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What a Harp Newbie Needs to Know (and the rest of us need to remember) - PHH 192

Practicing Harp Happiness

Release Date: 01/20/2025

Could Your Practice Today Actually Be More Fun? - PHH 211 show art Could Your Practice Today Actually Be More Fun? - PHH 211

Practicing Harp Happiness

Every time I talk about putting more fun into your practice, I hear feedback like, “I enjoy my practice,” or “I really like doing the challenging work,” or “My favorite part of practice is my exercises and etudes.” All of those harpists are enjoying their practice, and that’s terrific. But that’s not what I mean. Much of what we do in our practice can accidentally disconnect us from the music we want to make. We identify and correct mistakes. We drill our technique. We repeat passages over and over again. That’s all part of practice, and it is part of what enables us to play...

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Do You Hear What I Hear? Listening with Your Ears Open - PHH 210 show art Do You Hear What I Hear? Listening with Your Ears Open - PHH 210

Practicing Harp Happiness

Four friends went to an orchestra concert. Afterward, they went out for dessert and compared notes on the concert, talking about what they heard. Here is what they said: One person heard the person in the row behind crackling a cough drop wrapper.One person, a flutist, heard that the clarinet wasn’t in tune with the flute.One person, a harpist, heard that the orchestra drowned out the harp solo.One person heard that the piano soloist was humming to himself while he played. Oddly enough, when the review of the concert appeared in the newspaper the next day, it seemed the critic had gone to a...

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Is Your Practice Not Working? Maybe Hard Work Isn’t the Answer - PHH 209 show art Is Your Practice Not Working? Maybe Hard Work Isn’t the Answer - PHH 209

Practicing Harp Happiness

Today I want to talk with you about hard work. I don’t mean how to buckle down and do the hard work. We all know that playing the harp is hard, and we spend a lot of time working out practice techniques, strategies and routines to help us play the music we want in spite of the difficulties. No, what I want to talk about today is how to get out of the “just buckle down and do it” mindset. The truth is that when it comes to playing the harp or even music in general, sometimes trying harder is counter-productive. For instance, the harder we try to get that harmonic to ring, the more it just...

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Is Music Theory Really Useful? Turning Theory Into Practice - PHH 208 show art Is Music Theory Really Useful? Turning Theory Into Practice - PHH 208

Practicing Harp Happiness

Is studying music theory really useful? Yep. You heard right. I really said that, and I’m a total theory nerd.  I’m not going to leave you in suspense. Of course, knowing music theory is useful and helpful and part of being a good musician. But only - and this is a big “only” - if you know how it’s useful. Did you ever take a class in school and the whole time you were sitting in class you were thinking, “I’m never going to use this stuff”? Of course, you did. I remember sitting in my calculus class in high school - which, incidentally, I really enjoyed - knowing...

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How to Choose Your Next Piece - PHH 207 show art How to Choose Your Next Piece - PHH 207

Practicing Harp Happiness

Shel Silverstein wrote a beautiful and supremely short poem that perfectly fits today’s topic. The poem is called “Woulda-Coulda-Shoulda,” and in just seven short lines, Silverstein sums up the ultimate way to prevent regret. He tells us that all those woulda-coulda-shouldas vanish with one little “did.” Doing beats wishing every day. So if we were sitting in the same room together, sharing a cup of tea, and you asked me what I thought your next piece should be, I’d have to ask you a question right back, “What do you think you want to do?”  Life is filled with...

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Looking Beyond: Choose Your Focus - PHH 206 show art Looking Beyond: Choose Your Focus - PHH 206

Practicing Harp Happiness

Fact number one: Your focus is in your control.Fact number two: Your focus is a critical factor in your success and harp happiness.Conclusion: What you focus on matters… a lot. In the last episode of the podcast, we were talking about focus in terms of placing your chords. I cited one of my favorite Zig Ziglar quotes, “You hit what you aim at.” I’m going to put a different spin on that today. We aren’t going to talk about focusing on a goal exactly. We’re going to discuss how to shift your focus to get you beyond a sticking point or a challenge. Here’s my idea in a...

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Placing Chords: How to Find the Right Strings the First Time - PHH 205 show art Placing Chords: How to Find the Right Strings the First Time - PHH 205

Practicing Harp Happiness

The great Zig Ziglar, much-beloved author and motivational speaker, never played the harp as far as I know, but one of his most often quoted remarks is perfect for today’s topic. Zig said, “You hit what you aim at, and if you aim at nothing you will hit it every time.” If you have ever had difficulty placing the notes in your chords, today I am going to teach you how to fix your aim. Of course there is more to placing and playing chords than just aiming at the strings, but you do have to get to the right ones. This is what makes three-note chords more difficult than two-note intervals,...

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Review Done Right: It’s More Than Repertoire - PHH 204 show art Review Done Right: It’s More Than Repertoire - PHH 204

Practicing Harp Happiness

Do you review your pieces? If you don’t review your pieces regularly, then keep listening because today we are going to explore the different reasons you might want to start and a few different methods for review you might want to try. But here’s the thing; if I asked a dozen harpists who say they review their pieces how they do their review, I will get a dozen different answers. Some people schedule it; others set a rotation. Some people do both. Some harpists are trying to develop a repertoire list of music they can play at a moment’s notice. Others are trying to keep the last piece...

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Why Slow Practice Works - and When It Doesn't - PHH 203 show art Why Slow Practice Works - and When It Doesn't - PHH 203

Practicing Harp Happiness

My harp background is in the Salzedo method. This is the technique method devised and taught by legendary harpist Carlos Salzedo. It was at the time, the early part of the twentieth century, a startlingly different concept of harp playing and harp technique and the aim was to bring the harp into the modern world. The aesthetic of the method varied in almost every way possible from the French tradition in which Salzedo was trained.  But we aren’t discussing physical technique today. We are discussing practice technique, one practice technique in particular: slow practice. Please...

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Rhythmic Confidence: It’s Not About the Math - PHH 202 show art Rhythmic Confidence: It’s Not About the Math - PHH 202

Practicing Harp Happiness

If I had the opportunity to teach music to an absolute music newbie, someone without any previous musical instruction or experience, I know exactly how I would begin. I would start without printed music. That’s hardly revolutionary. The German composer Carl Orff is known today not only for his most famous work, Carmina Burana, but for the innovative methods he brought to musical education. Émile Jaques-Dalcroze created Eurhythmics, not the 1980’s pop band with Annie Lennox, but a system for teaching music through movement. Music schools throughout the world have been teaching young...

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Do you remember when you were a harp newbie? Maybe you still are, or maybe you’ve been playing for a long time and the time you were a beginner is a distant memory. That’s me, of course, I was a harp newbie a very long time ago. However, I can remember clearly the excitement I felt in my early days of harp playing.

You may have heard my harp story, but here’s the short version in case you don’t remember: Apparently, I heard the harp on the radio when I was two years old, asked my mother what it was, and told her that was what I wanted to do. I don’t remember that part, but I do remember my first harp. My parents had gotten some very good advice and started me with piano lessons when I was four, with the understanding that I could start harp lessons when I was eight years old, if I still wanted to play the harp by then. 

So - no surprise - when I was eight I got my first harp, a Lyon Healy Troubadour. I had a very high stool to sit on too. That was the beginning for me of a very long love affair with the harp. That’s not to say it hasn’t had its ups and downs, but I wouldn’t trade any moment of it. 

In the decades of harp teaching that I have done, I have seen many students start their harp studies with that same love of the harp and a passion for learning how to play. Some of them maintain that energy, and some do not, not because they’re doing anything wrong, but often they find that learning the harp just isn’t for them. If you’re just starting your harp journey, I’d like to offer you my thoughts on the most important things you can do to speed your harp journey, to maintain your enthusiasm and to find even more harp happiness along the way. 

If you’re not a harp newbie, I think you may find these things helpful for you, too. These are basics that we tend to lose sight of when the music gets more complicated and we involve ourselves in the details of playing. So don’t stop listening; this may be confirmation that you’re on the right path, or it may be the refresh you need to get you to that next level. I had a lot of fun preparing this show, boiling down the myriad details of playing the harp to just four key concepts that are powerful enough to make big changes for you.

Links to things I think you might be interested in that were mentioned in the podcast episode: 

Get involved in the show! Send your questions and suggestions for future podcast episodes to me at [email protected] 

LINKS NOT WORKING FOR YOU? FInd all the show resources here: https://www.harpmastery.com/blog/Episode-192