J
Jak Angelescu
Guest
Good morning (or evening) guys and dolls!
I’d LOVE for students to share their metronome tips with me. As I find that utilizing it can either make or break you. On one hand, it’s awesome to use the metronome to help us stay on time and develop good rhythm and timekeeping skills, and can also be a great way for us to gauge and increase our speed.
But one setback I believe the metronome has, is it can come with a sense of stress, frustration, and the urge to “race” ourselves.
I notice that many guitarists will have a very stable, strong spot where they’re playing a solo up to speed. They’re cruising along, having a great time, and then suddenly everything is rushed, smashed together, off-time, and next thing you know they’re struggling to regain themselves. And I find out that it’s because they practice the ‘boring and easy’ parts up to speed because they lacked the patience to practice the easy parts slowly, and then transition with this speed into the more challenging spots.
Or, their transitions from one spot to the next are stiff, chopped, and not very relaxed or controlled.
I believe using a metronome is extremely necessary and helpful, when used right. When used improperly I personally feel it can have adverse effects. Gauging our speed is not the only way to gauge our improvement. Speed is not everything. I believe it is great to practice certain spots that you are struggling with over and over again, and also to help stabilize your timing once you get something down.
So here are my personal tips for metronome usage I’d really love to hear some of yours!
1. Practice the boring parts at the speed you can play your hardest parts comfortably. Don’t lie to yourself either. If you’re having to strain your eyeballs looking at the strings and you’re holding your breath, that’s not being played comfortably
2. Practicing the boring parts as slow as the difficult parts will enable you to TRANSITION into the harder parts effortlessly, or with much ease. This will help relieve the “Oh my God here comes that part now focus focus focus don’t mess up don’t mess up” stress. It will make your connections sound better
3. Don’t doubt yourself. Don’t think that you have to improve 20 BPMs a day to be improving. Every single thing I’ve struggled with, I set the tempo for extremely slow paces, played it for ten minutes while relaxing and mentally clearing my head, and next thing I knew I could increase the BPM by 15 or 20.
4. Don’t let the BPM number distinguish how well you know something. Just because you can play something up to speed, doesn’t mean you’re playing it will ALL that you’ve got. I see a lot of guitarists struggling to hit vibratos where they could be. And to be honest, timing vibratos and allowing your muscles to get trained to react to them strongly and in time is a difficult thing. So if you practice slowly, put the vibratos and the slides in there. Slide slowly during slow tempos, and vibrato on time and slowly as well. This will also help you to hear if your vibrato is also getting a pitch change so that it comes through clearly.
5. Put the metronome down and allow yourself your own feel. If you are hearing the constant beat going, you may fumble your way through some spots trying to keep up. Allow your mind to clear of the feeling of needing to “rush to stay on time” and let yourself be your own metronome. If you play the boring parts faster, then you now have free will to slow down and work your way through the difficult spots without the metronome beeping.
6. Don’t get discouraged. Metronome usage can make you feel you’re never going to get better because the number’s not going up. Remember, there are other ways to gauge your improvement
That’s all I’ve got if you have any metronome tips, please share them because I would love to hear them! I’ll be in the studio for most of this week so my timing on here may be sparse.
Have a great week everyone!
I’d LOVE for students to share their metronome tips with me. As I find that utilizing it can either make or break you. On one hand, it’s awesome to use the metronome to help us stay on time and develop good rhythm and timekeeping skills, and can also be a great way for us to gauge and increase our speed.
But one setback I believe the metronome has, is it can come with a sense of stress, frustration, and the urge to “race” ourselves.
I notice that many guitarists will have a very stable, strong spot where they’re playing a solo up to speed. They’re cruising along, having a great time, and then suddenly everything is rushed, smashed together, off-time, and next thing you know they’re struggling to regain themselves. And I find out that it’s because they practice the ‘boring and easy’ parts up to speed because they lacked the patience to practice the easy parts slowly, and then transition with this speed into the more challenging spots.
Or, their transitions from one spot to the next are stiff, chopped, and not very relaxed or controlled.
I believe using a metronome is extremely necessary and helpful, when used right. When used improperly I personally feel it can have adverse effects. Gauging our speed is not the only way to gauge our improvement. Speed is not everything. I believe it is great to practice certain spots that you are struggling with over and over again, and also to help stabilize your timing once you get something down.
So here are my personal tips for metronome usage I’d really love to hear some of yours!
1. Practice the boring parts at the speed you can play your hardest parts comfortably. Don’t lie to yourself either. If you’re having to strain your eyeballs looking at the strings and you’re holding your breath, that’s not being played comfortably
2. Practicing the boring parts as slow as the difficult parts will enable you to TRANSITION into the harder parts effortlessly, or with much ease. This will help relieve the “Oh my God here comes that part now focus focus focus don’t mess up don’t mess up” stress. It will make your connections sound better
3. Don’t doubt yourself. Don’t think that you have to improve 20 BPMs a day to be improving. Every single thing I’ve struggled with, I set the tempo for extremely slow paces, played it for ten minutes while relaxing and mentally clearing my head, and next thing I knew I could increase the BPM by 15 or 20.
4. Don’t let the BPM number distinguish how well you know something. Just because you can play something up to speed, doesn’t mean you’re playing it will ALL that you’ve got. I see a lot of guitarists struggling to hit vibratos where they could be. And to be honest, timing vibratos and allowing your muscles to get trained to react to them strongly and in time is a difficult thing. So if you practice slowly, put the vibratos and the slides in there. Slide slowly during slow tempos, and vibrato on time and slowly as well. This will also help you to hear if your vibrato is also getting a pitch change so that it comes through clearly.
5. Put the metronome down and allow yourself your own feel. If you are hearing the constant beat going, you may fumble your way through some spots trying to keep up. Allow your mind to clear of the feeling of needing to “rush to stay on time” and let yourself be your own metronome. If you play the boring parts faster, then you now have free will to slow down and work your way through the difficult spots without the metronome beeping.
6. Don’t get discouraged. Metronome usage can make you feel you’re never going to get better because the number’s not going up. Remember, there are other ways to gauge your improvement
That’s all I’ve got if you have any metronome tips, please share them because I would love to hear them! I’ll be in the studio for most of this week so my timing on here may be sparse.
Have a great week everyone!