The Clarinet BBoard
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Author: JonTheReeds
Date: 2014-10-27 13:28
I have read a few things by Dr. Noa Kageyama (www.bulletproofmusician.com) that suggest that ‘interference’ practising may help to make learning more permanent. By ‘interference’ he means not necessarily practising the thing you want to play but practising 'around' it
For instance, a basketball player would practise sinking a penalty shot from different angles and distances, even though in a match the player would only shoot from the front of the D
Has anyone found this useful and, if so, what favourite 'interference' practice routines do you use?
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The older I get, the better I was
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Author: mnhnhyouh
Date: 2014-10-27 16:45
When I am learning a new scale I do some practice with it, then put on a backing track in the right key, and practice it and the two arpeggios and then jam to it using only the notes from the scale, but concentrating on the arpeggio notes.
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Author: Morrigan
Date: 2014-10-27 21:44
Practicing 'around' the problem can be fantastic, for example if there's a difficult passage and you always mess up a specific note or set of notes, I've found often the problem is actually in the part either before or after it. So getting everything around the difficult bit settled can either fix the problem, or allow you to see it more clearly.
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