Curated from YAMAHA – By Dr. Dave Gehart –
Student performers tend to only focus on the next thing they need to prepare for — an audition, a rehearsal or a performance. Believe it or not, this is also true for professional musicians. With my work, teaching, family and playing schedule, I don’t have as much time to spend in the practice room as I would like. But when I feel like skipping practice, I always remember this quote by golf legend Ben Hogan: “Every day you don’t practice, you’re one day further from being good.”
This quote inspires me to keep practicing. I have found that if I practice these three areas every day, I can continue to grow as a musician and maintain my chops.
All musicians should spend 15 to 30 minutes each day sight-reading. It doesn’t need to be melodic reading (although that it is probably weaker than your rhythmic reading), it just needs to be music you have never seen before.
Where can you get music? The number one source of free, public domain sheet music is IMSLP.org. For sight-reading, I would suggest starting with a Bach or Mozart violin or flute sonata. If you have someone else who wants to do some sight-reading, check out the Bach Inventions. There is so much music on the site, I promise you will never have a problem finding something new to read.
There are many beliefs about how you should sight-read something. Generally, once you play through it once, you aren’t sight-reading any more. Here are my steps:
CHECK IT OUT: The OSM Series Snare Drums
Once I have read it a second time, I put it away. Instead of printing all of these pieces, I use my laptop or iPad to view the PDF. It saves paper and I have material to share with my students. I also like sight-reading with other people to add a level of accountability. Vivaldi or Mozart string quartets are perfect for this.
Rolls are universal on all percussion instruments and something we need to work on daily to maintain the skills. I do a regime of SD roll exercises that include single stroke, double stroke, triple stroke and multiple bounce rolls. Working on single stroke rolls helps me maintain my timpani and mallet rolls. I enjoy working on double and triple stroke rolls with different fulcrum to accurately execute the different roll types. Two great books for roll development are “Developing Dexterity” by Mitchell Peters and “The Roll” by Emil Scholle.
Here is an exercise to work on snare drum rolls:
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In my opinion, developing your ear is one of the most underrated and under-practiced areas for most musicians. Working on your ear should be an ongoing daily activity. Work on listening and being more aware of what you are doing and what you are hearing.
Here are some suggestions to develop your ear:
Reading, rolls and listening — these are the three key areas all musicians should continue to develop to be successful. Honing your skills in these areas will help you further develop your musical skills.