I am just a few weeks into my accordion journey, and I would like to ask for some advice about how I should focus my song practice, especially when the song is nearing completion. For what it's worth I am learning by myself without teachers or books.
I have selected a handful of songs that I want to add to my currently non existing repertoire. What I have been doing so far is this:
Figure out the treble side, and a fingering I like. Then play it through section by section, commiting the button patterns into my mind and fingers. For the parts that are difficult, I slow it all the way down and play the handful of notes repeatedly until it sits, and then gradually speed it up.
Then I basically repeat the same for the bass side, and then finally I combine the two. This seem to be working well so far, with steady progress being made.
My question is how I should continue once I get the song to about 80-90%? What I mean by this is that I have all the parts down, and I can play it to speed, but for some parts a mistake still happens or is likely to happen. Should I start a session by playing a song all the way through, and then go back and focus on the part(s) where mistakes were made? Should I stop immediately when I make a mistake, and spend time grinding through it as slow pacing to "reprogram" my fingers to keep it correct? Should I just start over and try again?
And what about if I make it through a song 9 out of 10 times, but then one time I make a mistake?
My end goal for any song is of course that I would want to have it down so well that it goes from "a mistake or three is likely to happen", to "a mistake is unlikely to happen, and if it does, it will not be very noticable".
A small digression, but I did read an advice somewhere that it could be a good idea to work on a song "backwards", menaning to learn the last part first, and then work backwards. I did try this for my latest song, and I think that approach may suit me well. It may just be that when you then practice a new section and can end it by going straight into a section you have down, it feels like so much more progress, but whatever the cause, I liked that way of doing it.
I have selected a handful of songs that I want to add to my currently non existing repertoire. What I have been doing so far is this:
Figure out the treble side, and a fingering I like. Then play it through section by section, commiting the button patterns into my mind and fingers. For the parts that are difficult, I slow it all the way down and play the handful of notes repeatedly until it sits, and then gradually speed it up.
Then I basically repeat the same for the bass side, and then finally I combine the two. This seem to be working well so far, with steady progress being made.
My question is how I should continue once I get the song to about 80-90%? What I mean by this is that I have all the parts down, and I can play it to speed, but for some parts a mistake still happens or is likely to happen. Should I start a session by playing a song all the way through, and then go back and focus on the part(s) where mistakes were made? Should I stop immediately when I make a mistake, and spend time grinding through it as slow pacing to "reprogram" my fingers to keep it correct? Should I just start over and try again?
And what about if I make it through a song 9 out of 10 times, but then one time I make a mistake?
My end goal for any song is of course that I would want to have it down so well that it goes from "a mistake or three is likely to happen", to "a mistake is unlikely to happen, and if it does, it will not be very noticable".
A small digression, but I did read an advice somewhere that it could be a good idea to work on a song "backwards", menaning to learn the last part first, and then work backwards. I did try this for my latest song, and I think that approach may suit me well. It may just be that when you then practice a new section and can end it by going straight into a section you have down, it feels like so much more progress, but whatever the cause, I liked that way of doing it.