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For me,
It can vary wildly!
But on a good day where I have at least a 2 hour block of time I like to break things down as follows:
1. Establish my goal for the day
Am I memorizing a new piece? Putting fingering into a new piece? Reviewing repertoire for upcoming concerts?
Based on some of those answers I determine how much I can do (memorize 10 pages? fingering for 1st movement? review ALL of the repertoire to get a "status check")
2. After I establish my goal, I make sure I am warmed up! (Literally)
I might take a shower, drink some tea, get the blood flowing. I hate playing cold!
3. Then getting to the piano, I slowly practice a difficult fast passage (that I know, but needs reassurance practice) to just get it in my fingers. I don't necessarily play it at tempo, just half tempo even, before jumping to the new pieces that I need to work on.
4. My priority is ALWAYS memorization first before my brain gets tired.
5. When my brain gets tired (and I do take breaks, usually 20 minutes of practice then 10 minutes off) I will start doing fingering or harmonic analysis which doesn't always require maximum brain power.
6. I like to jump around alot during my practice, attacking my pieces from many different angles. It is an efficient way to practice
Some advice:
Don't start with scales and arpeggios! Those are very demanding. Always start with something slow, like your fast music played slow or just, slow music! THEN get to your scales and arpeggios! -
Hi All
I like to not have to think too much about my practice routine so I follow what is on my schedule (shown below). My repertoire consists of original pieces and jazz arrangements expertly crafted by my teacher. My new piece is an original too. I take a rest from the keyboard on Sundays and study theory/watch Tonebase videos. Yesterday I enjoyed watching Dominic’s excellent videos on improving arpeggios. My current goal is to be able to improvise freely (play the changes) over an 8-bar sequence in C - Major II-V-I-IV minor ii-v-1 Major VI. When I have cracked this I plan to move to Db with the same sequence.
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Interesting take, especially the take on harmonic analysis at moments of fatigue (I waste my time when I get tired). In my case, I do the scales and arpeggios first, but there's a catch : I don't do them in my limit. If, say, my limit of playing three octaves well for quarters is at 100 bpm, I do at 60-80 bpm, to ensure I don't fatigue and keep good form. I'll devote 15-30 min per week to attempt increasing speed of certain scales and arpeggios to get a new record (not much practice time for a father of two), and I can do this straight after the slow warm up. I can do that in 5-10 min chunks, so I don't get too tired for the repertoire. It works well for me.
And I follow this philosophy for the repertoire I study as well : always working slow and build up to a fraction of my personal best time (like 80% of my best time). Then I attempt to increase the speed like 30 min a week per song (maybe more if I nailed down other songs speed, and am working on interpretation). The numbers are a personal choice, but the idea of playing slower than your limit was an advice from my teacher. This advice helped me a lot.
I don't like jumping so much during training. I feel my muscle memory needs a sort of build-up. But I do change occasionally if I'm too tired of certain songs (say, short songs with long tremolos, and I feel my hand gets tired of it). Personal choice.