Interleaved Practice
- kbryson
- Posts: 47
- Joined: Jul 24, 2018
One of the blogs I regularly follow, Bulletproof Musician, recently ran an article on interleaved practice. In a nutshell this is a practice method wherein you rotate between two or three unrelated topics during your practice session. You can read more about it here: [url]<LINK_TEXT text="https://bulletproofmusician.com/why-the ... ht-part-2/">https://bulletproofmusician.com/why-the-progress-you-make-in-the-practice-room-seems-to-disappear-overnight-part-2/</LINK_TEXT>.
Anyone tried this and have thoughts on it? I'm going to try doing it during my practice sessions this week!
Anyone tried this and have thoughts on it? I'm going to try doing it during my practice sessions this week!
- johntarr
- Posts: 368
- Joined: May 07, 2018
I’ve read a fair amount about this and use it in my practice regularly. It’s just one of several ways to improve practice quality that seem counterintuitive at first sight.
- timothy42b
- Posts: 1812
- Joined: Mar 27, 2018
It makes a lot of sense to me. If I play a note 20 times concentrating on a clean attack, 19 of those notes are out of context for how I'll encounter them, because they were preceded by another note.
I took a lesson from a ball golf pro years ago prior to playing a celebrity event at work, and he would periodically interrupt me and ask a question about math or music to interrupt the flow of swing after swing, because I would never hit a ball on the course on the 20th swing.
I took a lesson from a ball golf pro years ago prior to playing a celebrity event at work, and he would periodically interrupt me and ask a question about math or music to interrupt the flow of swing after swing, because I would never hit a ball on the course on the 20th swing.