There are lots of ways to get our music ready for the holidays. Yes, I know it’s only July and we have months to prepare, but that’s actually the point. You could wait until the week before your first Christmas gig in December to practice your music, and I have to say that there were times in the past that was my strategy. As you might imagine, it isn’t a course of action I’d recommend.
Or you could try the standard Christmas in July method. You learn your holiday music in the summer and then try to hang onto it until the holidays eventually come around. Granted, it’s a much better plan than waiting until December, but as a preparation strategy it leaves a lot to be desired. If you’ve learned your music by the time summer ends, what do you do with it for the next three months?
Naturally, there are a lot of different approaches you could take, and some of those are going to feel more natural to you than others, just based on your personal practice preferences. There are external influences that might play a role as well. For instance, perhaps this is the year that you have ben asked to play Britten’s Ceremony of Carols for the first time. The difficulty and scope of this piece will require a more focused approach than standard church or party holiday music.
While I used to be fairly undisciplined in my approach to my own holiday repertoire preparation - and believe me, I paid the price for it more than once - I am unwilling to let my students suffer the same way. So I have a few “always” ground rules and a couple of “never” caveats that I try to share with them. These have their roots in my own learning the hard way.
However, I also have a system that seems to work pretty well for most of my students. The odd thing is that I haven’t really told any of them about it. We’ve used the system but I’ve never given it a name before. So here it is, making its official debut: my 5-4-4-3 plan for holiday music preparation. My students will recognize it, or at least most of it, and I hope this will organize more clearly what we have talked about already. If you haven’t studied with me, I’m happy to share this with you for the first time ever.
Links to things I think you might be interested in that were mentioned in the podcast episode:
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