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Novice here, I practice 2 finger and I wee bit of claw hammer and only when time allows. Only been at it a couple months.
I practiced today and it was great, all the way through my practice session without a mistake…I was a happy camper.
Now, I practiced yesterday after work and I couldn’t do a darn thing right. It took me 3 times as long to get through my practice session I have set up for myself and I was downright discouraged. Right hand and left hand.
You all think this just the learning process, does happen to others? I wondering if a time will come when all just goes right, maybe a bloop now and then but for the most part right.
Anyway, thanks. Joe
I agree with Sherry. I've been playing more than twenty years and there's the occasional day but, the more experienced and regular your practice, the rarer these days are.
I will add that sometimes you can be plateau-ing. If you find yourself hitting one thing too hard or too frequently that you stop progressing or worse, erring more, you may need to step away for a little bit and focus on something else.
Edited by - Nic Pennsylvania on 04/27/2025 15:36:21
Play with your banjo. Have fun. Life is too short. I know a fellow who loves the way he plays banjo and it doesn't sound bad, just unorthodox. Nothing wrong with that if you don't want to play in a band. Mike Seeger and Art Rosenbaum collected, tabbed, learned and published some mighty unorthodox banjo that they collected from true folk musicians who were just people like you and me.
I find that yes there are days where it is absolutely on point and days where I feel like nothing aligns. And I’ve watched my son for years in his running (college athlete) have the exact same thing happen for his practice.
First, to quote the physicist Wolfgang Pauli, “is is unwise to seek prominence in a field whose routine chores you do not enjoy”, not everything about an activity will be inspiring and synched up as though improvements will somehow just roll in. A lot of the development is routine. This also means that major advancements will occur less than routine slight changes. The key to almost every success in a field is long term commitment to the boring parts. This means commitment to the parts that feel like no success is occurring at all.
But if you don’t enjoy it, it’s unwise to keep doing the activity.
I've been at it closer to 60 years than 50. I don't "practice" as much as I get the banjo out and just play. After all of this time I still make the occasional stumble.
I'm guessing you're still working on repertoire and technique. So... If folks like me still make the occasional bobble on tunes they've been playing for over half a century, don't let a "bad day" now and then get you down.
As you continue on, one secret is to play through your mistakes- that is, don't lose the timing or stop playing. Just keep going until you can get back on track.
Last thing I'll add...
I once heard Bob Brozman say, "if you don't make a mistake, you're not trying hard enough".
I thought this was good advice. If you're always trying new things, even in a tune you've been playing for ages, you're bound to do something you're not 100% about. But, if you never make a mistake, you're likely playing it too safe.
It's a phrase I say to students all the time.
'Way back I had a construction boss who expressed ^^ as: "He that ain't made a mistake ain't made ****-all!"
Having said that, for me the band between what some refer to as "good" days and "bad" days is much narrower than I gather from ^^ posts. For me it's more like borderline crappy and not quite so borderline crappy.
Tongue-in-cheek Rusty, does "preserve the melody" come before or after I find / figure it out?
P.S. None of that ^^ is a plea for referral to a method / teacher/ program / book ... just some C'est la vie! stuff that's come to mind.
My "solution" for bad days in music is to drop the formal practice for that day and just do something, anything with the instrument. Usually finding a tuning I feel like playing in and just improvising at a relaxed pace for 20-30 minutes, playing around with a song I'm comfortable with. Then switch to another song or tuning and repeat.
This won't directly refine any of the tunes you're working on, but it helps with the frustration and I end up finding most of my best riffs this way.
Happens to most people. When I'm playing badly, I change what I planned to work on and play music that's simpler, easier, slower. I keep dialing it back until I can play correctly. Then I try to gradually bring it back to where I hoped to be, but go no further than a point when the mistakes start creeping in again. I think it's helpful to learn how to adjust on the bad days and fix what's wrong, even if just a little bit.