Why learn scales and arpeggios?
Why learn scales and arpeggios?
13:22 on Wednesday, November 15, 2006
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Re: Why learn scales and arpeggios?
13:53 on Wednesday, November 15, 2006
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Re: Why learn scales and arpeggios?
14:12 on Wednesday, November 15, 2006
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DottedEighthNote (180 points)
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Posted by DottedEighthNote
Exactly what Chris said. You can see a "difficult" passage in a piece, and say to yourself...oh wait, that is just a B minor scale starting on D instead of B. My personal opinion on arpeggios is that they are a a tone exercise as well as a flexibility exercise. Actually, practicing scales and arpeggios can let you work on anything you want. If you have a hard time with technique like maybe making a clean transition between high B natural and C, practicing apreggios can help you clean that up too. You can use them to practice single, double, and triple tonguing. The options are limitless. I personally also enjoyed scales to the point that I could play Db major 3 octaves in High School, and by the time I went to college I had all major scales memorized for the entire range of my flute. It kind of shocked my flute teacher a bit, but then again it shocked me everyone didn't like scales that much.
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Re: Why learn scales and arpeggios?
14:37 on Wednesday, November 15, 2006
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Pickled (123 points)
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What Chris said. And, frankly, I don't think teachers make this clear to students--I certainly always hated scales and no one ever hit me upside the head and explained to me why I might want to practice them.
James Galway has some nice articles and mp3's about scale playing, how to practice them, and WHY to practice them on his website:
www.thegalwaynetwork.com
Click on Audio/Video on the menu bar for the mp3's; there are some newer mp3's in a big white box in the middle of the home page; and the articles are available here:
http://www.thegalwaynetwork.com/notes/chatnote.htm
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Re: Why learn scales and arpeggios?
15:11 on Wednesday, November 15, 2006
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Patrick (1743 points)
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if you play scales and arpeggios like they are a piece of music, they become a piece of music, just look at the music of Mozart. Scales, arpeggios and all other theory are the grammar of music, the more you learn the more you will be able to play. If you play your scales boring, then they will be boring, if you make them musical they will be fun.
Try this, next time you play a scale pattern, give it a name, such as "slithering snake" or "rushing water", etc.
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Re: Why learn scales and arpeggios?
12:52 on Thursday, November 16, 2006
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Re: Why learn scales and arpeggios?
13:55 on Thursday, November 16, 2006
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