Small Sections
Practicing an instrument is both like and not like playing video games. Discuss.

Practicing an instrument is like playing video games:
- When you first begin, you must start at the lowest level.
- The more you do it, the better you get.
- If the video game in question is Pong, it sounds like this:
Practicing an instrument is not like playing video games:
- You get to choose what section of the music you practice.
- You can practice that section however many times you want—you are not forced to move on to the next level.
- When practicing an instrument, your goal is to be able to perform on that instrument (there are two stages, performance and practice). Playing a video game is both performance and practice simultaneously*.
1: Choose your small section.
Which to choose? Whatever you need to practice—you can start with the hardest part, start at the end of the piece, alternate between easy and hard sections. I like to start with the hardest part, because once mastered, it makes every thing else seem even easier.
How small? However small it needs to be for you to learn it. In some cases, maybe a slow movement, it can be as long as a phrase. In many fast passages, though, a whole phrase is too long. I often just practice two bars at a time, sometimes just one, and yes, even less than one.
This is so important! You cannot practice the whole piece at once**. In order to efficiently and effectively learn a piece of music, you must break it up into small sections. Your brain and your body can only learn so much at once.
When you are practicing small sections, you are creating and strengthening neural pathways in the brain that allow your body (and, at best, your soul) to perform that “dedicated series of acts” that Martha Graham wrote about. Those neural pathways are best created one tiny bit at a time.
2: Keep practicing even after you’ve “got it.”
In a video game, as soon as you successfully get through a level once, you are immediately advanced to the next level (woohoo! up from the dungeon!). In music practice, one success is not enough—now that you know how to play it, repeat it 4 to 7 times so that you will be sure to be successful in performance.
3: Number 2 above is only possible because in music we separate performance and practice. And we’ll talk more about that in a later entry.
It’s surprisingly easy, when practicing music, to forget that we are in the driver’s seat. Sometimes, we think of the music as a beautiful, organic whole, and we want to just play it that way. Sometimes we think of it as a daunting, huge task that we will never be able to achieve. Sometimes it seems like a magical force beyond our control. Any of those ideas can stop us from practicing in an effective way. But just remember, it’s not a like a video game because you are in control of what parts you play when, how many times you play them, and you don’t have to try and do the whole thing every time.
*OK, OK, some recent video games, like Guitar Hero, sort of let you practice, but the point here is that in music practice, YOU are in control. In video games, the video game is always in control.
**In fact, you can’t even perform the whole piece at once. In performance, you play every small section, in succession, without stopping, but you are still only playing it small section by small section.
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