Quick Tip: Use a Practice Schedule
Tutorial Details
- Difficulty: Beginner
- Time: 5 minutes
- Requirements: None
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Practicing is the most important skill that every musician should spend some time developing. Knowing how to practice will give you the quickest and easiest route to achieving your goals.
Here are some tips to help you figure out how to create your own effective practice schedule.
Quick Tip 1: Set Some Goals
Setting goals enables you to know what you want/need to practice. Goals give you something to achieve and makes sure you donʼt spend your practice time noodling over the same material.
Quick Tip 2: Break Down Your Goals
Breaking down your goals into smaller, more manageable chunks is an incredibly effective way to absorb anything your trying to learn. By making things smaller, your actively making what your trying to learn much easier for yourself.
For example, donʼt try and learn all five major scale patterns in one sitting. Take one, learn it, save the other for other practice sessions.
Quick Tip 3: Prioritize
Prioritizing is important in making sure you get what you need to get done fast. If you want to become a speed demon shredder, get your techniques exercises practiced first before moving onto writing riffs or jamming.
Quick Tip 4: Use A Timer
Using a timer is another effective tool to have in your practice toolbox. By giving yourself a time limit to learn something during a session, you mind focuses itself much more effectively than if you were just casually noodling over your scales for 15 minutes.
Also, practicing for a limited time is good for your brain. Itʼll save you from burning out, and losing focus. Itʼll also tell you when itʼs time for a break. Taking breaks is incredibly important because giving your brain a rest is out you absorb information.
Ideally, you should take a 15 minute break to drink water, walk around and stretch after ever hour of practice.
Quick Tip 5: Keep A Journal
Keeping a journal is a huge help for musicians. It tells you what youʼve been practicing, how long youʼve been practicing certain things for, and it gives you great motivation when you start seeing how far youʼve progressed over a couple of months.
You can write down little notes in your journal during a practice session as reminders for the next sessions, such as “Lick 1A – relax more, release tension,” or “Watch shoulder tension.” Small notes like these are what make a huge difference in the long run.
Quick Tip 6: Plan Your Session and Allocate Time to Each Topic
Before sitting down for that hour of practice, consider what you want to improve. If you want to improve technique, then plan out a session with that goal in mind. If you want to write some better songs, plan out a session where you can achieve that goal, or at least some of it.
Key Points
- Itʼs much better to practice with focus for thirty minutes than to practice loosely for an hour.
- Donʼt take on too much at once. Start small and slow. You donʼt want to overwhelm yourself because youʼll end up back at square one and wonder why your practice plan didnʼt work. See your whole development as a musician as a journey.
- Be realistic.
I hope you consider these points next time you sit down to practice. They are very effective, and can result in improvement in a short amount of time.

Is this still audio.tutsplus.com? or amateurmusicians.com? Come on guys, what’s the deal.
Hi Concerned Reader.
I hope you’re not saying serious musicians don’t need to practice! If you have specific concerns with Paul’s tip, please let us know. I thought it was good advice! How do you practice?
We’re bringing you just as many intermediate and advanced tuts as ever, but these days we’re also offering some content for beginners – and they seem very appreciated. We mark them “Beginner” of “Basix” right at the top of the tut so you don’t waste your time if that’s not what you’re after.
What kinds of tuts would you prefer to see?
This is very relevant for me. I am trying to become better at the art of scratching on vinyl. The best ones have obviously put hours into practice; so that is one of the areas in which I need to step up. Thanks for the post.
Actually I think this was a good article. it could have been supplemented with a couple of examples of prac routines by topic, but it’s not a biggie.
I actually think one of the hardest things to do is learn how to practice correctly. And people don’t talk about it enough. Some people can do in 2 hours what others will take 5 hours to do in a practice session. That’s serious.
One thing Hal Crook has said (I’m paraphrasing here):
Pratice a lot of things for a short time each, or practice a few things for a long time each, either is fine. But whatever you do, make sure you practice those things every day.
Concerned Reader
These were just tips to consider while practicing, not a guide to how to practice. Everyone’s individual and nobody practices the same thing. Obviously, there are certain things everyone needs to know, but this is just points to consider when designing your own schedule.
I could write up a follow-up with a more detailed schedule if you’d like.
Thanks for reading anyway.
Regards,
Paul