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Subject:Re: [RESOGUIT-L] Interesting on: Practice, practice, practice
Date:Friday, February 1, 2008  01:12:10 (-0800)
From:PHIL CATHEY <bluegrassservices @...com>

I do sound for a young band where the lead singer is 10 years old. When he just
had turned 2 before Christmas he told Santa to bring him a guitar, so his parents
thru Santa got him a plastic toy guitar. On Christmas morning in the year 2000 he
opened the toy guitar, he pushed a couple buttons (never taking it out of the
box) then picked up the box and guitar and put it in his dads lap and plainly
said "can Santa trade this toy for a Martin guitar with strings"  a very
religious family so I believe the dad who ran into me at a music store with the
little 2 year boy holding his dads pants leg staring at the guitars on the wall.
That day they took home one of the small dread knot Martin guitars. Oh by the way
no one in the family at the time played music, but now his sister 1 1/2 years
older plays fiddle and the little brother 8 plays mandolin and oldest sister 17
plays bass. It sure helps when kids are home schooled with lessons with a music
instructor 3 day a week. I feel like my young friend is another Ricky Skaggs.  He
now plays a 000 D28 Martin and flat picks well while he sings at least 3 full
sets on stage WOW. 
  ----- Original Message -----  
  From: KeimBob@aol.com<mailto:KeimBob@aol.com>  
  To: resoguit-l@elistas.com<mailto:resoguit-l@elistas.com>  
  Sent: Thursday, January 31, 2008 1:35 PM 
  Subject: [RESOGUIT-L] Interesting on: Practice, practice, practice 
 
 
  Practice often comes up on the list.  Here is something posted on  another  
  instrument's listserv that applies to the reso as well, no doubt. :   
   *************************** 
  I'm still slogging thru Daniel Levitin's book THIS IS YOUR BRAIN ON  MUSIC. 
  He mentions some interesting studies showing that expertise (musical  or 
  otherwise) is more of a function of practicing a lot than anything else.  He 
  cites numerous studies which show ten thousand hours of practice is  required 
  to achieve the level of mastery associated with being a  world-class 
  expert--IN ANYTHING. He says in study after study--of composers,  basketball 
  players, fiction writers, ice skaters, concert pianists, chess  players, 
  master criminals, and what have you, this number comes up again and  again. 
  10,000 hours is equivalent to roughly three hours a day, or twenty  hours a 
  week, of practice over 10 years. No study has yet found a case in  which true 
  world-class expertise was accomplished in less time. It seems to  take the 
  brain this long to assimilate all that it needs to know to achieve  true 
  mastery. (neural pathways, brain chemistry, etc). 
 
  Levitin cites  the classic rebuttal to the 10,000 hour argument: "Well what 
  about Mozart? I  hear he was composing symphonies at the age of 4! And even 
  if he was  practicing 40 hours a week since the day he was born, that doesn't 
  make  10,000 hours". Levitin points out Mozart didn't begin composing until 
  he was  six, and didn't write his 1st symphony until he was 8. He says 
  whereas Mozart  demonstrated precociousness early in life, that's not the 
  same as being an  expert. He says Mozart had extensive training from his 
  father who was a stern  taskmaster and the greatest living music teacher in 
  Europe at the time.  Levitin says if Mozart practiced 32 hours a week from 
  the age of 2 to 8, he'd  then have reached the 10,000 hour mark (& his papa 
  might well have pushed  him this hard!). Levitin also says the 10,000 hour 
  argument doesn't say it  takes 10,000 hours to write a symphony. The author 
  says clearly Mozart became  an expert eventually, but did the writing of that 
  1st symphony qualify him as  an expert, or did he attain his level of musical 
  expertise later? He cites  experts who say the tunes Mozart wrote that were 
  at expert level were clearly  after he'd been playing 10,000 hours. 
 
  I said to my wife (who played more  than a major role in raising my 3 kids): 
  "gee, you were a busy mom for more  than 3 hours a day in a 10 year period, 
  so that meant you were an expert",  and she said, in essence, "no kidding". 
 
  My question: I started playing  autoharp seriously at the age of 70, so when 
  I become an expert at the age of  80, who will notice & will I be able to 
  find my harp (RAR)? I'd better  quit writing this stuff and get back to 
  practicing!    Ron Bean,  San Francisco (where surrounding mountain tops are 
  dusted with snow down to  1000 feet, but no earthquakes!) 
 
 
 
 
  **************Start the year off right.  Easy ways to stay in shape.      
  http://body.aol.com/fitness/winter-exercise?NCID=aolcmp00300000002489<;http://body.aol.com/fitness/winter-exercise?NCID=aolcmp00300000002489> 
 
 
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