You'll Hear It: Full Album Deep Dives with Jazz Musicians - Best of YHI: 7 Great Practice Routine Hacks - #88
Episode Date: December 26, 2018See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. ...
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Hey Peter, you know what today is?
Wednesday.
It's Boxing Day, dude.
Boxing Day.
Oh, that's right.
This is big in Canada, right?
And the UK, I think.
And the UK.
Yeah, yeah.
And Australia.
I have no idea what it is, but it seems like a Commonwealth kind of holiday.
You know what?
I think I was actually in Australia once on Boxing Day, and so I always made this association
with like kangaroos boxing.
I don't think it actually has anything to do with that.
No, it's definitely not the fighting sport.
I think it means something else.
That's right.
I don't know.
I mean, we're in America, so what does it matter to us?
Yeah.
Happy Boxing Day.
Well, today we're continuing on our week of best ofubs because we're not actually here.
We are not. We are holograms.
We are enjoying time with our families.
I'm reaching out to touch Adam and my hands going through him because he's a hologram right now.
You know, we should do podcasts sometimes with our families replacing us.
That would be interesting.
That would be very interesting.
Probably a lot better than what we usually do.
That's right.
Well, speaking of better than what we used to do, today we're going all the way back to
OG.
That's right.
Episode number one, right?
This is our third most popular episode ever, our third most listened to episode ever.
and this is our first episode ever.
This is seven great practice routine hacks.
Yes.
And they were great.
I do remember,
but I'm wondering if the popularity of this episode
doesn't have something to do with the fact
that when people come to the podcast feed for the first time,
they're like, oh, let's check out.
Maybe they listen to a recent episode,
and maybe they listen to the first episode.
More likely than anything.
It's definitely not because of the quality.
No.
Weren't we like talking into our iPhones that day?
I think we were doing something like that, yeah.
Fun fact on that episode,
I don't know if you remember this,
because you are getting older.
and every day.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But a fun fact on this episode is that I had the idea to do a podcast.
I presented it to you and the team on the same day that this podcast was actually recorded.
I think of the same day it was recorded, uploaded.
And disseminated to the world.
Exactly.
Yeah, yeah.
So it's cool because now as you guys listen, this would be the only time in the history of you'll hear it,
what you're going to hear today when myself, Peter, was able to be.
able to think about this the night before or overnight as I had the idea.
And Adam was not able to think about it because he didn't even know he'd be doing a podcast.
Per usual.
Yeah.
But the next from every other episode on, we both knew it was coming.
That's right.
Sure.
All right.
Enjoy.
I'm Peter Martin.
And I'm Adam Manus.
Welcome to the You'll Hear It podcast.
Today we're going to give you seven great practice routine hacks for you to work into your daily
practice routine.
Okay.
So I'm going to start with developing a routine.
This is so important.
You want to have a routine of how you're going to get into your practice so that when you sit down each day, you already know what you're going to do.
That might be just a real simple, real simple way that you like to start out your scales.
Whatever it is for you.
You know, trumpet players like to do those tonguing exercises, things like that.
But you want to have a routine.
You don't want to sit there saying, what should I do?
And you also don't want to just sit down and play some random stuff, you know.
I was out for random.
I was kind of random, right?
Pretty random.
Just some random stuff.
You want to practice with purpose.
So develop a routine and make sure you're starting somewhere that makes sense.
Number two is to don't play until the very end of your practice session.
Don't start performing a piece or a tune and just start playing around the tune until you've hit specific things that you need to work on.
Why not?
Because then you just get caught up in these, you know, rambling, playing of tunes.
over and over again, usually the same tunes you already know. And that brings us to the third point,
which is...
Separate your conscious from your unconscious practice. So what I mean by that is, I think
70 to 80% of our practice should be very conscious practice, very focused, where we're thinking
about specifically what we're doing. So if we're working on improvisation, we're thinking
about specific scales, we're thinking about specific patterns, specific solos. We're practicing
in a way and thinking in a way that we wouldn't do when we're performing.
But then you always want to have that unconscious kind of practice where we're just playing
and letting loose.
And to your point of number three, of waiting until the end of your practice routine, that's
when you're going to want to do your more unconscious playing.
So maybe you're waiting until then to just play through the piece and not think about
all the stuff that you worked on.
Give yourself a chance to have all that come out unconsciously.
Or maybe it's subconsciously.
I don't even know the difference.
I don't either.
But they're both important, right?
And so that brings us to number four.
Don't practice stuff you already can do.
This is something that our silly human brains trick us into doing all the time.
Our egos want us to sound good, even when it's just for us, especially when it's just for us sometimes.
But don't fall into that trap.
You will never improve just playing the same tunes in the same way, doing the same licks, in the same keys that you can already play great.
So make a decision at the start of your practice routine.
to work on things that you can't do.
That's the time to do it.
You don't want to be doing it on the gig
or at the jam session.
You want to be doing it in the privacy of your own home
where you can really focus and hone in on the skills
that'll bring your entire level of playing up,
not just the stuff you're already good at.
Yeah, because when you're practicing things that you can already do,
you're actually not really practicing.
You're just playing.
And that might be fun.
You can't count that as part of your practice time, can you?
We save that to the end.
We save that to the end.
Number three,
Now we're tying it all together. Good. Okay, number five, have a discipline of practicing every day.
Even if it's only for five minutes, it's better to do that every day and to be at your instrument than to take a couple days off and say, I'm going to wait until Saturday when I know I have five hours.
At least sit down at the instrument. You know, it's just like becoming a great chef.
Be in the kitchen or a great basketball player. Have the basketball in your hands.
We don't all have the luxury of being at our instrument for hours a day. But we can all fit.
five minutes. Come on. You can get up five minutes earlier. We can all do that. Or stay up five minutes
later or one less bowl of cereal. I don't know. It's so true. Yeah, no, absolutely. Very, very important.
Number six is to switch it up throughout your practice routine. We talked about not playing
things you already know. Well, one trick to helping to retain things and to learn things faster
is to actually once you can kind of perform it as you're practicing, a skill, move on to something
else and then come back to that later in your routine so that you're you're kind of forcing your brain
to forget it again and it forces you to really absorb it the next time you come around sometimes i'll do
if i'm practicing a particular scale i'll play it once once i can kind of get it and then i'll move on to
maybe voicings and then maybe some time practice and then i'll come back to that scale and it'll be
worse than when i left it and that's good i want it to be worse because now it makes me reabsorb it again
in a shorter amount of time and you know in the same way um
you know, hit things up day to day.
You know, once you have something one day, don't just ignore it.
The next practice session, try it again.
Kind of like thoughtful practice.
Thoughtful practice.
I like it. I like it.
Okay.
And number seven, the last one, I think this may be the most important hack that we can give you
for your practice routine.
So we saved it for the end.
And that is to listen.
What?
Listen.
Okay.
Okay.
Now, it seems so simple.
We say, we're always listening.
We're at the instrument.
No, we're not.
Sometimes we're thinking about what we're going to have for dinner.
We're going out on a, thinking about going out on a date, thinking about a gig we're going to do or whatever.
But if you want your practice to be effective, and especially if you only have five or ten minutes to practice, you have to listen to everything that you're playing, just like you're in the audience listening to yourself.
So you want to hear the nuances of everything that you do.
And really listening to yourself has to apply to everything that you practice, not just when you're sounding good, you know, or when you're playing your tune at the end.
Especially.
Especially.
Exactly.
So when you're practicing scales, you want to really be listening to the evenness.
See how that kind of jumped out?
That's the piano's fault, though.
It's not my fault.
But, I mean, we're listening to everything.
You know, all the things that we are not going to want to pay attention to when we're performing
and we want to be more unconscious or subconscious, those are the things that we listen to very closely.
And you know what happens when you listen closely?
You'll hear it.
Exactly.
You'll hear it.
All right.
See you guys next time on.
you'll hear it. That's it for today's episode of the You'll Hear It Podcast. For more information
or to hear more of these podcasts, go to openstudio network.com slash podcast.
