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Post by princessmoose on May 28, 2006 11:12:29 GMT
How does one get their playing sounding more even and flowing rather than totally disjointed? Because that's what my Chopin sounds like, well all my playing really, and it's annoying me.
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Post by Steve Hopwood on May 28, 2006 15:14:20 GMT
Ehup Nat It takes regular, frequent, systematic practise. Steve
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Post by princessmoose on May 28, 2006 15:15:03 GMT
I've been practising for 10 years .
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Post by Steve Hopwood on May 28, 2006 15:21:21 GMT
To expand then, I reckon it takes a minimum average of 30 minutes a day, 5 days a week, 48 weeks a year unless the player is highly talented. Any less than this leads towards halting, uncertain playing. A bit of a how-long-is-a-piece-of-string reply, but roughly compatible with my experience of teaching people to play with varying degrees of expertise. Very varying ;D Steve
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Post by princessmoose on May 28, 2006 15:23:14 GMT
Maybe in another 10 years I will get somewhere .
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Post by Steve Hopwood on May 28, 2006 15:27:27 GMT
Maybe in another 10 years I will get somewhere . According to a tv dramatisation of Churchill's 'wilderness' years, he and his butler referred to KBO. This might be apt in your case. KBO = Keep nuisanceing On ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D
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Post by princessmoose on May 28, 2006 15:28:07 GMT
LOL...yes Steve.. lol.
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