Roy's Practice Diary
I have found the diary in the drop-down lists - at last! I have written my diary in Excel - attached, as this allows me to copy in blocks each month.
My format is quite standard: one piece of old music, one piece of newer music, a study [or several small studies] and scales and arpeggios.
My aim is to practise for around two hours per day, broken up into half hours, and to change my pieces every six weeks. I was aiming to practise more than this each day when I joined Tonebase in September, as I thought I had retired, again. It was the fourth attempt.
However, about a month later I was offered a really interesting job in flood alleviation, so retirement has gone on hold again. However, I am WAH [working at home] because of COVID-19 office strategy. There's an upside to this as I have two pianos in my 'office' - one acoustic and one electric and I use my practice as a rest from the computer screen. We work flexible hours so I just do a longer day. We're not going anywhere far these days.
I was practising previously the scales and arpeggios of the keys of the pieces that I was learning, but I have now decided to work on all of the scales because they have been so neglected over the years. I am not practising enough hours to do them all each day so I have divided up the scales - major and harmonic minors so that I cover all of them in a four week period; hence the use of Excel so that I can copy and paste those four weeks into future diaries.
I am practising broken chords on a programme that covers six weeks. My plan is to introduce arpeggios into the four-week timescale when the scales have settled down after the first six weeks of this programme.
Thanks to Dominic for his session on structuring one's practice, I am now playing the scales hands together and have started a Bach Fugue, as Asiya said practise each voice separately, not just separate hands! Dominic said tackle something we find difficult at the start of the practice day, so I start with Back usually as so many people do and now I don't leave scales until the end of my practice but bring them in before I get tired, so hands together is far less of a problem. Derrr!!
All the Best!
Roy
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Month 1 went really well. Here is Month 2! I am so pleased that for the first time in my life I have played through all of the scales - majors and harmonic minors! I can see why Bach Fugues have a reputation of their own. I spent the first two weeks on page 1 of the C Minor Fugue - mostly separate voices and then separate hands. It's easier to some extent to do both voices in the right hand so that the fingering makes sense. I then started to join up some sections on page 1 and started Page 2, using the same format. I planned for six weeks on this fugue but I may revise that to six months - for my first reading! I had done an introduction to Bach on Tonebase by Magdalena Stern-Baczewska so I am including in this and next month's practice the pieces she recommended. I now have much more of a sense that there is possibly a staged process for approaching Bach, which is a relief!
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Anthony Miyake Hello Anthony, I saw your reply in my emails but I cannot find it on Tonebase. However, I have listened to the Jurassic Park theme [John Williams] and it is the Bach C Minor fugue but played in B flat, so you're teacher is correct. It's lovely to hear that yo are learning to play jazz too. Yes, my copy is Urtext from around fifty years ago, and yes, it's always interesting to see how others would phrase the older music.