Release Review: Łukasz Kuropaczewski's Practice Principles
Dear tonebuddies,
We’re thrilled to announce the release of our debut course with Łukasz Kuropaczewski! We’d love to hear your thoughts on it!
Click here to get to the lesson: https://app.tonebase.co/guitar/home?tbModal=courseModal&tbModalSlug=lukasz-kuropaczewski-practice-principles
- What did you enjoy most about the course?
- Is there anything we could improve, whether in content or the recording?
- Were there any aspects or topics you felt were missing?
- Is the one-pager and the edition helpful for you?
Your feedback is invaluable to us as we strive to make each course better than the last.
If you enjoyed this release, we’re excited to let you know that more is on the way! We’re currently in post-production for two more courses with Łukasz: a Guitar Technique Booster and the Catalan Folk Songs by Miguel Llobet. Stay tuned!
Thank you for being part of our community and for helping us grow. We can't wait to hear your thoughts!
Best,
Martin
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I really enjoyed the course. Łukasz is the guitarist I admire the most and it was really fascinating to look over his shoulder as he's practicing. the course is a great format where he's not explaining the music at hand or teaching general technical concepts, but showing how to practice in the context of a real piece of music. Discussions of practicing can often be very abstract so it's valuable to see it applied. Looking forward to the next courses!
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This was an excellent course. I have been told many times by teachers to practice slowly. I have read the suggestions from David Leisner in Effective practice from his book Playing with ease. However, it only now, while watching this course that i finally grasped this concept. I have already started to apply this in my practice and this indeed really helps. I would recommend this course to everyone!
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For me, one of the most useful courses on tonebase.
I was lucky enough to see Lukas in concert.
His technique is incredibly solid.
The same goes for most of his students I've seen in competitions.
So I think his approach is a good one, even if it may seem difficult to put into practice - it's very demanding in terms of concentration.
More in-depth videos on complete pieces with this set-up will be very interesting. -
It is great to have "practicing slowly" explained and motivated.
I look forward to see a full technical practice and warmup routine and scale/arpeggio work presented on ToneBaseGuitar with a workbook. I enjoyed the short version presented previously on ToneBase at the guitar meeting. I hope for a longer, more complete version with accompanying workbook on ToneBase.
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All in all, a well done production, Practice Principles. I really enjoyed how clear Lukacz was in explaining his approach. He made his approach readily understandable and easy to implement. I was also pleased to see that his approach and explanations were very consistent with others that I follow and listen to about how to practice, which have been effective for me. I am looking forward to tweaking my practices with some of the suggestions made here.
A minor improvement I would make is the title for this course. Really what is taught here is an approach on how to learn a piece of music, and how to prep that piece for a performance. In my mind, especially for those of us in the early to middle stages of learning to play classical guitar, practice also includes developing technical skills which we may learn by practicing scales, arpeggios, slurs, sight reading, and so on. Perhaps this course should have a title along the lines of Practice Principles When Learning Repertoire since it does not deal with the learning of technique.
Looking forward to more productions like this one.
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This was one of the best webinars to date on ToneBase. I love his method and I will be using his method from now on. So thank you thank you thank you Lukasz for sharing that technique with us.
What really appealed to me was that the method of practice suits my style of learning. I am very big on technique and whilst I was practising slowly before seeing this webinar it showed me a new style of slow practice that emphasises technique. My current teacher whilst he is very good is big on everything being musical no matter at what stage of your learning you are at. Unfortunately that is a stumbling block because I find it very hard to be musical whilst trying to simply understand and perfect correct finger placement and shape.
Using the 60 BPM on the metronome is brilliant and I have it on in the background. It is amazing how just doing that, my brain connects to the beat without trying. I have found I am playing to the beat better than ever before.
Kind regards
Michelle
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Fantastic lesson, I am very interested in learning how to incorporate repertoire with daily technical practice. I would love to learn more about how Łukasz balances technical exercises and practice with this type of work. Very well done video with great examples of what slow practice should look like.
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A very good course that should be added to the level 1 or 2 of the Tonebase level system curriculum.
I noticed the comment from Michelle Roper on the need from her teacher to be musical on everything and I think both approaches can be combined together.
When I learn a piece, i set the metronome at 60 bpm for the shortest note in the piece. If the shortest note is 1/8 then a full bar is 8 beats (8 seconds). If I can't play at that speed; I just slow down to 50 or 40 bpm.
For me the real challenge is to make sure I plant my right hand fingers before to fret my left hand.
It is still a work in progress but I am sure it will pay off great dividends when I get used to it.