My vacation started yesterday and I will be free for four weeks from my job as a programmer. I'm going to use it essentially for two things. 1)Take care of my house and my plot and 2) for practice.
Since Friday, I have practiced every day at least four hours and hopefully I will continue to do this. A huge difference to what I usually do because I do not even practice every day during the rest of the year.
Now I need some pressure, and I'm writing this because if that.
For this summer my ambition is to improve my legato. I thought I could post what I practice and how it goes, and to post audio files to get criticism. I have noticed that this brought me forward earlier so I hope for the same result now.
So this thread is to improve my legato
What I currently focus on to achieve this is to play Swedish folk songs. They are often in minor and lend themself very well to be performed without accompaniment. I recently discovered they are great to practice my legato.
I choose one and play it without the sheet music in all keys, both with and without vibrato. At some point during the day I also record and inspect how I'm doing.
My discovery up to now is that I have to improve the smoothness so that legato between notes in different overtones, that is, by stepwise motion upward as the slide moves outwards must sound more similar to those that are in the same harmonic series when the slide moves inwards.
I visualize this as a picture where the change of overtone, when pulling the slide outwards is like lifting the tone over a threshold to a higher floor. To do it smoothly, it becomes easier if I lie fairly close to the threshold before crossing so that I only lift a little bit just enough so the tone comes up and over the threshold. In the opposite direction when I go stepwise down, it becomes smoother if I do not let the tone fall down after the threshold as I step down and the slide moves inwards and the stream breaks the harmonic series.
One consequence will be that I'm very close to the next tone I'm going to and coming from, thus avoiding the break that would otherwise be heard when the overtone barrier is crossed. To think like this seems to help me.
I hope you understand this. It is not easy to explain this in Swedish so I'm very interested if you understand what I'm talking about and if you have thoughts about this.
Thoughts?
/Tom