5:23 #2 shifts 8:01 #3 hands separate 11:28 #4 three in a row 12:08 #5 slow practice 13:12 #6 watch each finger 16:16 #7 time management 17:18 #8 listen and record 18:26 #9 smaller sections 19:06 #10 be realistic with your short term goals :)
Thank you David, excellent suggestions and points here. In the Hauser video you say something to the effect of "some guitars are just difficult to tune" which unfortunately is one of the truest statements on the internet. But this guitar seems extremely in tune, excellent intonation, and playing!
@@davidjaggs certainly !!! I learn a lot from your videos. I am now watching your video on lagrima. Thank you so much. I learn from your videos. 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Just tried the barre shift tip with Cavatina (Deerhunter) which despite sounding simple I've always found fiendish. Improved it with 10 mins work. Golden tips, many thanks!
Holy moly I had no clue you were such an amazing player! It is rare to find a person who is a great teacher aswell as a player! Thanks for all the work
I really enjoy this particular tutorial. I have watched it the 3rd time, and every time, I find new angle and understand your tips better and better. All your tips are excellent. For example, I usually have specific difficulty with shifting between "nasty chords". When I try to apply tips no. 2 and 5, I see my shifting improved a lot. I also apply the tips of separating the left hand playing and right hand playing, and see improvement. Thousands thumbs up for this video. Thank you David! :x Please do more of this type of videos (practicing tips)! :)
DPJFILMS this corona-virus time is dangerous, I hope you stay safe. Thank you for replying so fast. Maybe you could do more tips on shifting? Or piece memorization? Or maybe Chord balancing (play a chord of 3 notes but try to make one melody note standing out) Or maybe tremolo. :) I am just brainstorming in answering to your question. I am most interested in left hand chord shifting , or barred chord :)
You give excellent advice throughout this tutorial. Learning how to learn more effectively, and applying those techniques while practicing, is something no musician should ignore. Sincere thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience here on youtube.
Great video David. I will be employing these tips in my future practise sessions. Learning classical guitar can sometimes seem disheartening, as you really have to work hard for every little bit of progress. But patience, and small progress everyday leads to big improvements over time. Thanks again. Will you be doing more of such tutorials? I really look forward to them!
Hey David, great video, any thoughts on differences of practicing new pieces, interim to performance , I know for some it maybe obvious but I’m interested if it’s better to practice in a different way at each stage and the ratios of each, also, any suggestions on preparing to play in public? Cheers
I just think the better you know a piece the less nerves and memory lapses you'll have. Hands separate, visualization without the guitar, recording yourself, 3 in a row, slow practice, having a definite idea of what you're doing musically, starting the piece from unusual places, not ignoring things that are going wrong... All these things will help. Also put yourself in a different environment, try playing to friends in a different place, make a note of what went wrong and why..... Hope this helps.
@@davidjaggs Thanks so much, David. I’m sure they will help, I’ve always worked on the five times perfect, idea. Two ideas I’ve had for playing in public were, when practicing each number, I try and play with a different emotion and secondly, I’ve started taking my guitar to a bench in the middle of a local park, to practice, with the idea of moving to busier places as I progress. I start with my easier tunes first, in a set pattern, moving towards the longer more challenging numbers. If I’m having a bad day, I stay on the easy pieces until I relax…….. Thanks again, every piece of advice always helps! 😁👍🏼
@@davidjaggs thank you for your infinite devotion. The “mountain” analogy it’s game changer, everything on this video is helpful! (Sorry, I’ve been writing from 3 different profiles, but yes, I just tried your advice on changing the accents and rhythm on a new fingering that hadn’t even tried before on the climax of The Grand Sarabanda and it worked IMMEDIATELY!!! I can see you had the fortune to study with Barrueco, (I’m from Cuba too), listening to the Regondi Studies I started digging in cause noticed high musicality and the deepest technical approach, thank you for building such a magnificent website, I hope I take advantage of everything in it. Really inspiring!!
Super video, dotted practice is Imperative with Metronome, it's hard too keep motivated at times. Your tips help, be great too see you're way of learning a piece from scratch Again great lesson
Loads of great advice here David. Thanks for doing these tutorials. Looking forward to your advice on harmonics and tremolo. If there's anything to practice slowly it's tremolo, but mine still sounds like a 3 legged horse 😂
Thanks David of this excellent lesson. You are one of the best players I know on UA-cam. I'm always delighted to listen to those gorgeous songs you've recorded here in your channel. I have a question about slow practice. Can you please help me on this? My question is: how slowly should I start practicing a piece? And by how much should I increase the speed after I am able to play the piece with no mistakes at a given slower speed? So far I've came up with my own solution to this problem, but I'd like it to be validated if possible, so that I keep using it or change it somehow if it does not work as I expect it should. My solution is based on the 85% Rule, which states that one will be able to play at 100% speed if he can play it at 85% speed. So, what I do is basically about applying this 85% Rule recursively on the piece speed to get a series of smaller speeds to practice in each of them. For example, I am starting to practice a song whose final speed is 72 bpm. To get its smaller speeds I apply 85% to 72 bpm, and get 61 bpm. Then I apply 85% to 61 bpm, and get 52 bpm. I keep doing this until I get around 20 bpm, because I think this is a very slow speed, where it starts to become cumbersome to practice in such a slow motion. To make it clearer, here is the list of smaller speeds I get to practice a song of 72 bpm: - 72 x 85% = 61bpm - 61 x 85% = 52bpm - 52 x 85% = 44bpm - 44 x 85% = 37bpm - 37 x 85% = 32bpm - 32 x 85% = 27bpm - 27 x 85% = 23bpm Then, with this list of smaller speeds in place, I start practicing the song in the reverse order of speeds, that is, from the slowest tempo (23bpm) to the final tempo (72 bpm), like this: 1º: 23bpm 2º: 27bpm 3º: 32bpm 4º: 37bpm 5º: 44bpm 6º: 52bpm 7º: 61bpm 8º: 72bpm In this particular example I get to practice the song at 8 different speeds, so of course it adds more time to my project of getting the song up to speed, but it also gives me some structure to my practice, so that I know how far I am from getting to the final speed, that is, to getting to the finished project. Is this a good approach to breaking down a song in smaller speeds?
Hi Ulysses. Thank you for your interesting comment. I don't think I've ever heard of this 85 percent rule, or been as organised as you in my practice. It sounds like a very thorough way of building speed. I don't think I was ever as patient! I do know that it's essential to start by practicing a piece at a speed at which you are in total control. Not just getting the notes, but being in control and aware of every movement of both hands. Try to make all the changes smooth, even at these slow speeds. Once you've achieved this notch up the metronome a beat or two and so on. As long as you keep control I don't see a problem in what rate one increases the speed. Make a note of what speed you start to lose control, or naily tone begins, and stop. Day by day this speed should gradually increase. You'll keep discipline if you see how the speed increases daily. It's hard to resist trying pieces a tempo, and I don't see any harm once in a while, but yes, slow practice is VERY important. Thanks for watching, and thanks for your kind comments.
Good question Herick. As you gain more experience you begin to know what works and what doesn't. It takes time and experience though. I always write full fingering on the score, left and right hand, and I don't feel I can begin to learn the piece until I have. There will be a few occasions when you have to try a passage at speed with a couple of different fingerings to see what works, and over the next weeks some will get changed. So the answer to your question is yes, mostly.
Hi David, thanks for the reply , I wasn’t expecting one. I once tried some false nails and they ruined my natural nails. They looked almost bruised when I took the false ones off. Took about 6 months to start growing strong again. It’s a damn shame too because the sound and tones I got with the false nails was superb. Maybe there are better quality ones I could try
DPJFILMS that would be very helpful sir thank you . I did consider gel nails but the nail tech didn’t seem to put my mind at rest about the previous problem I had. Also David, I truly appreciate you giving your time to help . You CD is jammed into my car CD player and it’s never coming out.
5:23 #2 shifts
8:01 #3 hands separate
11:28 #4 three in a row
12:08 #5 slow practice
13:12 #6 watch each finger
16:16 #7 time management
17:18 #8 listen and record
18:26 #9 smaller sections
19:06 #10 be realistic with your short term goals
:)
Thanks
Great advice, David!
Thanks for watching 👍😊
A joy to follow your creative play
👍
Thank you David, excellent suggestions and points here.
In the Hauser video you say something to the effect of "some guitars are just difficult to tune" which unfortunately is one of the truest statements on the internet. But this guitar seems extremely in tune, excellent intonation, and playing!
Thanks for watching, 🙂
Great lesson. Thank you so much.
Hope it helps! 👍
@@davidjaggs certainly !!! I learn a lot from your videos. I am now watching your video on lagrima. Thank you so much. I learn from your videos. 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Good to hear that!
Excellent advice, David. More of this approach, especially for players with very limited practice time, would be helpful. Thank you
Thanks for watching!
This is a great series, would like to see more definitely. This tutorial would be really helpful for the Sagreras studies and any of the études.
Thanks, Tony!
Just tried the barre shift tip with Cavatina (Deerhunter) which despite sounding simple I've always found fiendish. Improved it with 10 mins work. Golden tips, many thanks!
Nice! 😊
One of the most important videos on this subject. And Ive seen many videos.
Thanks. Your comment means a lot to me ☺
Holy moly I had no clue you were such an amazing player! It is rare to find a person who is a great teacher aswell as a player! Thanks for all the work
Oh thanks! Those clips are from Giuliani op48 which I will release in the next few weeks on youtube.
@@davidjaggs oh please do, I would love to hear more of your playing!
The art of practising! Thank you for this brilliant and very instructive video!
You're welcome!
I really enjoy this particular tutorial. I have watched it the 3rd time, and every time, I find new angle and understand your tips better and better. All your tips are excellent. For example, I usually have specific difficulty with shifting between "nasty chords". When I try to apply tips no. 2 and 5, I see my shifting improved a lot. I also apply the tips of separating the left hand playing and right hand playing, and see improvement. Thousands thumbs up for this video. Thank you David! :x Please do more of this type of videos (practicing tips)! :)
I'm going to do some soon... can't get out of the house at the moment. Any particular subject?
DPJFILMS this corona-virus time is dangerous, I hope you stay safe. Thank you for replying so fast. Maybe you could do more tips on shifting? Or piece memorization? Or maybe Chord balancing (play a chord of 3 notes but try to make one melody note standing out) Or maybe tremolo. :) I am just brainstorming in answering to your question. I am most interested in left hand chord shifting , or barred chord :)
You give excellent advice throughout this tutorial. Learning how to learn more effectively, and applying those techniques while practicing, is something no musician should ignore. Sincere thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience here on youtube.
Thanks for the feedback. . I'll keep it coming!
Very practical tips and useful advice. I'll be sure to incorporate much of this in my daily practice. Thank you!
Hope it helps Ed!
So helpful....
Good to hear 👍
LOVE THIS VIDEO! It would be nice if you could make a video about Relaxation.
very useful tips! thank you David!
Thanks for watching 👍
Many thanks for these tips, really useful 👍👍
I love you David
your advice helped my practice immensely...thank you again :)
That's nice to know ☺️
A number of very useful guides/tips.I will endeavour to take these on board.Thank you for your time spent in preparing these videos.
Thanks Geoff
Great video David. I will be employing these tips in my future practise sessions. Learning classical guitar can sometimes seem disheartening, as you really have to work hard for every little bit of progress. But patience, and small progress everyday leads to big improvements over time. Thanks again. Will you be doing more of such tutorials? I really look forward to them!
Thanks UJ. I will be doing more!
Excellent!
Thank you Geoff!
Hey David, great video, any thoughts on differences of practicing new pieces, interim to performance , I know for some it maybe obvious but I’m interested if it’s better to practice in a different way at each stage and the ratios of each, also, any suggestions on preparing to play in public? Cheers
I just think the better you know a piece the less nerves and memory lapses you'll have. Hands separate, visualization without the guitar, recording yourself, 3 in a row, slow practice, having a definite idea of what you're doing musically, starting the piece from unusual places, not ignoring things that are going wrong... All these things will help. Also put yourself in a different environment, try playing to friends in a different place, make a note of what went wrong and why..... Hope this helps.
@@davidjaggs Thanks so much, David. I’m sure they will help, I’ve always worked on the five times perfect, idea. Two ideas I’ve had for playing in public were, when practicing each number, I try and play with a different emotion and secondly, I’ve started taking my guitar to a bench in the middle of a local park, to practice, with the idea of moving to busier places as I progress. I start with my easier tunes first, in a set pattern, moving towards the longer more challenging numbers. If I’m having a bad day, I stay on the easy pieces until I relax……..
Thanks again, every piece of advice always helps! 😁👍🏼
Thanks for watching and good luck with your playing.👍😊
Many thanks for these ideas.
Hope some of them help you!
Very helpful
🙏
Brilliant!
Thanks for watching Brian 🙂
Play an easy piece well, Great advice.Loved the 10 tips.
Thanks Vince
Amazing video!! Guitar illumination!!
Thanks for watching 👍
@@davidjaggs thank you for your infinite devotion. The “mountain” analogy it’s game changer, everything on this video is helpful! (Sorry, I’ve been writing from 3 different profiles, but yes, I just tried your advice on changing the accents and rhythm on a new fingering that hadn’t even tried before on the climax of The Grand Sarabanda and it worked IMMEDIATELY!!! I can see you had the fortune to study with Barrueco, (I’m from Cuba too), listening to the Regondi Studies I started digging in cause noticed high musicality and the deepest technical approach, thank you for building such a magnificent website, I hope I take advantage of everything in it. Really inspiring!!
@@rogeliomontenegroguerra768 kind words, thanks 👍
Missing your live performances, but enjoying your playing on spotify. :-)
Thanks Linda.. don't know when I'll be playing again!!
@@davidjaggs soon I hope. I have so enjoyed listening to you on spotify. I have come to appreciate the more gentle tracks. :-).
Super video, dotted practice is Imperative with Metronome, it's hard too keep motivated at times. Your tips help, be great too see you're way of learning a piece from scratch
Again great lesson
Thanks for all your kind comments, they are appreciated.
Loads of great advice here David. Thanks for doing these tutorials. Looking forward to your advice on harmonics and tremolo. If there's anything to practice slowly it's tremolo, but mine still sounds like a 3 legged horse 😂
More to come!
Excellent advice from a great virtuoso
Ah! Thank you kind sir!
Thanks David of this excellent lesson. You are one of the best players I know on UA-cam. I'm always delighted to listen to those gorgeous songs you've recorded here in your channel.
I have a question about slow practice. Can you please help me on this?
My question is: how slowly should I start practicing a piece? And by how much should I increase the speed after I am able to play the piece with no mistakes at a given slower speed?
So far I've came up with my own solution to this problem, but I'd like it to be validated if possible, so that I keep using it or change it somehow if it does not work as I expect it should.
My solution is based on the 85% Rule, which states that one will be able to play at 100% speed if he can play it at 85% speed. So, what I do is basically about applying this 85% Rule recursively on the piece speed to get a series of smaller speeds to practice in each of them.
For example, I am starting to practice a song whose final speed is 72 bpm. To get its smaller speeds I apply 85% to 72 bpm, and get 61 bpm. Then I apply 85% to 61 bpm, and get 52 bpm. I keep doing this until I get around 20 bpm, because I think this is a very slow speed, where it starts to become cumbersome to practice in such a slow motion.
To make it clearer, here is the list of smaller speeds I get to practice a song of 72 bpm:
- 72 x 85% = 61bpm
- 61 x 85% = 52bpm
- 52 x 85% = 44bpm
- 44 x 85% = 37bpm
- 37 x 85% = 32bpm
- 32 x 85% = 27bpm
- 27 x 85% = 23bpm
Then, with this list of smaller speeds in place, I start practicing the song in the reverse order of speeds, that is, from the slowest tempo (23bpm) to the final tempo (72 bpm), like this:
1º: 23bpm
2º: 27bpm
3º: 32bpm
4º: 37bpm
5º: 44bpm
6º: 52bpm
7º: 61bpm
8º: 72bpm
In this particular example I get to practice the song at 8 different speeds, so of course it adds more time to my project of getting the song up to speed, but it also gives me some structure to my practice, so that I know how far I am from getting to the final speed, that is, to getting to the finished project.
Is this a good approach to breaking down a song in smaller speeds?
Hi Ulysses. Thank you for your interesting comment. I don't think I've ever heard of this 85 percent rule, or been as organised as you in my practice. It sounds like a very thorough way of building speed. I don't think I was ever as patient! I do know that it's essential to start by practicing a piece at a speed at which you are in total control. Not just getting the notes, but being in control and aware of every movement of both hands. Try to make all the changes smooth, even at these slow speeds. Once you've achieved this notch up the metronome a beat or two and so on. As long as you keep control I don't see a problem in what rate one increases the speed. Make a note of what speed you start to lose control, or naily tone begins, and stop. Day by day this speed should gradually increase. You'll keep discipline if you see how the speed increases daily. It's hard to resist trying pieces a tempo, and I don't see any harm once in a while, but yes, slow practice is VERY important. Thanks for watching, and thanks for your kind comments.
@@davidjaggs got it. Thanks for the clarification.
4:26 suddenly Prokofiev 😅
Bardzo fajny materiał. Zawsze mówiłem moim uczniom, że nie ma trudnych utworów, ale są źle wyćwiczone. Pozdrawiam serdecznie :)
Thanks for watching, 🙏
cool
😊👍
6:25 actually sounds pretty good lol sounds like a secondary dominant or something.
I guess it is, yes!
@@davidjaggs hehe real nice tips btw helped me a lot thanks!
Can you know before hand what fingerings would work a tempo?
Good question Herick. As you gain more experience you begin to know what works and what doesn't. It takes time and experience though. I always write full fingering on the score, left and right hand, and I don't feel I can begin to learn the piece until I have. There will be a few occasions when you have to try a passage at speed with a couple of different fingerings to see what works, and over the next weeks some will get changed. So the answer to your question is yes, mostly.
There was a time when classical is all I wanted to play but my nails keep breaking and I’m set adrift . Then they grow and break and repeat !!
Have you tried false nails?
Hi David, thanks for the reply , I wasn’t expecting one. I once tried some false nails and they ruined my natural nails. They looked almost bruised when I took the false ones off. Took about 6 months to start growing strong again. It’s a damn shame too because the sound and tones I got with the false nails was superb. Maybe there are better quality ones I could try
I know someone who uses them. . Maybe I'll get him on a short tutorial. ...
DPJFILMS that would be very helpful sir thank you . I did consider gel nails but the nail tech didn’t seem to put my mind at rest about the previous problem I had. Also David, I truly appreciate you giving your time to help . You CD is jammed into my car CD player and it’s never coming out.
I am afraid of practicing the classical guitar because I am afraid that people would hear it and I would fail and get insulted for some reason
Don't ever worry what other people think! Do what YOU want not someone else!
@@davidjaggs Thank you.
Thank you! Really helpful.
I'm pleased!