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Stefan Jackiw - The Art of Practicing Scales 

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Acclaimed violinist Stefan Jackiw breaks down his method for practicing scales. He shares his approach for getting the most out of your practice time and tips for practicing one of his favorite resources, the Carl Flesch Scale system.
Watch the rest of Stefan Jackiw's in-depth lesson on practicing, only on tonebase Violin!
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27 июн 2022

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Комментарии : 84   
@jessicalambert296
@jessicalambert296 Год назад
Thank you for this video. This actually covers Rule #23 in my studio beautifully: Don't fix a mistake and keep going - practice it a few more times and learn not to make the mistake. So many times students practice diligently to strengthen their errors. I have forwarded the link to my students!
@clotilderecalde8934
@clotilderecalde8934 Год назад
👍
@johnmc3862
@johnmc3862 Год назад
No students practice diligently to strengthen their errors! 😂
@claudiaclaudia1557
@claudiaclaudia1557 Месяц назад
Nicht bewusst, aber unbewusst üben Schüler die Fehler ein.
@sasssssa6565
@sasssssa6565 Год назад
To resume: practice scale only slowly for intonation accuracy Shift in slow glissando for muscle memory ( to practice with no mistake rather than practice in correcting the pitch).
@frizzleface4294
@frizzleface4294 Год назад
Absolutely spot on. When you play scales this this, it is never rote playing just to get through the scale routine. And you know why you are practicing scales. Wonderful advice.
@IOFrimpong
@IOFrimpong Год назад
Nice distinction between teaching yourself self the correct shift vs. teaching yourself the mistake and then to fix the mistake.
@alhfgsp
@alhfgsp Год назад
Thank you for the information! I've been taught to prioritize intonation over speed. Speed is nothing if you aren't playing clean notes in tune.
@els1f
@els1f Год назад
I've learned to play so many different instruments, starting with piano and guitar.... Nothing has been as hard as violin! 🤯😱i played Cello and some trumpet in school and they were nothing like how precise and delicate EVERY SINGLE movement is
@emisaurushex
@emisaurushex 8 месяцев назад
Ha! I'm sharing this with my mum who plays violin and my friend who plays cello 😂
@PBXVIILY
@PBXVIILY 4 месяца назад
My Teacher, Erick Friedman emphasized scales in this manner. This was exactly how I was taught to shift. This was the way Heifetz practiced scales.
@marlonramos2161
@marlonramos2161 Год назад
This was so helpful (and validating) about how I've been approaching scales. It's good to keep the long-term goal in mind!! Thanks for sharing your expertise!
@DrDrolly
@DrDrolly Месяц назад
I love it! I play bansuri and i see so many parallels to what your talking about! Do it slow and you eventually 'touch' the note! Then it becomes actually difficult to it wrong! I hope i will find the time to experiment with the violin once! Such a fascinating and difficile instrument. Must feel amazing!!!!
@delanemarsh5637
@delanemarsh5637 3 месяца назад
love this video so much, the way he explains it is so clear
@ricardol1116
@ricardol1116 Год назад
Thank you for this lesson!
@axlcrush
@axlcrush Год назад
Thank you, that's how I have been practicing as I thought that would be the way to get the most benefit out of the scales.
@gribmuse5686
@gribmuse5686 Год назад
Thanks, yours advices are smart and helpful!
@MegaToti26
@MegaToti26 Год назад
Perfect! Thank you so very much for this video!
@bethanyjones8535
@bethanyjones8535 Год назад
Amazingly helpful, thank you.
@wiltonpt1
@wiltonpt1 Год назад
I love this. I had the chance to hear you and speaking with you in upstate NY and I am glad to know you can also share things on the technique very clearly and articulate some of your experience to others attempt to emulate you.
@EliasAxelPettersson
@EliasAxelPettersson 11 месяцев назад
Fantastic teaching and great technique. This is actually helpful to improving technique and the concept of practicing to train yourself rather than correcting a mistake. I tell my students all the time that it's not about putting on a Band-Aid for every mistake; it's about what happens right before the "mistake" that they need to work on or "fix".
@dayaneoliveira1122
@dayaneoliveira1122 Год назад
This is fantastic advice, thank you!😍
@bahman1186
@bahman1186 22 дня назад
Excellent advice, thank you!
@erreoable
@erreoable 10 месяцев назад
Excellent! Thank you very much
@Shareef2610
@Shareef2610 Год назад
Thank you so much this is very important approach how to change position instead of keep correcting fingers.
@sadhbhdelahunt
@sadhbhdelahunt 11 месяцев назад
Thanks, i tried this and it works
@NicholasWarnertheFirst
@NicholasWarnertheFirst 9 месяцев назад
Great Video Thank You 🎉🎉
@PlaybacksCCB
@PlaybacksCCB Месяц назад
Wow! Incredible, I loved it.
@johndeer4250
@johndeer4250 6 месяцев назад
Im coming back to this video for a bigger thanks than before this really works
@johndeer4250
@johndeer4250 2 месяца назад
proven point it actually works wonders and as a rookie my self I got to say thank you so much for this exercise I don’t read music and just try to play by ear but this works for street as well as classical I guess I seen the fruit of this because I always practice before my shift starts at work and now I get applauses and I never ever ever get them so this exercise is by far one of the best ! so thank you thank you thank you!
@saea58
@saea58 10 месяцев назад
Thank you!
@mariaviolin
@mariaviolin 2 года назад
Más vídeos como este plissssss 🙏🏻 ¿cómo se estudia el Kreutzer correctamente? O las escalas de Galamian
@violinhunter2
@violinhunter2 Год назад
Yes, great advice and insights. Intonation, Rhythm, and Sound - that is the alpha and omega of playing.... easy to say and extremely difficult to accomplish.
@gillbrooks5259
@gillbrooks5259 9 месяцев назад
Thankyou for this advice. I am slow at playing the violin because I want to get it right.
@augustinechinnappanmuthria7042
@augustinechinnappanmuthria7042 8 месяцев назад
Super tutorial Augustine violinist from Malaysia
@Mephibosheth52
@Mephibosheth52 6 месяцев назад
Thanks,
@deveshgupta8655
@deveshgupta8655 2 месяца назад
"Hardest thing about playing the violin is to play in tune". Dude you just sympathised my tears after playing 3 octave d major arpeggio out of tune :')
@chrisma3256
@chrisma3256 Год назад
Thank you! Is there a recommendation when to shift?
@kevinsullivan4156
@kevinsullivan4156 28 дней назад
Practice does not make perfect, practice makes permanent. Only perfect practice makes perfect
@jeanparke9373
@jeanparke9373 Год назад
It's quite funny to confess that although I'm not the biggest fan of Jackiw's playing, his advices on practicing helped me the greatest deal - almost at the same level with my professor.
@M_SC
@M_SC Год назад
Rude
@carl-gunnaraahlen8376
@carl-gunnaraahlen8376 Год назад
Right!
@JustFiddler
@JustFiddler Год назад
matur suksma kak stevan 🍀😍🎻💃🌈
@BenjiOrthopedic
@BenjiOrthopedic Год назад
Listen to Augustin Hadelich’s instructional videos on here. And of course his performances. He is phenomenal on both levels.
@alhfgsp
@alhfgsp Год назад
He's one of the finest violinists today, and yes, those instructional videos are very edifying.
@BenjiOrthopedic
@BenjiOrthopedic Год назад
@@alhfgsp Yes indeed. I love how un-Hollywood Augustin is...he's an ordinary guy with extraordinary gifts. I don't really warm up to a lot of the younger generation fiddlers - as one myself, I vastly prefer the great old guys and gals of the 20th century (Kogan, Milstein, Oistrakh, Haendel, Rabin, Morini, all the rest really!) But Augustin is different. He's just in a class by himself.
@alhfgsp
@alhfgsp Год назад
@@BenjiOrthopedic Of the old greats you mentioned, Oistrakh is my favorite. Like Hadelich, he produces a warm, vibrant, beautiful sound while maintaining exact precision and a regulated bow.
@BenjiOrthopedic
@BenjiOrthopedic Год назад
@@alhfgsp yeah, he is a rarity nowadays. Most of these guys and girls just sound about as interesting as a cardboard box. Many of them have excellent technique but they don't develop adequate tone production. Their performances are mostly unmemorable. I can only imagine how much money some of them are paid, compared to what the older folks made.
@IgorVasquesBarata
@IgorVasquesBarata Месяц назад
Esse cara tem que fazer força pra conseguir errar
@conniechan3280
@conniechan3280 8 месяцев назад
❤ 😊
@dominoplay3712
@dominoplay3712 Год назад
How to present this to a younger students? “Sliding” like this is a nice idea, I think it would make a lot of progress with shifting. But I wonder, if I speed up the tempo gradually, will the sliding be too noticeable?
@M_SC
@M_SC Год назад
No because eventually it will be so fast that the bow isn’t moving when you’re sliding
@johndeer4250
@johndeer4250 7 месяцев назад
ok as a 45 yo guy that’s been practicing less than a year this immediately helped me in my ear/finger zinc , an my improvisation with scales sounds cleaner after every exercise so yes this class was totally worth watching till the very end lost of stuff with little effort thanks for this awesome 👏 video 🤯
@johnnyparker9928
@johnnyparker9928 Год назад
I like how you think. One must eliminate the memory of mistakes lest they destroy the progress.
@violinbuff3782
@violinbuff3782 Год назад
Highly intelligent comments. eric shumsky
@songsabai3794
@songsabai3794 Год назад
If you wanna learn fast, play slow.....oh, and always play a "beautiful-note"! 😁
@Maria-rh6hb
@Maria-rh6hb Год назад
Stupendo ma possibile avere i sottotitoli in italiano ? 😩😩😩
@Joshua-sm6ql
@Joshua-sm6ql 4 месяца назад
As a former guitarist, the idea that there aren't any marks on the fret board to guide you is crazy and intimidating to me
@mattimaranda9638
@mattimaranda9638 5 месяцев назад
5:00 "Ya???!!!" 😂 Sorry that was funny.
@dm.25
@dm.25 4 месяца назад
What does reperoire mean?
@samvel4315
@samvel4315 2 месяца назад
Its a repertoire, which is basically a piece of music
@justinstrik7125
@justinstrik7125 6 месяцев назад
play without vibrato... finally something I can do 😇
@richardcarter5314
@richardcarter5314 Год назад
When I practise I always turn the tuner on.
@violatione
@violatione Год назад
Thank you for telling me how to pronounce your name. I've had it wrong for years!
@CruelLion7
@CruelLion7 Год назад
based take
@johndeer4250
@johndeer4250 7 месяцев назад
let’s see what else i get from watching it again
@NicholasWarnertheFirst
@NicholasWarnertheFirst 2 месяца назад
Slow is good.
@juliejules7780
@juliejules7780 Год назад
I just realized all scales have the same finger pattern. You don't really have to memorize the notes
@carmelacorpuz114
@carmelacorpuz114 24 дня назад
When i listen to specifically this channel it always makes me worse at whatever its trying to teach for some reason
@kirkp7470
@kirkp7470 Год назад
Who?
@PilipiHoops
@PilipiHoops Год назад
Ling Ling doesn't need to play scales
@stephenbrivati3233
@stephenbrivati3233 Год назад
Din’t know pandas played the violin…
@lastmoutainman8334
@lastmoutainman8334 3 месяца назад
Ling Ling practices 40 hours a day. 52 of those hours are Heifetz style scales.
@Latortabuena
@Latortabuena 3 месяца назад
Ling ling is now a doctor 👩‍⚕️
@BenjiOrthopedic
@BenjiOrthopedic Год назад
I wouldn’t totally agree with this approach. The way to get the most out of scales is to really Listen to yourself as you play…for intonation mainly, especially when playing scales in thirds, and fingered octaves. I’ve not heard much about this violinist but he’s no great artist. Yet. Nor is he a great pedagogue. Yet. He’s cute though!!
@ErikWilliamsviolin
@ErikWilliamsviolin Год назад
I think his advice is very solid. Not sure why you're being so critical.
@Firenmage433
@Firenmage433 8 месяцев назад
I’m sure you’re so much better 😂
@rogerchen4525
@rogerchen4525 7 месяцев назад
You haven’t heard of him so therefore he’s no great artist?? He is still young but is definitely already among the greatest violinists of today. Take a listen to his Scottish Fantasy-one of the best renditions out there. Also, in case you didn’t understand, his approach literally revolves on building the correct muscle memory so that one can play more in tune more consistently. Though he demonstrated with regular scales, the approach can be easily carried over to thirds, sixths, octaves, and tenths. You can’t exercise this approach without closely listening to yourself either, so I don’t get your point here.
@xanderknecht5090
@xanderknecht5090 6 месяцев назад
You’re a crappy troll if you’re even human lol
@joeorca5087
@joeorca5087 6 месяцев назад
To much bla bla nla bla bla
@vkviolin
@vkviolin 11 месяцев назад
🤣🤣
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