Plus mastery of an instrument doesn't yield a fruitful career.
 
Although the rate of mastery of a task versus success in a career is much  
higher outside of the field of music.
 
-William
 
 
In a message dated 3/18/2010 4:30:02 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

It is  not important, how many hours one studies one thing. 
But it is very  important how effectively practice time is used. 
One first has to learn  & understand how music is about, including the 
theory. 
Next one has to  learn & understand 
how practice time is to be divided for the certain  purposes: 

developing the hearing sense
developing technical skill  including secureness,
developing tone quality,
developing  endurance,
developing musical taste through musical literature, means  
developing musical knowledge
developing the ability to read, understand  & play music at the spot, 
even never seen the part before & never  heard the piece before.

If the time is divided properly and if practice  is done with most possible 
concentration upon the matter,
one should be  able to study the horn or trumpet or any other brass 
instrument to arrive  at
a high professional level, just with three hours studying daily for five  
to six years.
300 days a year (vacations & days without the horn, ill  leave etc. 
counted) by
three hours daily makes 900 to 1000 hours (gigs  count also positively), 
that by 5 years makes 4.500 hours, 
by seven years  6.300 hours. Count the extra hours of preparation by just 
reading the musical  literature, 
preparing parts, writing out parts by hand or PC, hours spent  in the 
library, fixing the horn, well, 
there you have the 10.000  hours.

Be happy you have not to study as much as string players or wood  wind 
players, who have to spend
uncountable hours preparing their reeds,  not to speak about pianists.

If one does not consider the points I  mentioned above, one has the never 
ending problem, needing
to "hammer in"  every single part, just mechanical trying & trying & trying 
again.  What a waste of life time.
If you study, using your brain, your advancement  will be much faster and 
you will have remaining tie to 
rest, for sports,  for socializing, etc.

Do not forget studying art history in general,  try to study Italian & 
rudimentary German to understand
the masterworks  better. If you have a very good teacher, NEVER question 
his advice. But if you  
might find a better solution or a better trick, making a passage easier,  
demonstrate it to your
teacher, who will like your effort. But, again,  never question your 
teacher  !!

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###########
Am  18.03.2010 um 06:03 schrieb Kit Wolf:

> I've heard this too, though  I feel slightly uncertain about the idea of 
it
> being a hard and fast  rule.
> 
> I guess there are two points here: one is how much  practice an 'average'
> person has done. Almost by definition, a master  is somebody who is
> exceptional and to my mind the 10,000 hour rule  simply reflects the fact
> that most amateur musicians never put in this  many hours - or at least,
> not within a short period of time.
>  
> The other is how long it takes to reach a steady state of  accomplishment,
> where a level of diminishing returns is reached.  Surely this must vary 
for
> different endeavours? It takes less time to  play noughts and crosses to 
an
> excellent standard than chess, for  example. I also once read that airtime
> stopped being a good marker of  pilot ability after the 250 - 1000 hour
> mark.
> 
> I don't  find it hard to believe it takes 10,000 hours to play the horn
> well,  though. Perhaps more..?
> 
> Kit
> 
>> That's  interesting. Too bad I'm pretty sure I practiced the horn for
>>  10,000 hours (took it 40 years ago) but I'm not close to achieving
>>  "true mastery" :-(
>> 
>> Daniel
>> 
>>  
>> On 17Mar 2010, at 14:54 , Steven Mumford wrote:
>>  
>>> One of the most significant factors is what scientists call  the
>>> "10,000-hour rule."
>>> When we look at any  kind of cognitively complex field -- for example,
>>> playing  chess, writing fiction or being a neurosurgeon -- we find that
>>>  you are unlikely to master it unless you have practiced for  10,000
>>> hours. That’s 20 hours a week for 10 years. The brain  takes that
>>> long to
>>> assimilate all it needs to  know to achieve true mastery.
>> 
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>>  
> 
> 
> -- 
> Sometimes my Email program gives the  wrong return address. If you have 
any
> trouble replying to me, use  '[email protected]' and not 
'n802...'
> 
> Sorry for any  confusion
> 
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