It's Day 7 of the Learn New Repertoire Faster Challenge in the Piano with Rebecca B community ! I'm working on Jonny May's stride arrangement of Ode to Joy . Day 7 Assignments Our assignments for today included: Revisit Batch 1 to see how it's doing Listen to other recordings and note what works (and what doesn't) for me Review deliberate practice concepts and apply them to Batch 2 Revisiting Batch 1 Batch 1 is holding up! I played through it a couple of times with no real issues. Some measures are more solid than others, and I can feel the urge to speed up creeping in. Tomorrow I'll return to it (along with starting Batch 3) and will start using the metronome to avoid the speed-up-where-it's-easy, slow-down-where-it's-hard pattern. Listening to Other Recordings I found three YouTube performances (besides Jonny's). More detailed thoughts are in the video, but here are my key takeaways: If I don't deliberately bring out the melody in the A sec...
I'm continuing with Jonny May’s stride arrangement of Ode to Joy as part of Rebecca Bogart’s Learn New Repertoire Faster challenge in the Piano With Rebecca B community. Day 6 The theme for today's challenge is "Try Something New." Ironically, that led me back to something very old: a tried-and-true classical exercise—practicing in chunks of 2, 3, 4, and even 5 notes to smooth out scale and arpeggio passages. The "new" part was shifting into classical mode. Or at least what I think of as classical mode—that focused, nose-to-the-grindstone mindset that says, "I'm going to do whatever it takes to make this two-measure section perfect." I set aside the part of my brain that wants to analyze, improvise, and arrange, and just focused on the notes. It was refreshing. I've been doing so much improvisation and arranging lately that it felt good to sit down, look at the page, and say, "Music, just tell me what to do, and I will do it! "...