picking book structures your practicing for you...just work on the picking patterns till you've got them down.
3) Repertoire
Just memorize as many songs as possible. 100 should be your goal. Most pros probably know 1000 from memory.
I also like to warm up with Django's Unaccompanied pieces. In addition to being good technique workouts, you also learn a lot cool arpeggios, licks, chords, etc.
So a good session might be:
10 min. - Warm up: Unaccompanied piece
30 min. - Rhythm with a metronome
30 min. - Gypsy Picking with a metronome
30 min - Memorize songs, melody and chords
30 min. Just have fun!
Once you're solid on all the basics I'd spend a lot of time transcribing solos and learning phrases. When I do practice now, which isn't that often unfortunately, I work on learning new phrases and incorporating them into songs that I play.
If you put the time in on technique early, you don't need to practice it much later. You'll be able to spend more and more time on musical ideas once you've conquered the technical stuff. But the first few years are all about technique....
I hope that helps...
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So during your practice, try, in the first place, to listen to what u play. Make pauzes in your melody.. thus try to make the song your own by creating your own melody, and don't overdo it. Chet Baker was never a virtuous jazzmusician, when talking about fast scale-playing, but he was unmatchable in placing notes which were uncontroversial, but genious and rhytmchanges. :shock:
That's my advice at least, cause I often find that the music itself gets forgotten, and what u do with it. Speed and scales are admirable, in combination with musicality.