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Posts Tagged ‘practice time’

Back to Practicing

June 8th, 2010 No comments

Last night was my first night seriously practicing in a couple of years. I have spent my time really learning how to teach the guitar effectively in the meantime. But in my inner most being, I still desire the joy of playing and performing. Therefore, I have chosen to resume my practicing and given myself deadlines to persue for performances.

Returning to a three hour practice session was quite interesting to say the least. Sitting for three hours with a guitar in my hands felt wonderful. However, I had to take a few precautions to ensure that my hands made it through the session and did not hurt this morning. I stretched very slowly before and after the session. I also took a few breaks throughout. I made myself get up every 30 minutes to stretch and refocus my mind (or to let it rest after deep concentration).

All-in-all, I enjoyed the three hours. I worked 30 minutes on technique and spent the rest of the time on new and old repertoire. I always encourage people to work on sight-reading but my goals have a different purpose at the moment. I feel that my time teaching has greatly benefited my sight-reading to a point that I am much better than when I first began teaching seven years ago.

I have much to work on, but I am delighted to see that I still have quite a bit of movement in my hands after such a long hiatus from practicing. It’s not that I have not played entirely for the past couple of years. I have spent many hours playing in lessons. But the difference, of course, is the focused work that can be accomplished during practice to reach a desired performace.

I feel good and look forward to keeping you updated as I return to my performing form.

Suggested Resources:

A Guitarist’s Guide to Better Practicing by Pete Huttlinger
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How many hours do I need to practice a day?

May 16th, 2009 No comments

We are all clambering to be the best at the guitar, to master it. However, I have mentioned before the time it takes to do so (10,000 hours). I have heard that even Segovia once said that you should not perform the Chaconne before you turn 50! With that in mind here is how the 10,000 hours it takes to master a skill breaks down. Also this is with good teaching and practice habits. It could work out longer if you have poor teachers and poor practice.

Practice Years
24hrs/day 7 days a week 1.14 years
6hrs/day 7 days a week 4.60 years
3hrs/day 7 days a week 9.13 years
2hrs/day 7 days a week 13.70 years
1hr/day 7 days a week 27.40 years
.5hrs/day 7 days a week 54.80 years

Therefore, slow and steady wins the race!