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Hitz Academy Blog

A blog about performing music, teaching music and the business of music.

Filtering by Tag: daily routine

Getting serious about your routine

Andrew Hitz

This is not a complicated concept and yet can be hard to implement until you get some momentum. If you are serious about improving your playing, you must be practicing the things you can't do well every single day.

The first part of this equation is having the self-awareness to accurately identify the weaknesses in your playing. I don't think I've ever met a player who has no idea what their weaknesses are. But the best players have an acute sense of their shortcomings with a high degree of specificity.

Noticing that soft playing is not a strength is one thing. (And that's a great start!) But digging a few layers deeper (like for example your ascending slurs in the upper middle and upper registers at a soft dynamic are particularly poor) is much better.

The best players can not only identify their shortcomings to that degree of specificity but then develop a plan to meet them head-on in their daily routines. If you are bored with practicing scales, incorporate one of your weaknesses into your daily scale work. This requires creativity and a lot of focus (since playing a new exercise that you just made up takes a lot more work than just playing around the Circle of Fourths again.)

And if you really want to raise the bar, throw a portion of your warmup on Instagram Live. Even if only five people watch for a total of a minute, your focus will be off the charts when you are broadcasting one of your biggest weaknesses to your friends and colleagues.

So ask yourself two questions: what are your biggest shortcomings as a player (be as specific as possible) and how many days in the last week have you worked on them?

If your answer is less than seven, you might want to reevaluate your priorities.

Marty Hackleman Quotes from 2011 Master Class at George Mason University

Andrew Hitz

Last night, Professor Marty Hackleman gave an amazing master class at George Mason University.  Marty is the principal horn of the National Symphony and a former member of both the Empire Brass and the Canadian Brass.  In my opinion, he is one of the premier teachers and performers that the brass world has ever known. I have put a few of the quotes that really spoke loudly to me in bold.  What quotes jump out at you? Please comment with your favorite quote and how it relates to your playing.

Here are the highlights from the class:

  • "It's not that you work, it's how you work."
     

  • "How simple can you make the problem?  How simple can you make the solution?"
     

  • "We don't see the causes.  We see the symptoms."
     

  • "All that you want to do is make it slightly better than yesterday but not as good as tomorrow.  And you enjoy the chase."
     

  • "When you do a daily routine, don't sit in front of the TV wasting your time."
     

  • "Think of your routine as a physical brass mediation.  Enjoy the time alone."
     

  • "The routine is a question of how you play and not what you play."
     

  • "A lot of times when you have a problem with your playing and you think you know the solution try the exact opposite.  85% of the time it will work.  And that comes from personal experience."
     

  • "I only breathe as much as I need when I'm warming up and I focus on quality over quantity.  But if you're playing a different instrument, like the tuba, it may be different."
     

  • "It is more important to practice efficiently than a lot of inefficient practicing.  If you don't feel like it, stop.  Get a cup of coffee and then come back.  Then suck it up and make yourself feel like it for even 15 minutes."
     

  • "Even if you can play your ass off, try to make it easier."
     

  • "Make it as simple, natural and easy as you can."
     

  • "Don't save the high notes until the end of your routine.  They shouldn't be that precious.  They should be a natural extension of everything else."
     

  • "I failed first.  Everybody failed first.  But do you stop at failure?"
     

  • "You'll be surprised that if you ask yourself to do something regularly, you'll find a solution."
     

  • "If tension is creeping into your playing, your routine is where you find that out, not in rehearsal or in performance."
     

  • "Support isn't caused by air.  They are separate things."
     

  • "You want to use your routine to make yourself better, not just make yourself functional."
     

  • "I know (my routine) works because at almost 60 years old I believe I can play better than I've ever played in my life.  And it's not luck.  I promise you."
     

  • "First thing is you have to make sure that your horn sounds like what's in your head."
     

  • "You have to be more responsible about being a musician and not just a horn player."
     

  • "We make crescendos and we don't come all the way back.  If you come all the way back you have somewhere to go again."

Thank you Marty for such an insightful class! Everyone is welcome to attend his next class, free of charge, on Monday April 4th at 7:30pm at George Mason University.