[Harp-L] Re: Positions Playing and breathing patterns
Here is where you have different teachers w/different philosophies.
My approach shows students that scales are really note choices. I try to
move quickly away from talking "scales" and the mind set that goes with "scales"
(practicing up and down, up and down, up and down, up and down - and then,
after a while, moving on to "music" as a subtly separate entity). One
successful approach is to add the ninth scale degree to your basic diatonic major
scale. Instead of practicing up and then down the "scale", you play the scale to
the "ninth" and back, (without repeating the highest note) and treat it as a
melodic line. This means you can arc it, slow it down as you end it, whatever
- but it becomes "music" through note choices. The ear begins to hear into
it as a melodic line and not so much as a "scale" separated from music. This
opens the imagination and understanding towards notes, where they live and
making note choices much quicker than any method I've tried.
Memorizing breathing patterns gives you memorized breathing patterns and
they become an entity unto themselves - once you start the memorized pattern,
you continue on making the same note choices through habit (automatic pilot) and
you start playing more predictably, eventually boring yourself as well as
your audience. Most have been there. The solution? Learn more newer breathing
patterns? Learn more memorized licks? This is a short term fix, as you play
new ideas {predictably}, but end up at that same dead end eventually. Then you
wonder why you are stuck on that plateau AGAIN.
So, what is the shortest route to keeping yourself interested in what you
are playing and/or flowing musical expression that is ever evolving and
changing?
I've found that it is not through approaching your instrument via memorized
patterns (note and/or breathing) nor SCALES (per se), but rather speaking
musical line as soon as is possible.
Granted, my methods run counter to "the way it has always been done" and
seems to sometimes raise the hackles of players that learned through the old
memorized patterns and running scales approach. I'm not discounting the values
found in "the way it has always been done". I'm suggesting new ways to shorten
the path.
The Iceman
In a message dated 3/13/2009 7:47:32 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
hvyj@xxxxxxx writes:
But isn't this what muscle memory is about and why we practice
scales? Not an end in itself, but an effective means to "learning
where the notes live" and building technique and speed, among other
things?
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