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Practice Strategies

9 easy ways to follow and plan your practice

  1. Chunking
    Break the music into small sections (1–2 lines or 4–8 measures) and master one chunk at a time before connecting them.
    Example: Practice mm. 1–4 three times, then mm. 5–8, then connect 1–8.
     

  2. Slow-to-fast ladder
    Start at a comfortable slow tempo and increase only when you can play it correctly and relaxed several times in a row.
    Example: 60 BPM → 66 → 72, moving up only after 3 clean runs at each tempo.

  3. Reps with criteria
    Repeat with a clear goal—only count a repetition if it meets the criteria (accurate rhythm, good tone, correct notes).
    Example: “5 perfect reps” means you reset if one rep has a slip.​
     

  4. Rhythm first
    Lock in the rhythm first (clap/say/tap), then play on open strings, and only add notes or fingerings after the rhythm is stable.
    Example: Say “1-and-2-and” while clapping, then play the rhythm on an open string, then add fingers.

  5. Sing or hum, then play
    Sing or hum the passage before you play to build inner hearing and confidence in pitch and phrasing.
    Example: Hum the first phrase, then play it immediately with the same shape.

  6. Isolate variables
    Practice one ingredient at a time—left hand only, right hand only, or rhythm only—then combine.
    Example: Do silent left-hand finger taps first, then bow open strings, then combine.

  7. Record and reflect
    Record a short clip (10–30 seconds), listen or watch once, choose one thing to fix, then record again.
    Example: If the sound is scratchy at the tip, try a slower bow and a steadier contact point in the next take.

  8. Reference recording
    Choose a high-quality professional performance video, listen for one specific element (pulse, phrasing, dynamics, articulation, tone color), then imitate that element in a short passage.
    Example: Watch a professional play the first 8 measures, sing the phrase shape, then play the same 8 measures aiming for the same dynamic arc and articulation.

  9. Goal or checklist
    Use a simple checklist so you know exactly what “done” means for today’s practice.
    Example: Set three goals such as 1. steady beat, 2. clean notes, 3. relaxed shoulders, then check them after each run.

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