I only scanned this, so I may be missing some of the subtlety — always a risk with me! My main question is have you watched our instructional material where we explain why we do things like table tapping tests up front in the sequence, and not later on?
In the Primer we’ve taken great pains to make it clear that fast motion is not the end goal per se, but one of the most important diagnostic tests we have on the road to developing smooth, efficient motion. If you counted the number of times I say “smoothness” or “efficiency” in the Primer, it’s gotta be dozens or maybe hundreds of times. The hope is that it is clear where we are coming from, what we are trying to teach you, and why we’re taking the steps we’re taking.
Another thing we’ve taken great pains to do in the Primer is show a wide variety of musical styles and instruments. We specifically show acoustic guitar and mandolin examples in some of the very early Primer videos to make this point as clearly as we can. In those examples, I and our interviewees are playing things that are “hard” for styles like bluegrass, but obviously 130bpm sixteenth notes is nobody’s idea of death metal tremolo. So if we’re concerned that we focus too much on “speed”, then we are concerned with basically all musical tempos in the hundreds and above.
I’ve seen recent forum posts on sites like TDPRI from users who were initially apprehensive about signing up, but pleasantly surprised when they loaded up some of those initial chapters and saw the diversity of musical examples. Some of these posters were primarily acoustic players and not sure if our stuff would be for them. Obviously, personally I’m pleased that the message is getting out. Making the the Primer more style-diverse has been an important goal of the past couple years because it reflects our view that these issues in technique development really are universal.
That being said, if someone can watch the first few sections of the Primer and come away thinking that our focus is misplaced, then I’ll take that feedback for sure. If we’re wrong today, we’ll be right tomorrow.