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Jamey Andreas is a classical guitarist based
in New York, who has taught and played all styles of guitar for almost
30 years, his specialty being the Classical Guitar. In that time, he has
developed teaching methods that are so effective and fundamental to all
styles and levels of players, he has called them "The Principles of
Correct Practice for Guitar". Through the use of these principles,
anyone can learn to play the guitar correctly, from the beginning, so
that bad habits and playing problems do not appear, as they do for so
many guitarists and would be guitarists. Likewise, longtime
players can learn how to undo the bad habits they have unknowingly
acquired over the years, bad habits that are preventing them from
improving. Jamey enjoys all styles of music from Rock to
Classical. In 1997 he released a CD "Touched To My Tenderness" a
collection of Guitar Classics, featuring Spanish Guitar Solos, as well
as original arrangements of songs by the Beatles, Send in the Clowns,
and Classical Gas. In 1999, he published his revolutionary approach
learning the guitar "The Principles of Correct Practice for Guitar". It
is now being used by players around the world, as they use the
Understandings, Tools, and Foundation Exercises it contains to overcome
the obstacles to development as a guitarist. He has written original
music for the guitar also, which he will be releasing soon. In
addition to being a performer and composer, Jamey is dedicated to
helping other players become the guitarists they want to be, by teaching
them how to use "The Principles of Correct Practice for Guitar".
For more information about Jamey, his teaching, and his music, visit
Guitar Principles.
Changing from Guitar Student to Guitar Player
The
Importance of Having a Repertoire
Over the years, I have met many guitar students who
could not actually
play
anything, even though they had taken lessons, perhaps
for years. If
they
were asked to play something, the best they could do
would be offer you
some
isolated "pieces" of songs or solos they had worked
on. They are
missing
certain pieces of knowledge about the Art & Science of
practicing that
would
enable them to get past a hurdle that stops the
progress of many guitar
students: how to actually finish something you are
learning, and bring
it up
to what is called "performance level", which is
another way of saying
"I can
get through this without it falling apart so badly I
can't keep it
going",
or "I play it all the way through well enough to not
cause me major
embarrassment, or the listener major discomfort, or
pain".
Do you have a repertoire?(pronounced rep-eh-twah)
Answer these questions:
Here is a letter I recently received, expressing this
problem from
someone
who made the wise decision to educate themselves out
of this situation.
Jamey,
This letter was good timing, since I had just decided
to write about
this
very important subject of why you need a repertoire,
and how to develop
and
maintain one.
There are many reasons why having a repertoire is
vital to developing
properly as a guitarist, and I will go through them.
But first, let me
tell
you that the reason many "players" don't have a
repertoire is:
In fact, putting something together, in
tempo, and bringing
it up
to performance level, is often the hardest part of the
whole process of
learning a piece.
Play For Yourself First
Some people always practice, and never play. Others
always play, and
never
practice. Each is bad, but the first is worse. One
day, in the early
part of
my development, I happened to just grab the guitar,
and start playing
this
piece I was working on in lessons. I realized then, as
I started to
notice
how much I enjoyed playing this little Baroque
Sarabande, that I rarely
allowed myself this pleasure of "playing", I was too
busy "practicing".
It
is times like this that I say to myself, "Jamey, you
are an idiot. Now,
stop
being like that!".
And I did!
I began to sit every night, after
practicing all day, light
a
candle, and just PLAY. No obsessing about mistakes, or
self
flagellation
about how well I "should" be playing this piece; just
playing, and
enjoying.
For me, that was the beginning of developing a
repertoire; responding
to the
simple need of feeding myself emotionally by playing
music. I was
getting
back to the original point of it all, the thing that
made me pick up
the
guitar in the first place, before I complicated the
whole issue with
"my
concerns".
Then Play for Others
As time went on, I realized that if I didn't start
performing, offering
and
sharing the results of my "work" with others, I would
not get any
better. I
was starting to feel my motivation for practicing
getting weaker, and I
knew
it had something to do with not having a REASON enough
for practicing.
Playing for myself the rest of my life was only going
to take me so
far. I
realized that if I did not learn HOW to give a
finished form to the
many
things I was practicing every day, (a finished form
that would hold
together
in front of others), I would simply not break through
to the next level
as a
player.
So I realized that, like it or not, I had to start
performing (and
there
were many parts of it I didn't like). I had to accept
the fact that it
would
be a shaky start, I would often play with mistakes and
various
imperfections, but if I did not subject myself to
this, I would not
learn
how to make it all better. So at first, I started to
"create"
performance
situations" for myself.
I started grabbing family members, and made them sit
down and listen to
me
play a piece or two, just so I could experience the
pressure and
nerves, and
see where I would fall apart, so I could focus on that
spot in the next
day's practice.
Then, I started planning a piece to perform for my
teacher at the
beginning
of every lesson. He didn't ask me to do that, I just
would go in and
say
"before we start, just let me play this piece for
you". After every
lesson,
I would plan the piece I would play next.
As I continued to do this, I got better and better. By
setting these
informal "performance goals" for myself, I began to
see that my
practicing
was taking on more "structure" and organization, I now
had more of a
reason
for practicing. The payoff of course, was the
satisfaction of having
achieved the ability to play something for someone
else, and receiving
their
gratitude (applause). For those of you suffering from
"lack of
motivation"
to practice, let me tell you that there is nothing
like that experience
for
acting as an instant shot of "motivation medicine"! As
Beethoven said
after
playing for a group of people who were too moved
emotionally to applaud
"what's the matter with you people, a performer wants
APPLAUSE!"
From there I went to giving public concerts, and the
fun of seeing my
picture in the paper!
How to Get a Repertoire :Write it Down!
I have often written of the need for developing your
Power of
Intention, the
ability to feel a desire consciously, and put your
actions behind it to
bring it to reality in your life. One of the important
tools for doing
this
is to WRITE YOUR GOALS DOWN, AND LOOK AT THEM OFTEN.
Many people write
them
down in a fit of resolve one day, and avoid looking at
them later,
because
it is too depressing to face how they are avoiding
working toward
them!
Putting your desires in writing helps to marshal the
inner resolve to
put
forth the effort to accomplish them. As you begin to
discover your own
power
for doing what you say (have written down) you will
do, it gets easier,
and
in fact, becomes fun.
As a first step, write down 3 songs or pieces that you
like, and that
you
feel are within your present level of playing ability.
It doesn't
matter
what they are, it is just important to start
somewhere, and it will
develop
from there.
After practicing them each day, record them, (use a
cheap little hand
held
cassette player). LISTEN to them, and don't wince at the
mistakes. Resolve, instead,
to
PRACTICE THOSE PARTS THE NEXT DAY AS CORRECTLY AS YOU
KNOW HOW!
You will see these pieces or songs getting better and
better.
When you are getting through things reasonably well,
plan on who your
first
victim will be, the first person you will try playing
your developing
repertoire for. I usually try to pick someone who
really likes me!
Record that too. Later as you listen back, you can
have the reassurance
of
knowing you are now hearing yourself at your worst. It
won't get any
worse
than that! You will have undoubtedly fallen under the
power of Murphy's
Law,
which was invented specifically for performing
musicians: everything
that
could possibly go wrong, will have gone wrong!
Now that you have hit bottom, and faced your worst
fears, there is no
where
to go but up! You will take that tape, and little by
little, every day,
you
will improve it. In a month, you will have
significantly raised your
level
as a guitar player, in fact, you may begin for the
first time to feel
like a
guitar player, instead of a guitar student!
The next time you "perform" those pieces, they will be
better, and the
next
time and the next time. As time goes by, you will have
a SOLID
repertoire.
Personally, I have things I can pull out and depend on
no matter how
many
beers I have had, or how tired I am. That's because
these pieces have
been
tested, refined, and tested again over the years. All
longtime players
develop these "trusted friends".
Ask yourself how you measure up when it comes to
having a repertoire
(I'll
bet you already have). Try out the ideas presented
here, and you will
have
increased power to realize your goals as a guitar
player.
Jamey Andreas, creator of "The Principles of Correct
Practice for Guitar," will be having a guitar workshop
in Washington, D.C., in the near future. If you want to remove your
obstacles to progress on the guitar, this workshop is
for you. For all levels, beginner to advanced, as well
as for all styles of playing. To view highlights from
Jamey's New York workshop, and to find out how to join
Jamey in a workshop in your area, check out:
Your book arrived today. I am really hoping that your
book can help me.
I'm
getting tired of "trying" to play. I want to be able
to play for myself
and
others, i.e., have a repertoire of at least 10 songs
under my fingers
that I
can play without embarrassing myself. At the moment I
can't seem to
struggle
through a simple song, Devil's Dream, without fumbling
even though I
know,
or at least think I know, it. I have been looking for
the correct way
to
practice for some time. When I saw your article at
Wholenote.com and
the
name of your book, I had to check it out. I'll let you
know what
happens.
Steve
#1)
Nobody
told them how important it is, and
#2)Nobody told them
how to GET one,
#3)
it is EASIER to leave things half finished, in pieces,
than to put it
together.
Used with permission, Musicstaff.com
