A fundamental tenet of the Lindeman-Sobel Approach is that the general tendency among musicians is to hold long notes too long and make short notes too short. "When you hold a note too long, it causes you to miss your next entrance, and consequently, you may rush to make up for the lost time. Music is made up of entrances. If you are constantly in motion, you won't miss your entrances and you won't have to rush to make up for the lost time. Most musicians are constantly rushing because they are constantly late. We put weight on the wrong notes.....We play the long notes too long and the short notes too short." – Phil Sobel – March 1999. The Lindeman-Sobel Approach also emphasizes building an awareness of note groupings by placing greater weight on the downbeats of each grouping. "It's not about keeping up with the
metronome (or the beat), it's about playing the correct mathematical combinations and always moving forward and going somewhere!" – Phil Sobel, March 1999. ==Fingers==